Space Bar – Small Thai bar, nice people.

This place has been really cool for me during the last months. It’s own by « Nu », a Thai man and managed by « Mix » who is also a young Thai man. I haven’t seen many foreigners there, only few friends of mine knowing this place. It is located in front of « Some Might Say » on Suranaree street (Same street as KoratChef, but opposite side and closer to Tiger is coming).

Nu is in white and Mix is in black. They both speak English.

These 2 guys can speak English and prices are quite cheap. However, there is no food but only snacks like Pringles or peanuts. This bar opens late, rarely before 6pm and sometimes only around 10 pm. What is nice is the often closed the doors late and it’s like a small family, only friends, with the same clients going there or to Run Juan, or Smaz Bistro.

They recently added beer without alcohol, even with « hemp ». They mostly serve Leo, Singha, Soju and Brandy. They also added more places with a side bar. They are working on the sound system at the moment.

Non Alcoholic drinks

I highly recommend to encourage these two guys and tell them they should have food, be open earlier as I do think they can gather much more clients. Music is played on youtube and you can ask them whatever you want. This place was called « Mob Bar » before Covid.

Location : https://goo.gl/maps/FFbv11w1PQFiRQ1v8

Follow them on Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/Spacebar-Korat-107020458537743

About This Place

Ran Juan Bar – Central Korat Social Venue. Ran Juan Bar is a meeting and socializing venue in central Korat styled as a modern youth bar, popular for its relaxed atmosphere. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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Khao Na Phet – My 3 best places in Korat

Khao Na Phet: My 3 Best Food Places in Korat

Khao na phet — literally « rice with duck » — is one of those deceptively simple Thai dishes that reveals everything about a cook’s craft when it is done right. In Korat, a few places do it exceptionally well. But this post is about more than duck rice: it is my personal guide to three spots that represent the best of Korat’s local food culture — places where Thai people eat, prices are modest, and the food is remarkable.

Why Local Eating Matters in Korat

Korat has excellent restaurants across every price point and cuisine type. But the most distinctive eating in the city is the local kind — the places Thai families return to week after week, that have been open for decades, that serve the dishes particular to this city and this region. These are the places that most visitors miss because they require knowing where to look, or because they lack English menus and fancy signage.

After years of eating around Korat, these are three places that consistently represent what local food does best.

Place 1: The Duck Rice Specialists

A good duck rice restaurant is defined by its broth — the base in which the duck has been braised for hours with spices, soy sauce, and aromatics. The broth served over rice alongside sliced duck should be deep, complex, and slightly sweet. The duck itself should be tender without being mushy, with crisp skin. Korat has several excellent practitioners of this dish, and tracking down the best becomes a pleasant obsession.

Look for places that have been open since the morning — duck rice is a breakfast and lunch dish in Thailand — and that have a loyal queue of Thai customers. These signals rarely mislead.

Place 2: The Grilled Pork Morning Market

Korat’s morning markets are among the city’s best-kept food secrets. The grilled pork vendors (moo ping) who set up in the pre-dawn hours and are sold out by 8am represent Thai street food at its finest — marinated pork on bamboo skewers cooked over charcoal, served with sticky rice and a sweet-savory dipping sauce.

The best moo ping is marinated overnight in a mixture of fish sauce, garlic, coriander root, and palm sugar. The fat bastes the meat as it cooks, keeping it moist while the outside caramelizes. It costs 15-25 THB per skewer. Eaten fresh off the grill with sticky rice in the cool of the morning, it is one of the most satisfying breakfasts imaginable.

Find your nearest Korat morning market and arrive before 7am.

Place 3: The Isaan BBQ Evening

Korat’s evenings come alive with moo kata — the Thai combination grill and hot pot where you cook your own meat and vegetables over a charcoal fire at the table. The central dome grills the meat while the surrounding moat of broth cooks vegetables and creates a flavorful soup.

This is quintessentially social eating — loud, communal, unhurried. Groups of friends and families sit for two or three hours, feeding the fire, cooking and eating at their own pace, with quantities of beer and local spirits flowing freely.

In Korat, several excellent moo kata restaurants operate from evening until late. The best are located away from the main commercial areas, often in open-air settings with better ventilation (important with charcoal grills).

The Wider Korat Food Culture

These three examples — duck rice, morning pork skewers, evening BBQ — give a sense of how food functions in Korat’s daily life. It is not primarily restaurant culture; it is street and market culture, where eating is woven into the rhythms of the day. Learning these rhythms is the best way to eat well in Isaan. See more of our Korat restaurant reviews for specific recommendations.

Conclusion

The best food in Korat is not in the most expensive or the most famous restaurants — it is in the places that Thai people use every day. Find those places, eat at the right time of day, and you will eat extraordinarily well for very little money. Korat rewards the curious eater.

About This Place

Khao Na Phet – Thai Rice and Meat Dishes. Khao na phet literally means rice with duck – a popular Thai dish of flavored gravy poured over rice, typically served with roasted duck or chicken. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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Ran Juan Bar – A gem in the center of Korat

Location: https://goo.gl/maps/HKzJba8d3TAUbBrt9

Since the reopening of bars and late night in Korat, this is my favorite place. Why? Because it is small, the waitresses are super nice, the place is beautiful and you rarely see a foreigner there!

Don’t get me wrong: I like to speak English, but I can also have small talk in Thai. The clients there are similar to the ones going at Smaz Bistro. We often know each others and it’s just a cool place. Music is excellent, it opens around 6pm and closes around maybe midnight.

I love the small space and proximity that you have with the staff. The decor is also quite nice. It’s about 100-200 meters near the big Kasikorn bank behind Yamo. Check Google Map because it is not easy to find.

Name in Thai and board outside. It is really a tiny bar…

The first time I was there is in 2561 but with Covid, it was closed for a long time. After their re-opening, they had really nice cocktails but the person that was making them left so we are back with some drinks, beer and whisky. Do note that they have a small menu and also some bottles of wine.

About This Place

SMAZ Bistro – All-Day Cafe and Evening Bar. Located at 6 Pollan Road, SMAZ Bistro uniquely transforms itself throughout the day, functioning as a comfortable cafe serving heartwarming food during the day. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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Where to get Khao Soi in Korat

Where to Find Khao Soi in Korat

Khao Soi is arguably Thailand’s most celebrated regional noodle dish — a rich, coconut-curry-based noodle soup topped with crispy fried noodles, pickled mustard greens, shallots, lime, and chili paste. It is the signature dish of northern Thailand, particularly Chiang Mai, but its fame has spread far south — and in Korat, you can find it if you know where to look.

What Is Khao Soi?

Khao Soi (ข้าวซอย) is a noodle soup of northern Thai and Shan origin, made with egg noodles in a rich broth that combines elements of curry and coconut milk. The base is a spiced curry paste — typically with dried chilies, galangal, turmeric, and shrimp paste — simmered with coconut milk to create a creamy, aromatic soup.

The dish comes topped with:

  • Crispy fried egg noodles (the contrasting texture is essential).
  • Tender braised chicken (most common) or beef.
  • Pickled mustard greens for acidity.
  • Shallots for crunch and sharpness.
  • A wedge of lime.
  • Chili oil on the side.

The interplay of creamy broth, tender meat, crispy noodles, and acidic condiments makes it one of the most complex and satisfying dishes in Thai cuisine.

Khao Soi in Isaan: A Northern Dish in the Northeast

Korat and Isaan are firmly in the central-northeastern food tradition — rice, som tam, laab, grilled meats. Khao Soi is a northern Thai dish, so finding it in Korat requires seeking it out rather than stumbling upon it.

The good news: as Thai food culture has become more interconnected, northern Thai food shops (often run by people who moved south from Chiang Mai or Chiang Rai) have appeared in cities across Thailand, including Korat. Some Thai-Muslim restaurants also serve a version of Khao Soi with a slightly different spice profile.

What to Look For

When evaluating Khao Soi quality in Korat:

  • Broth depth: The curry paste should have been cooked down properly, creating a fragrant, complex base — not thin or one-dimensional.
  • Coconut milk balance: Should be creamy but not cloying. The curry should come through.
  • The crispy noodles: Non-negotiable. They should be freshly fried and placed on top at serving time — not pre-made and soggy.
  • The condiments: Pickled mustard greens and lime should be served properly. They are not optional garnish; they complete the dish.

Where to Find It

In Korat, Khao Soi can typically be found at:

  • Northern Thai specialty restaurants (ร้านอาหารเหนือ) — sometimes found in the older parts of the city.
  • Large food courts in shopping malls often have a stall offering a version of Khao Soi.
  • Some Muslim-Thai restaurants serve the southern/Muslim variant of Khao Soi, which is excellent in its own right.

The most reliable approach is to ask local residents or check current food recommendation apps for Korat — the scene changes as restaurants open and close, and local knowledge is the best guide.

Making Khao Soi at Home

If you want Khao Soi and cannot find a good version nearby, it is actually achievable at home. The key challenge is making or sourcing a good curry paste. Fresh paste (rather than jarred) makes a dramatic difference. Mae Ploy and Maesri brands make acceptable Khao Soi paste if you cannot find fresh.

Conclusion

Khao Soi is not Korat’s native dish, but it has found a place in the city’s food culture as Thai cuisine has become more regionally diverse. The best versions are deeply satisfying — one of those dishes that rewards you every bite with new nuance. Worth seeking out whenever you are in the city.

About This Place

Khao Soi – Northern Thai Noodle Curry. Khao soi is a northern Thai specialty originating from Chiang Mai region. Finding authentic khao soi in Korat is possible at some northern Thai specialty restaurants. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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Lunches at 8 Dinning – Street Food

8 Dinning is located at Condo Link and one of the best Thai restaurant in Nakhon Ratchasima. The owner is « Bus » and was a contestant at Iron Chef Thailand. He is the brother of « Bon », the owner of 8 Bistro and Fat boy Tavern.

Great restaurants with nice new lunches at reasonable prices

I didn’t know that they have special promotion for street food on lunch time. This is the perfect place to eat quality meals and the price, while higher than street markets, do reflect the quality of the place.

Strangely, not only do they have Thai dishes, but you can eat a burger or a chili dog! Well done…

Location is here: https://goo.gl/maps/2SjHVo6uEtP7NHbx9

Do not confuse 8 Dinning (condo link) and 8 Bistro (behind St-Mary’s school) even if they are both great places.

About This Place

8 Dining – Casual Quality Street Food. 8 Dining (also known as 8 Street Food) is a street food establishment in Nakhon Ratchasima offering fragrant noodle soups and spicy stir-fried dishes. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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Utopia in Korat

Bar and BBQ

Location : https://goo.gl/maps/zPjnFJb2B6vya9Vn8

I visited in a new « bar/restaurant » in Korat called « Utopia » last January. Outside, the name is only written in Thai (ยูโทเปีย) and it is located near the 100 years market. I think it opened maybe a month before I went.

I saw a banner outside written CRAFT BEER and SMOKE MEAT and I was intrigued. At night, the place is lighted with large pink/purple neons…

They do have craft beer on tap (Similar to Some Might Say or Must Kiss So – this last one doesn’t have on tap at the moment). I tried the ribs and it was good. It was cooked very well but the BBQ Sauce had too much « ketchup » to my own taste. The price is according to the weight. Still, it was quite good and some of the best ribs in Korat. I am kind of difficult for ribs as I do mine sous vide and cook them for 24 hours…with a dry rub and homemade BBQ sauce.The atmosphere was nice. I do like that place and they obviously have a different menu than usual French fries that we see in all bars…

Try this link to know more: https://www.facebook.com/Utopiabarbq/


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Fat Boy Tavern In Korat – Best pizza?

Fat Boy Tavern in Korat: Is It the Best Pizza in Isaan?

For expats living in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima), the search for a good pizza is a recurring mission. Thai food is extraordinary — I eat it most days — but sometimes you want a proper Western meal, and pizza is the benchmark dish. Fat Boy Tavern has established itself as one of the more reliable options in the city for exactly that.

The Setting

Fat Boy Tavern has a classic Western bar and restaurant feel — the kind of unpretentious, comfortable space that expats gravitate toward. Wooden furniture, sports on TV, a bar that is properly stocked, and a menu designed with Western tastes firmly in mind. It is not trying to be a Thai restaurant that also serves pizza — it is a Western establishment that does its thing with conviction.

The clientele is a mix of expats (long-term residents, contractors, English teachers), Thai professionals who enjoy Western food, and the occasional tourist passing through Korat on the way to or from the Khmer temples or the coast.

The Pizza

The pizza at Fat Boy Tavern is, in my experience, one of the more serious attempts at proper pizza in Korat. The key metrics:

  • The base: Properly thin and crisp rather than the thick, bready bases that plague many Thai « Western » pizza places. The dough has been fermented adequately.
  • The sauce: Tomato-based, with proper seasoning. Not sweet (a common problem in Thailand, where pizza sauce is often adjusted to local palates with added sugar).
  • The toppings: Good range, with reasonably quality ingredients. The classics — margherita, pepperoni, meat feast — are executed well.
  • The cheese: Proper mozzarella, applied in sufficient quantity and properly melted.

Is it Naples-quality? No. Is it a genuinely satisfying pizza by any reasonable standard? Yes.

Beyond Pizza: The Full Menu

Fat Boy Tavern’s menu extends well beyond pizza. Highlights include:

  • Burgers: Solid beef burgers with proper buns. Better than most burger options in the city.
  • Ribs: A popular option, slow-cooked and served with BBQ sauce and sides.
  • Nachos and starters: Good for sharing over drinks.
  • Sandwiches and wraps.

The portions are generous — the « Fat Boy » name is not misleading in this regard.

The Bar

Fat Boy functions as a bar as well as a restaurant, and the bar is properly stocked. Draft beer, imported bottles, spirits — the kind of drinks selection that is not always available in Korat’s more Thai-focused establishments. Happy hour deals are worth knowing about.

On evenings when sports events are on (football, rugby, American sports), the atmosphere picks up significantly.

Practical Details

  • Price range: Mid-range by Korat standards, entirely reasonable by Western standards.
  • English menu: Yes — no translation apps needed.
  • Reservations: Recommended for groups, especially for weekend evenings.

The Expat Food Scene in Korat

Fat Boy Tavern sits within a small but genuine expat dining ecosystem in Korat. A city of its size that is home to a significant expat population (teachers, lawyers, businesspeople, retirees) develops the restaurant infrastructure to support those residents. Fat Boy is one of the anchors of this scene — the kind of place you can reliably come back to.

For more Korat restaurant options, explore the other reviews on this site.

Conclusion

For pizza in Korat, Fat Boy Tavern is my recommendation. It serves the best version of what it does, with genuine effort and consistent quality. For expats craving a Western meal done properly, it reliably delivers. And even if you are more Thai-food-oriented in your Korat dining, the bar alone is worth knowing about.


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New Dim Sum in Korat

At the Mayfair market, near Fat Boy Tavern

Location : https://goo.gl/maps/dHmJVi6PxSJXUer77 (It really just opened, do not care about the reviews and pictures yet. I think they are unfair. I liked it).

Today, I had Dim Sum at Cha Kafair. The main branch is in front of Suranaree Witthaya, in the old city, but they just opened a new place that is perfect for lunch. It’s just beside the food trucks at Mayfair market (Condo link or near Fat Boy Tavern).

You might have tried the Dim Sum near Leosor Hotel, same side as Monkey Bar. Or at Sima Thani. But I did enjoyed these while being at reasonable price (30 baht per dish). Dim Sum were also before available at Terminal 21, Tim Ho Han (1 star Michelin) but that fabulous restaurant closed. Kantary also has some but Covid changed many things in Korat.

Example of their Dim Sum.

A new Ramen place also opened near that Dim Sum. Lots of new interesting things in this area. 8 Dinning is doing lunches with street food too at low cost.

The other restaurant beside (seems Chinese too) had that menu but I didn’t try yet.

That is the Ramen place beside:

Ramen place beside

About This Place

Tim Ho Wan – Premium Dim Sum Dining. Located at 99 Mittraphap Road, Ground Floor near FoodLand, Tim Ho Wan brings Hong Kong acclaimed dim sum tradition to Nakhon Ratchasima (Korat). Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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B.Blanche nouveau café à Korat

There is a new coffee shop all in white where people likes to take selfies in Korat. You might have seen on your Facebook these white stairs or a white building… It is actually kind of hidden in a small soi but you will find it easily on Google Maps : https://goo.gl/maps/QEXdCKnvHpi3qrgn6

I went twice and really like the Caramel Mocchiato but I was not a big fan of the croissant on the pictures below. This place is very close to Bung Ta Lua and has a parking. Lots of young people like to take pictures outside the building, which is decorated with cactus and others.

About This Place

B.Blanche Cafe – Minimalist Instagram-Worthy Destination. B.Blanche is a contemporary cafe concept in central Korat featuring a sophisticated minimalist design with a white, clean aesthetic. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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Goro Goro – New Shabu in Korat

Goro Goro opened around April 2022 and attracts a lot of people. It’s so popular that 2 competitors opened similar restaurants in less than 200 meters this month. Why is it so popular? Buffet, for 400 baht, including quality meat unlimited that you choose, thin slices of pork of beef. You cook them at your table in a different way that I am used to. It could be in a soup but also on the grill, which both ways are just delicious. This place has 4.8 stars on 5 on Google with already 45 reviews. That means it is a really nice place and you will get a good ration of quality/price.

You have access to a selection of vegetables, 3 different sauces (the soya one if my favorite) and there is also some fruit drinks (not beer but in fountain) and an ice cream buffet. I highly recommend that place but expect it to be full if you want to go around 7pm. Better chance by arriving at 6pm or maybe 8:30pm.

There is a menu on the table in Thai with extra items. But these are not included in the price, like shells, etc.

Location: https://goo.gl/maps/4p7dMknYHxmBdk4X9

About This Place

Goro Goro – Japanese Shabu Shabu Restaurant. Goro Goro opened around April 2022 and quickly became one of Korat most popular shabu shabu (hot pot) restaurants. Popular spot for locals and expatriates in the region.

Have questions about living or working in Thailand? Contact Sebastien Brousseau – French-speaking lawyer based in Korat (Nakhon Ratchasima).


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