Signature Cocktails from The Boathouse Phuket

It’s always nice to enjoy a tipple or two when you’re on holiday. What if you’re suffering from post-holiday blues and miss the taste of that amazing cocktail you had?

We’re sharing 2 signature cocktails from The Boathouse Phuket that you can recreate back home.

Born in 1989

Mix together

  • Gin mare infused chamomile tea – 1.5 oz
  • Homemade cinnamon syrup – 0.5 oz
  • Martini Rosso – 0.5 oz
  • Splash of Coke

Shake well
Strain and serve in a wine glass

Garnish

  • Chocolate rice
  • Banana Blossom
  • Homemade Cookies
  • Cinnamon Stick
  • Lemon slices

Watch how it’s done! 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼

Famlab (Secret)

Mix together

  • Malibu infused pineapple skin – 1 oz
  • Crème de cacao white – 0.5 oz
  • Homemade pandanus syrup – 0.25 oz
  • Fresh coconut juice – 1 oz
  • Fresh pineapple juice – 1 oz
  • Red grenadine – 0.25 oz

Shake well
Serve in a glass of crushed ice

Garnish

  • Bee pollen (torched lightly)
  • Coconut pulp
  • Wedge of pineapple
  • Butterfly pea flower

Watch how it’s done! 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼

Phuket Food Guide: 5 Local Dishes to Try

Phuket, one of the oldest cities in Thailand, was an important port where Chinese immigrants first landed and married locally-born wives. This gave birth to the “Peranakan” – a term used to identify the “mixed-race” descendants. These cultural influences are reflected in Phuket cuisine, which has a strong Chinese influence.

If you are in Phuket, it’s a must to try these 5 local dishes. We’ve got you covered from breakfast to supper.

Kanom Jeen

Try this noodle dish of thin rice noodles made from fermented rice. Top your noodles with a variety of flavourful sauces, usually fish curry (Nam ya) made with fish and various spices cooked in coconut milk. Typically eaten for breakfast, you mix it together with various fresh, blanched and picked vegetables like long beans, shredded cabbage, bean sprouts, Thai basil leaves and pickled mustard greens.

Por Pia

A simple deep-fried dish that wraps together a filling of meat, prawn, rice noodles and vegetable in a roll. This Thai spring roll is great as a snack that you can grab on the street. You can also find it in sit-down restaurants and have it as an appetizer.

Mee Hokkien

Thick yellow noodles stir-fried with prawns, pork, eggs, bean sprouts and greens, this Hokkien-style noodles is enjoyable as a lunch meal. The most famous restaurant in Phuket is Mee Ton Poe, right in the heard of Old Phuket Town where you’ll find mostly local Phuketians tucking into a bowl of simple goodness.

O-Tao

Another variation of a Chinese-inspired dish, O-Tao is an oyster omelette dish made of flour and taro root, together with oysters (or sometimes seafood) and bean sprouts. Served together with additional bean sprouts and pork crackling, you can eat it on its own or dip it into a sweet and spicy sauce for an additional kick.

Oh Aew

This is a traditional Southern Thai shaved ice dessert. “Oh Aew” is a softer and stickier gelatinous jelly is made of banana and a Chinese herb known to “cool” your body. Served with red bean, black grass jelly and ice with a bright red syrup on top, it’s a great dessert to cool off from the heat of Phuket.

Learn the art to Local Dishes with these Cooking Classes

One of the best ways to get acquainted with local culture is through food, and what better way than to participate in a cooking class that brings you through learning about your ingredients, preparing and cooking them, down to enjoying it as a reward of your labour? 

Malay Cuisine at Casa del Mar Langkawi

Malay food is known for its aromatics and bursts of flavours thanks to an array of fragrant spices used such as tamarind juice, cumin, coriander seeds, turmeric, fresh galangal… and the list goes on.

Learn how to make a three-course meal of satay ayam (chicken on skewers) with traditional peanut sauce, gulai ikan dengan bendi (Malay fish curry with okra) and butir nangka (jackfruit seeds in coconut milk) at Casa del Mar Langakawi. While this menu can sound a little daunting for “noob cooks”, it really isn’t that difficult once you have the right ingredients and the right sequence to adding them (that’s where your recipe notes come in handy!), and of course, you will be cooking up this feast with the help of Chef.

Learn to make Malay dishes in this beachfront setting at Casa del Mar Langkawi

Perks of this cooking class: learn to cook facing the beautiful view of Langkawi’s Cenang Beach.

Authentic Thai Food at The Boathouse Phuket

Take part in an educational and enlightening class starting with a visit to the local fresh market with Chef. Here, you get to see an array of fresh meats, seafood, vegetables, and many of the spices and pastes that go into Thai cuisine. Chef shares his knowledge on the common herbs and spices that are unique and commonly used in Thai cooking – some you may not even have seen before in your home country!

Visit the local market in the morning with chef.

After marketing, it’s time for the real fun where you will prepare and cook your own three-course Thai meal, which you will of course, partake at the end of the class. Learn to make classic favourites like phad thai (stir-fried flat rice noodles), green curry chicken, tom yum soup, that you can easily recreate back home.

Local Thai favourites like pad thai and green curry chicken.

Bonus: enjoy the beautiful views of the Andaman Sea while cooking in our air-conditioned cooking studio!

Traditional Balinese Dishes at Hard Rock Hotel Bali

When asked to name food synonymous to Bali, most will think of babi guling (whole roast suckling pig) but another traditional Balinese dish is ayam betutu (roast chicken with Balinese spices wrapped in banana leaf) that is definitely an easier one to replicate at home.

Preparing the Balinese spices for the ayam betutu.

At Hard Rock Hotel Bali, you can enrol for their interactive Balinese Cooking Class where you will have a hand in making your own ayam betutu. Learn from Chef about the Balinese spices that go into their flavourful cuisine and 2 simple side dishes that go well with your chicken. Stir up a simple long bean salad and sambal matah (which translates to raw sambal), a refreshing sambal that packs a bomb of flavours that is sweet, tangy and spicy, and a great accompaniment to the ayam betutu.

The end result of your hard work during the class!

Enjoy the meal you prepared as a reward for your hard work in the kitchen!

Gili Lankanfushi Maldives’ Organic Garden Vegan Experience

Not a cooking class per se, discover the wonders of vegan dishes prepared by Executive Chef Hari. Go on a tour of Gili Lankanfushi Maldives’ Organic Garden and be introduced to a world of herbs and healthy greens that are mixed and matched into a refreshing salad.

Watch as each course of your vegan meal is prepared before your eyes, from vegan scallops to delectable desserts that will leave your taste buds in awe, and change your opinion towards vegan dishes – all these done in the middle of the Organic Garden.

A feast for your eyes and mouth in this interactive dinner experience with Chef Hari.

The next time you travel, make it a point to join a cooking class. If it’s truly not your cup of team, join a local food tour and learn about their culture through your tastebuds!

Customise Your Unique Hard Rock T-shirt

A trip to the Rock Shop when you are at a Hard Rock Cafe or Hard Rock Hotel is a definite must.

The Rock Shop boutique is where you’ll find the best range of Hard Rock branded tees, jackets, hats, watches, collectible pins and more. What better way to bring back something to remember your trip by owning your unique Hard Rock T-shirt.

Hard Rock Penang Rock Shop

Customise your very own Hard Rock T-shirts by simply selecting a Hard Rock T-shirt. Our designers will create a unique piece just for you. There are several designs available in each store and you can mix and match designs to own your specially designed piece.

Pay a small top up price on top of the price of the t-shirt, allow 1 to 3 days for customisation of your T-shirt, depending on the complexity of the design.

Visit our Rock Shops for more information.

Black Rock Viewpoint, Phuket

Black Rock Viewpoint is still a well-kept secret.

Situated high up in the hills that overlook Nai Harn beach and Ao Sane, the view is outstanding—arguably the best view in Phuket. Black Rock Viewpoint derives its name from the exposed, flat black rocks that cover much of the ground on that side of the mountain. What really makes Black Rock stand out is its isolation. It’s perfectly quiet up there, and given how crowded Phuket is, that’s a rare thing.

To get to Black Rock Viewpoint, take the trail that leads to Nui Beach. It starts a few hundred metres to the right after Karon Viewpoint. The parking area is near a large rock spray-painted with the words “Pa Hin Dum” on it. Directly across the road from this is a trail with a small sign in Thai. The trail is about 200 meters long, but it’s steep—especially in the beginning. We definitely recommend sneakers or hiking shoes for safety, but given that it’s only a 5-7 minute walk up, flip flops would work too if you’re brave. It requires a healthy dose of adventurousness to reach, but it’s worth it.

Instagram Worthy Cafes in Phuket

If cafe hopping in Bangkok is too mainstream, you may want to check out some interesting cafés & restaurants in Phuket.

This guide highlights some of the restaurants and coffee houses that are perfect for that Instagram-worthy shot.

WeCafé Salad & Coffee

As the name suggests, this café is popular with Salad. Located along Chaofa West Road (between Phuket Town and Chalong Temple), the café is adjacent to a famous hydroponic farm that has been growing and selling fresh salad and also distributes to Phuket’s many restaurants and hotels. The farm’s owner eventually decided to open WeCafé. From garden to table, the café serves fresh and healthy food and juices.

Address: 5/30 Chao Fah Tawan Tok Road, 83000 Changwat Phuket
Tel: +66 88 752 1352

Ciao Pizza and Bistro 

This place is a good alternative if you are seeking a break from Asian cuisine. Situated at an unrivaled location along Karon Beach Road with sunset views over the Andaman Sea, Ciao Pizza and Bistro serves up great Italian cuisine, coffee, and desserts.

 

Address: Karon Beach Road 311 Patak Road Karon Beach, Phuket 83100

Update: The restaurant is temporarily closed. Please check their website for updates.

Bookhemian

Highly recommended for bookworms, this café is more than an ordinary coffee shop as it doubles up as a mini bookstore with stacks of books decorating the walls. Visitors can have a relaxing afternoon reading with a cuppa before they decide on the book of their choices.

Address: 61 Talang Rd., Phuket Town

Factory Cafe

A hidden gem in Phuket Town, just like it name says, this cafe features an interior design which blends rustic and industrial concept beautifully. An Instagram-worthy place with exposed brick walls, grey concrete walls, industrial lights, and cosy coffee tables.

Address: 81-83 Satoon Road | Talad Nuea, Phuket Town, Phuket 83000, Thailand

*Picture credit from Phuket.net

Chino@Cafe’ Gallery

A quaint little café on Talang road in Phuket old town. The interior of this café is filled with interesting decorations, such as painting, textiles, accessories, and stationery. Enjoy a tasty selection of sandwiches, pastas, all-day breakfasts as you enjoy the rustic-chic interior.

Address: 4 Talang Road,Talad Yai, Phuket Town, Phuket 83000, Thailand

Pattaya Food Guide for the Foodie in You

Pattaya is a popular destination on the eastern Gulf coast of Thailand, just 147km southeast of Bangkok – a mere two-hour drive.

There are many great restaurants in Pattaya; if you’re looking for suggestions on where to eat around Pattaya, here are some places you can explore, ranging from cafes serving up fusion food to places where you can find authentic local delicacies.

Casa Lapin XL Pattaya

This Thai specialty café is well-known among coffee lovers. Casa Lapin means House of Rabbits, it boasts an exciting selection of aromatic coffee and wholesome dishes on its menu.

Located in North Pattaya, Casa Lapin take the art of coffee seriously. From the selection of coffee beans to the bean roasting and even the presentation of beverages by the barista team. The coffee beans are mainly from Northern Thailand, and the selection of coffee beans varies in different seasons. Thus coffee lovers can discover a delightful diversity of different coffee beans showcasing unique flavours and aromas.

Photo from Casa Lapin Facebook

Address:
666/88 Moo. 5, Na Kluea Subdistrict, Bang Lamung District, Chon Buri 20150
Website

 Lou Café Pattaya

Located in the quiet suburbs of Pattaya city, this hidden gem is a perfect place to escape from the hustle-bustle of the city. Inspired by nature, Lou Café offers a soothing ambiance with its aesthetically pleasing décor featuring a flair for plants and greenery. Every corner of the café is thoughtfully adorned with small plants and filled with natural light.

Photo from Lou Café Official Website

Immerse yourself with their artisan coffee and home-baked desserts. Our favourite picks are the baked sweet potatoes with a dollop of whipped cream and cinnamon powder, creamy custard pudding, and gluten-free banana blueberry muffins.

Address:
Chaloem Phrakiat 16 Alley, Pattaya City, Bang Lamung District, Chon Buri 20150
Website

Surf and Turf Pattaya

Located on the Na Klua beach, Surf & Turf Pattaya offers a casual dining experience by the sea. The restaurant boasts a chic and modern look with the spacious outdoor seating overlooking the white sandy beaches.

The menu at Surf & Turf Beach Pattaya is enormous, ranging from Thai, Italian, European and other fusion food. Note that the place is popular during dinner hours, while reservations are not compulsory, but is recommended.

Address:
499/5 Moo 5 Wongamart Beach, Naklua soi 16, Banglamung, Pattaya
Website

Trattoria Pizzeria Toscana Pattaya

This is one of the best Italian restaurants in Pattaya, located within a short walking distance away from Hard Rock Hotel Pattaya.

On the menu is an array of satiating yet delicious Italian dishes made with fresh produce from the owner’s organic farm. Our favourite picks are the seafood spaghetti and Tiramisu

Address
98/4 Soi 6/1 North Pattaya Beach Road,
Pattaya, Chonburi 20150

Doo Dee Noodles

This humble diner is best known for its Tom Yam Noodle Soup – an iconic thick, savoury broth and fresh lime juice. Doo Dee Noodles offers different combinations of seafood, meats and vegetables. You can customise your Tom Yam soup by selecting the level of spiciness.

A must-have with your tom yum noodles is crispy deep-fried fish skin. Complete your meal with a local cold dessert like Thai traditional style ice cream. This is definitely a restaurant you want to visit for an affordable and fuss-free meal.

Address
Sukhumvit Road Naklua, Pattaya, 20150
(Nearby the Bangkok Hospital Pattaya)
Website

The Silver Lining by The Glasshouse

This Instagrammable restaurant located at Wongamat Beach, a perfect option for a romantic dinner with a magical sunset view. The restaurant is reminiscent of a colonial beach house and shaded by pine trees.

It is best to be there before sunset to enjoy the beach and the view before the meal. The menu is quite extensive with both European and Thai food. Recommended dishes include corn salad, deep-fried seafood with salted egg, and Cha Pluu (wild betel leaf).

Address
Soi Na Klua 18, Banglamung, Chonburi 20150
Website 

Eating Your Way Around Phuket Town (Part 2)

In part 2 of our insider’s guide to the timeless tastes of old Phuket, we bring you more well-loved food places to satisfy your tastebuds.

You should check out Part 1 if you have not.

Tu Kab Khao

Experience old Phuket Town in all its original splendour at Tu Kab Khao. Housed in a beautifully restored 130 year-old Sino-Portuguese building, the restaurant is well-loved by locals and visitors alike, who come for lovingly prepared traditional southern Thai cuisine.

Tu Kab Khao is run by Khun Kim, who had wanted to recreate his mom’s recipes using authentic ingredients and cooking styles. It is apt then that he had chosen to set up the restaurant in a charming colonial house. Today, family portraits and photographs of 1960s Phuket Town line the wall of the elegantly decorated restaurant. The ambiance is cosy and homely, perfect for enjoying a hearty family-style meal.

 
 
 
 

Highlights of Tu Kab Khao include the immaculately slow-cooked moo hong (a Phuket-style stewed pork), nam prik (spicy shrimp paste dipping sauce with boiled shrimp), stir-fried melinjo with glass noodles and dried shrimp, gaeng poo (crab curry with chapoo leaves served with rice noodles), and stir-fried lotus stem with mackerel.

8 Phang Nga Road, Talad Yai, Mueang, Phuket
Tel: +66 76 608 888

Mee Num Kung

 
 
 

There is just one thing on the menu in this eatery. Really, really good prawn noodle.

The fact is, no one comes here for the ambiance. It is an unapologetically humble eatery, with nondescript plastic chairs and folding tables. The only reason why this place draws a steady stream of loyal customers all day long is this: wonderful bowls of springy egg noodle tossed in special soya sauce, topped with wonton, shrimp, pork, and beansprout, with a sprinkling of fragrant crushed peanut for that extra oomph. The dry version comes with a bowl of flavourful, heady prawn broth that is bursting with umami. Or you can opt for the soup version as well. Either choice you go for, the outcome is guaranteed to be lip-smackingly, mouth-wateringly good.

76 Poonpun Road, Talad Nuea, Mueang, Phuket

Keng-Tin

Keng-Tin prides itself on being the “house of tau sar piah”. Known for its fragrant, flaky balls of pastry filled with sweet or savoury bean paste, the 76-year-old confectionery has been delighting locals and visitors craving for a taste of tradition.

The name “keng tin” means great respect in Mandarin, and the business has been run by the same family since 1942. To this day, all of the over 30 types of sweets and desserts are still made by hand with no artificial preservatives, using original recipes passed down across generations. For customers who are more health conscious, Keng-Tin also makes selected items with less sugar.

 
 

A must-try here is of course tau sar piah. Besides the sweet and savoury versions, the delicious pastry also comes filled with yam, a mixture of sweet potato and ginger, and our personal favourite—sweet taro with gingko nuts. These make for great souvenirs and are best enjoyed with a pot of hot Chinese tea.

342-344 Phuket Road, Talad Yai, Mueang, Phuket

Andaman Fishball Noodle

Just a few shops away from Boon Rat Dim Sum is Andaman Fishball Noodle. The restaurant uses locally caught yellowtail fish from the nearby Andaman Sea to make a fish paste, which it then turns into a variety of fish balls, fish cakes, and fish tofu. All of which are produced fresh and by hand.

Customers can choose either the clear broth or tom yum as the soup base, and pick from a variety of noodles including rice noodles, glass noodles, seaweed noodles, and even brown rice noodles. The noodles also come in dry and yong tau foo (fish paste stuffed beancurd) versions as well.

15 Suthat Roadd, Soi 2 Talad Yai, Mueang, Phuket

Eating Your Way Around Phuket Town (Part 1)

On the culinary front, Phuket has come a long way. It was the first Asian city to be named by UNESCO as a City of Gastronomy.

To give you a flavour of what this world kitchen has to offer, we take you to some of the most well-loved food places. It’s an insider’s guide to the timeless tastes of old Phuket.

Torry’s Daily

Located along Soi Romanee, in a charmingly restored shophouse, Torry’s Daily is the perfect place to escape the heat of the tropical sun. The three year-old ice-cream parlour, started by brother and sister pair Torry and Fern Wongwattanakit, has been “bringing local experiences and the taste of Phuket to visitors by turning forgotten childhood snacks into delicious ice-cream flavours,” Fern says.

Made naturally using no artificial scent or colouring, ice-cream flavours range from avocado, banana, and corn milk to pumpkin, coconut sorbet, and o-aew, a refreshing ice-cream with red bean and jelly. A must-try is a local-style crepe known as apong, made from coconut milk, pan-fried on a mini wok over hot charcoal, and served with ice-cream.

Sharing the space is Torry’s other venture, Malou Tea Atelier. Taking pride in serving their own blends, Malou Tea’s delicate flavours include rooibos rose lavender, green tea spearmint, and Ceylon rose.

16 Talang Road, Soi Romanee, Taladyai, Mueang, Phuket

Tunk-Ka Cafe

For a magnificent bird’s eye view of Phuket Town, head to Tunk-Ka Cafe on Rang Hill (known also as Khao Rang). The open-air hilltop restaurant boasts not just postcard-worthy panoramic views, but an equally impressive all-round menu.

The entry to the restaurant is by a shaded wooden walkway, undulating through lush bamboo bushes. The restaurant itself has three separate terraces, surrounded by the majestic canopy of banyan trees. Wherever you sit, there is a sweeping view to behold. When the lights are turned on, the setting is simply magical.

Food-wise, Tunk-Ka Cafe serves authentically prepared Thai fare, including a very good moo hong (southern Thai stewed pork belly) and steamed whole fish in lemon juice and chillies. Don’t forget to leave some room for the mango bee-go, a sweet concoction of mango, coconut ice-cream, and black sticky glutinous rice.

Top of Rang Hill, Kosimbee Road,
Ratchada, Mueang, Phuket

Mee Ao Ke

It’s difficult to do a simple dish well. And this coffeeshop does the local version of Hokkien noodles really, really well.

All it is is a bowl of dry egg noodles, stir-fried in soya sauce, sugar, and sweet sauce, accompanied by fishball, shredded pork, and vegetables, and finally topped with a perfectly done soft-boiled egg. Mix everything together and what you get is the dark, gooey goodness that keeps the crowd coming back for more. No frills, no gimmicks—just food from the heart.

97/1 Soi Poonpon3, Poonpon Road, Mueang Phuket

Coffs & Burgh

Thalang Road, the main artery of Phuket Town, is lined on both sides with charming and colourful shophouses, many of which are over a century old. Today, these shophouses are home to an eclectic mix of businesses, such as cafes, barbershops, hostels, souvenir shops, and eateries.

To experience some of the old world charms, step into Coffs & Burgh, which occupies one of the shophouses on the main drag. The cafe has maintained a lovely vintage vibe, with furniture and objects from a seemingly bygone era. The owner has also kept the architecture of the building intact, so you can wander around and be amazed by just how well-built and airy these old structures are.

Don’t be in a rush at Coffs & Burgh though. It is a special place to just linger, slow down over a cup of strong coffee, and soak in the wonderful atmosphere.

92 Talang Road, Taladyai, Mueang, Phuket

Boon Rat Dim Sum

For an authentic taste of traditional Phuketian Chinese breakfast, make your way to 100-year-old Boon Rat Dim Sum. Started in 1917, the popular eatery still prepares its delectable dim sum using recipes brought over from Guangzhou, China. These recipes have been handed down from generation to generation, and today Boon Rat Dim Sum has expanded to several branches, run by fourth-generation Mrs. Wilaivat Vorranoppakul.

 
 
 

Dim sum refers to little morsels of steamed or fried meats, served in small steamer baskets or on small plates. Favourites at Boon Rat Dim Sum include steamed pork dumplings, shrimp dumplings, deep-fried crab with pork, and a silky smooth wheat flour noodle. Mrs. Vorranoppakul’s daughter, who helps in the family business, explains that even though traditional recipes are used, the dim sum is served with a selection of condiments like hot sauce, fish sauce, and green chillies in vinegar to suit the local palate.

26/41 Bangkok Road, Talad Nuea, Mueang, Phuket

Slowing Down in Old Phuket Town

In Phuket’s historic Old Town, a di­fferent world presents itself. A surprising counterpoint to the city’s internationally renowned beach scene, Phuket Town is a world unto its own, filled with history, culture, and rich culinary heritage.

Located in southern Thailand, about 860 kilometres from Bangkok, Phuket measures 48 kilometres long and 21 kilometres wide, making it Thailand’s largest island. The land is mostly forested and mountainous, surrounded by the warm waters of the Andaman Sea. With sunny white beaches and abundant sea life, the tropical paradise attracts pleasure seekers from all over the world. Yet, it was a very different reason that drew early migrants to Phuket—they had come looking for tin.

As far back as the early 1800s, Phuket’s lucrative tin mines attracted immigrants from China, Penang, Malacca, and other parts of Southeast Asia. As with the European and Arab traders, the Chinese pioneers brought with them their customs, food, art, and religion, adding to the mishmash of culture that has made Phuket so wonderfully rich.

Most of this unique culture can be observed and experienced in Phuket Town, where the early migrants settled. These voyagers had built grand mansions, lively markets, and intricate temples that reminded them of their homelands. Take a walk around Phuket Town today, and you can still see reminders of this glorious past—century-old temples take their place alongside beautifully constructed Sino-Portuguese shophouses, many of which have been converted to hostels, cafes, family-style restaurants, and even ice-cream parlours. It is worthwhile wandering into some of these narrow and long shophouses. In times gone by, traders used the front of these ornate shophouses to go about their businesses, and the back of the building to house their families. There is usually an open-air courtyard inside too, to allow for ventilation in the humid tropical heat.

Historic Phuket Town is filled with culture and colonial architecture.
Roads are closed to traffic to let visitors wander around freely.
Thalong Road in Phuket Town becomes an outdoor market every Sunday.
Intricately handcrafted souvenirs at the Sunday Walking Street.
Intricately handcrafted souvenirs at the Sunday Walking Street.

The main drag of Phuket Town is Thalong Road, which cuts the town centre from east to west. Today, it remains the historical heart of old Phuket, with rows of beautifully restored shophouses on both sides of the road. Walking along Thalong Road is just like stepping back in time. The old world charm is palpable.

On Sundays, Thalong Road takes on a di­fferent air. The road is closed o­ff to traffic from 4pm to 10pm, giving space to over 150 stalls to set up their business right on the road. These stalls sell everything from handmade souvenirs to local street snacks and desserts like coconut ice-cream, fried chicken, fishball, fried quail egg, and even horseshoe crab salad. But perhaps what makes this Sunday Walking Street most special is its creative energy. Here, you will see young Thai artists putting up street performances, and creative types showcasing their novel designs and ideas. (Even though it poured when we were there, the industrious stall owners were still peddling their wares!)

Besides Thalong Road, there are also little lanes called sois that lead to even more curious and interesting finds. The best way to explore these sois is to wander around. But don’t miss Soi Romanee. This narrow street is laden with a colourful history. If the walls of the shophouses lining Soi Romanee could talk, they would tell you stories of a time when the area was a well-known red light district. This was where tin miners came looking for other pleasures. Today, atmospheric Soi Romanee is one of Phuket Town’s most photographed streets.

To enjoy a panoramic view of Phuket Town, head to Khao Rang (see our review of Tunk-Ka Cafe, a picturesque spot among the canopy where you can relax and have a sumptuous meal). Rising just 140 metres above sea level, Khao Rang is short ride away by car, and provides a wonderful view of Phuket Town, the tranquil o­shore islands, Chalong Bay, and even the Big Buddha, one of Phuket’s most iconic landmarks covered in glorious white Burmese marble and measuring 45 metres tall. There is also a statue of Ratsada Korsimbi Na Ranong on Khao Rang itself. Ratsada was a governor of Phuket who modernised the tin mining industry, helping to shape Phuket Town and the rest of the island.

On the culinary front, Phuket has come a long way too. It was the first Asian city to be named by UNESCO as a City of Gastronomy. To give you a flavour of what this world kitchen has to offer, we take you to some of the most well-loved food places. It’s an insider’s guide to the timeless tastes of old Phuket.

Local snacks like fried quail egg, fishball, and coconut ice-cream are available too.
There’s nothing like ice-cream to cool you down on a hot day in the tropics.