Restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand
etcha
250ptsBook for occasions. European technique, Thai soul.

About etcha
Etcha at the Chatrium Grand Bangkok runs 8- and 11-course seasonal tasting menus that apply European classical technique to Thai ingredients. Chef Giacomo Primante's approach is precise and produce-led, making it a strong choice for a celebration dinner or business meal. Booking is straightforward by Bangkok fine-dining standards — a few weeks ahead is usually sufficient.
Verdict
Etcha earns a booking for any special occasion in Bangkok — particularly if you want European technique applied to Thai ingredients without sacrificing either. The 11-course "360°" and eight-course "180°" tasting menus are seasonal and ingredient-led, which means availability is genuinely limited in the way that matters: what's on the plate changes with what's growing. If you're deciding between etcha and a more established name on the Bangkok fine-dining circuit, etcha's European-Thai approach makes it the clearest choice for diners who want something that doesn't fit neatly into either category.
The Room and the Experience
Etcha sits on the seventh floor of the Chatrium Grand Bangkok on Phetchaburi Road, which makes it practical for anyone staying in the Ratchathewi corridor or coming in from Asok and Phloenchit. The room itself is taupe-toned, quiet in palette, and deliberate in detail — golden cutlery, handmade pottery, the kind of considered tableware that signals the kitchen takes presentation seriously before the first course arrives. For a celebration or a business dinner where atmosphere does part of the work, this room performs. It reads formal without being stiff, and the setting is proportionate to the price point.
Chef Giacomo Primante frames the menu around what he calls "borderless dining" , European classical technique meeting Thai seasonal produce. The Thai white asparagus with beurre blanc and white chocolate is the dish most frequently cited as a reference point for the kitchen's approach: a French-rooted preparation built on a local ingredient, with a flavour combination that doesn't feel like a concept exercise. That dish alone tells you the kitchen has real finesse with its produce, and it suggests the rest of the menu follows similar logic. Dishes are crafted using seasonal local produce throughout, so the menu evolves, and a return visit is unlikely to replicate the first.
Private Dining and Group Occasions
Etcha's hotel setting at the Chatrium Grand Bangkok means the infrastructure for private dining exists at the property level, and the tasting menu format suits group occasions well , everyone eats the same progression, which removes the friction of a shared table at an à la carte restaurant. For a business meal, the format also works in your favour: the kitchen controls the pace, so the evening runs on a clear timeline rather than depending on when you flag down a server. If you're planning a celebration dinner for four or more, the tasting menu structure at etcha is a more controlled experience than most of the à la carte alternatives in Bangkok's fine-dining tier. Contact the venue directly to confirm private room availability and any minimum spend requirements for groups.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for etcha's position against Sorn (Southern Thai), Baan Tepa (Thai contemporary), Sühring (German), Gaa (Modern Indian), and Côte by Mauro Colagreco (Mediterranean).
Booking and Practical Details
Booking etcha is direct relative to the harder-to-secure tables in Bangkok's top tier. The venue is located at 728 Phetchaburi Road, 7th Floor, Chatrium Grand Bangkok, Ratchathewi. Reserve directly through the hotel. Given the tasting menu format and the seasonal menu changes, booking a few weeks ahead is advisable for weekend dates and essential for any occasion with a fixed date. Walk-in availability is unlikely to be reliable for a multi-course tasting experience of this type. Dress code information is not confirmed in our data , smart casual is a reasonable assumption for a hotel fine-dining venue in this tier, but confirm with the property when you book.
Etcha is one reference point in a strong Bangkok dining scene. For a broader view of where it fits, see our full Bangkok restaurants guide. If you're planning the full trip, our Bangkok hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the wider picture. Outside Bangkok, comparable tasting-menu experiences worth knowing include PRU in Phuket and Aquila in Chiang Mai. For a different price tier and format, AKKEE in Pak Kret is worth the detour. If you're comparing tasting-menu formats globally, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Le Bernardin in New York City sit in the same structural category: fixed progression, chef-driven, occasion-grade.
Quick reference: 7th Floor, Chatrium Grand Bangkok, 728 Phetchaburi Rd, Ratchathewi, Bangkok 10400. Book via the hotel. Easy booking difficulty. Smart dress advised.
Compare etcha
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book etcha?
Etcha is easier to secure than Bangkok's hardest tables — Sorn and Baan Tepa regularly book out weeks in advance, while etcha's hotel setting at the Chatrium Grand gives it more operational capacity. One to two weeks ahead is a reasonable buffer for weekends; mid-week tables are more flexible. For special occasions or larger groups, book earlier to guarantee your preferred menu format, either the eight-course 180° or the eleven-course 360°.
What should a first-timer know about etcha?
Etcha is a tasting menu-only format — Chef Giacomo Primante runs either an eight-course (180°) or an eleven-course (360°) progression, so come prepared for a multi-hour sit. The kitchen applies European technique to Thai seasonal produce, and standout details like golden cutlery and handmade pottery signal that the full experience is the point, not just the food. First-timers should pick the 360° menu if budget allows; it delivers the fuller arc of what Primante is doing with borderless dining.
Does etcha handle dietary restrictions?
Etcha's tasting menus are built around seasonal Thai produce with European technique, which gives the kitchen range to work with dietary needs — but because the format is a structured multi-course progression, flag any restrictions clearly at the time of booking rather than on the night. The hotel setting at the Chatrium Grand generally supports more accommodating back-of-house logistics than a standalone restaurant of similar size.
What should I wear to etcha?
The room is described as elegant — taupe tones, handmade pottery, golden cutlery — so dress accordingly. Business casual at minimum; a dress or collared shirt fits the register without being overdressed. Etcha is a special-occasion venue, not a drop-in dinner, and the physical environment signals that guests should treat it as one.
Can I eat at the bar at etcha?
There is no confirmed bar counter dining format at etcha based on available information. The experience is structured around the tasting menu in the main dining room, so walk-in or casual bar seating is not the model here. If counter or bar dining is a priority, Sühring or Gaa offer different formats worth comparing.
Can etcha accommodate groups?
The Chatrium Grand Bangkok's hotel infrastructure means private dining arrangements are available at the property level, making etcha a practical choice for corporate dinners or celebration groups. For larger parties wanting a tasting menu format in a private setting, check the venue's official channels and specify whether you want the 180° or 360° menu. Groups looking for a purely Thai-focused menu for a special occasion should compare Baan Tepa, which also handles private events.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Bangkok
- SühringSühring is the most credentialed European fine dining table in Bangkok: 2 Michelin stars held since 2018, #11 on Asia's 50 Best (2025), and a 97.5 La Liste score. Twin chefs Thomas and Mathias Sühring serve a modern German tasting menu in a restored 1970s villa. Last seating is 8:30 PM — book 6–8 weeks ahead and treat availability as the main obstacle.
- PotongPotong is Bangkok's most award-accelerated tasting menu restaurant, climbing from No. 88 to No. 13 on Asia's 50 Best in two years. Dinner-only, Thursday through Tuesday, with near-impossible availability at short notice. At ฿฿฿฿ pricing, the Michelin-starred Thai-Chinese tasting menu in a century-old Chinatown building delivers strong value by global fine dining standards — book the moment your dates are set.
- SornSorn holds 3 Michelin stars and ranked #1 in Opinionated About Dining's Asia list for 2024 and 2025 — making it Thailand's most credentialed Southern Thai tasting menu. The catch: it is also the hardest restaurant in Thailand to book. Plan months ahead, expect uncompromising chilli heat, and treat the reservation as the first thing you lock in on any Bangkok itinerary.
- Gaggan AnandGaggan Anand is the #1 restaurant in Asia (2025) and the most decorated dining experience in Bangkok — a 14-seat counter, up to 25 courses, and a theatrical format built around progressive Indian cuisine with French, Thai, and Japanese influences. Book months ahead or not at all. At ฿฿฿฿ with a near-impossible table, this is the special-occasion booking Bangkok is known for.
- Baan TepaBaan Tepa holds two Michelin stars and a #44 spot on Asia's 50 Best for 2025, making it Bangkok's hardest fine-dining reservation to land right now. Chef Tam Debhakam's seven-course Thai contemporary tasting menu is built on indigenous ingredients and local sourcing, with the kitchen running until 11 PM Wednesday through Sunday. Book two to three months ahead minimum.
- GaaGaa holds two Michelin stars (2025), ranks #65 on World's 50 Best Asia, and scores 95 on La Liste 2026 — Bangkok's clearest case for modern Indian fine dining. Chef Garima Arora's tasting menus apply Indian technique to seasonal Thai produce in a restored Thai house on Sukhumvit 53. Book four to six weeks out minimum; weekend lunch (Sat–Sun, noon–3 pm) is the most accessible entry point.
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