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My Favorite Thai Restaurant in Korat: Ton Sabiang (ต้นเสบียง)

After many years living in Nakhon Ratchasima, I have eaten at hundreds of restaurants in the city. Korat has a remarkable food scene, from outstanding street food to modern fusion, but if someone asks me where to go for the best traditional Thai food in a beautiful setting, I always say the same name: Ton Sabiang.

อ่านบทความนี้เป็นภาษาไทย : ต้นเสบียง โคราช ร้านอาหารไทยร้านโปรดของฝรั่ง

Great Restaurant in Nakhon Ratchasima
Great Restaurant in Nakhon Ratchasima

Where Is Ton Sabiang

Ton Sabiang (ต้นเสบียง) hides behind the 80th Anniversary Stadium (สนามกีฬาเฉลิมพระเกียรติ 80 พรรษา), in the Suranari area of Mueang Nakhon Ratchasima. Come out of the stadium’s rear gate, walk straight, and the restaurant is on your right. Local food pages literally call it the « hidden restaurant of the 80 Phansa Stadium », which is accurate: you will not stumble on it from the main roads, and that is part of why the dining room is full of Thai families rather than tourists. The owner is a Thai chef who has worked in Atlanta in the United States, which may explain how polished the kitchen is for a neighborhood address. Here is the exact spot: Google Maps placemark.

There is parking for about twenty cars, credit cards are accepted, and the staff answer at 096-823-6395 or 091-005-8281 if you want to reserve — which I recommend on weekends.

The Atmosphere

This is a family restaurant in the proper Thai sense: a big, relaxed compound with an air-conditioned room, outdoor tables in the greenery, and private rooms that Korat families book for birthdays, reunions and company dinners. In the evening there is live music, and there are karaoke rooms if your table is in that kind of mood. Weekday early evenings are quiet; weekend evenings fill up with multi-generation Thai tables, which remains the most reliable restaurant review there is.

The Food

The kitchen runs on recipes handed down in the family, and the menu is Thai food cooked for Thais — nothing is toned down or internationalized. Locals on Wongnai rate it 4.3/5, and these are the dishes the regulars actually order:

  • ขาหมูทอดต้นเสบียง (Kha Moo Tod Ton Sabiang) — the house signature: deep-fried pork leg with the restaurant’s own aromatic marinade, shatteringly crisp skin over tender meat. If you order one thing, order this.
  • หมูกรอบคั่วพริกขี้หนูสวน (Moo Krob Khua Prik Khi Nu) — crispy pork belly wok-tossed with garden bird’s-eye chilies: salty, hot, aromatic, and dangerous with cold beer.
  • กุ้งเสบียงแช่น้ำปลา (Goong Sabiang Chae Nam Pla) — the house version of raw shrimp cured in fish sauce, with the usual bitter-herb and chili accompaniments.
  • ปูผัดผงกะหรี่ (Poo Pad Pong Karee) — crab stir-fried in curry powder and egg, the great Thai-Chinese classic, done properly here.
  • ยำกุ้งฟู (Yum Goong Foo) — crispy fluffed shrimp over a sharp, spicy yum dressing.
  • แกงคั่วหน่อไม้ปลาคัง (Kaeng Khua No Mai Pla Khang) — a thick, intensely aromatic curry of khang catfish and bamboo shoots that reviewers keep coming back to; made for sharing over rice.

A useful local ordering formula: for two people, two rice-friendly dishes and one fried item; for a table of four to six, add a curry or soup, one or two stir-fries and a vegetable dish for balance.

Prices, Hours and Practical Details

  • Budget: roughly 250–500 baht per person, drinks included — remarkable value for cooking at this level.
  • Hours: Monday to Friday from about 4:30 pm until late (around midnight); Saturday and Sunday from 11:30 am. Closing time varies between 11 pm and midnight depending on the night, so call ahead if you are cutting it late.
  • Phone: 096-823-6395 / 091-005-8281.
  • Facebook: the restaurant posts its specials as ต้นเสบียง (Ton SaBiang).

Tips for Visiting

  • Come with a group if you can — Thai food is designed for sharing, and the table is better with more dishes.
  • Ask the staff for recommendations; they are proud of the kitchen and happy to guide you.
  • The full Thai menu is longer than any English version — a translation app (or pointing at the next table) opens it up.
  • Book ahead for weekend evenings and large groups; the private rooms go first.

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