Restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand
Grok
290ptsMichelin-recognised Thai, easier to book than most.

About Grok
Grok brings Ratchaburi regional Thai cooking to central Bangkok with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024–2025) and a 4.7 Google rating, all at a ฿฿ price point that undercuts most credentialed Thai venues in the city by a wide margin. The focus on intense, herb-forward Ratchaburi flavours makes it a strong alternative to Bangkok's broader Thai fine dining circuit. Booking is easy relative to Michelin peers.
Should You Book Grok?
If you're weighing Grok against Bangkok's higher-profile Thai restaurants, here is the direct answer: Grok punches above its price tier. At ฿฿ against a field of ฿฿฿฿ competitors, it holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a Google rating of 4.7 from 161 reviews — numbers that signal consistent kitchen quality, not a one-off visit. The focus is Ratchaburi cuisine, a regional Thai tradition that most Bangkok dining lists overlook entirely, which makes this a genuinely different proposition from the city's broader Thai contemporary scene. Book it.
The Venue
Grok sits on Soi Somkid in Lumphini, Pathum Wan, a quieter pocket of central Bangkok that keeps it accessible without the noise of the main tourist corridors. The interior works in dark tones with wood-clad walls — a considered aesthetic that skews nostalgic without tipping into pastiche. For the explorer who cares about context, this is a room that earns attention before the food arrives.
The kitchen's focus on Ratchaburi cuisine is the key decision variable here. Ratchaburi province sits west of Bangkok, close to the Myanmar border, and its food is defined by intensity: deep aromatics, assertive use of Thai herbs, and spice combinations that differ meaningfully from the central Thai canon most visitors know. If you've already done the rounds at Nahm or Saneh Jaan and want a regional angle that goes somewhere less charted, Grok is the right call.
The Michelin-highlighted dishes , duck confit with red curry, and stir-fried minced chicken thigh with Thai herbs and five peppercorns , frame the kitchen's approach well. Duck confit is a French technique applied to a Thai flavour profile: the red curry brings the fat and richness of the bird into sharper focus through aromatic heat. The five-peppercorn chicken is a more direct expression of Ratchaburi's layered spice logic. Both dishes speak to a menu that takes its regional subject seriously rather than using it as decorative framing.
Aroma is the first sensory signal here. Ratchaburi cooking relies on herb-forward foundations: galangal, lemongrass, kaffir lime leaf, and peppercorn , all volatile compounds that announce themselves early in the kitchen and carry through to the table. If you are sitting close to an open kitchen or a pass, that is not incidental atmosphere; it is a live read of the cooking. For food-focused visitors, that aromatic intensity is part of what makes the meal worth the trip.
On Takeout and Delivery
Given Grok's ฿฿ pricing and its Michelin recognition, the question of whether the food travels is worth addressing directly. Ratchaburi cuisine is herb-intensive and sauce-dependent, which means some dishes hold better than others in transit. Dry-finish preparations like the stir-fried chicken thigh with five peppercorns are reasonable candidates for off-premise eating , the texture is resilient and the spice profile doesn't collapse when the temperature drops. Curry-based dishes, including the duck confit with red curry, are format-dependent in a different way: the sauce is integral, and reheating at home can work if you have the right equipment, but you lose the kitchen's precise finish. If you are ordering for delivery or takeout, the herb-forward, drier preparations are the safer choice. For the full experience of the duck confit dish, eating in is the better call.
For visitors staying elsewhere in Pathum Wan or the Lumphini area, the Soi Somkid address is convenient enough that a dine-in visit is logistically simple. Takeout makes most sense for Bangkok-based diners who want access to the kitchen's regional cooking on a weeknight without the sit-down commitment. Given the price point, the cost difference between delivery and dine-in is unlikely to be the deciding factor.
Booking and Practicalities
Booking difficulty at Grok is rated easy, which is a meaningful advantage over most Michelin-recognised venues in Bangkok. Venues like Samrub Samrub Thai and Aksorn require more planning; Grok's ฿฿ positioning and moderate profile mean you are unlikely to face weeks-long waits. That said, securing a table in advance is always the smarter move at any Michelin Plate restaurant, particularly on weekends. Exact hours and booking method are not confirmed in available data, so contacting the venue directly at 14 Soi Somkid is the recommended approach.
Price range at ฿฿ makes Grok one of the more accessible Michelin-recognised Thai venues in the city. For context, Bangkok's leading Thai fine dining venues , Sorn, Baan Tepa , operate at ฿฿฿฿ and require significantly more budget commitment per head. Grok delivers credentialed regional Thai cooking at a fraction of that cost.
For those building a broader Bangkok trip, Pearl's full Bangkok restaurants guide covers the complete field. The Bangkok hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companion reads if you're planning around a Grok visit. Beyond Bangkok, regional Thai cooking at a serious level is also available at PRU in Phuket and Aquila in Chiang Mai. For traditional Thai cooking in a more formal garden setting, Suan Thip in Pak Kret is worth the trip north of the city. AKKEE in Pak Kret and Ayutthayarom in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya are further options for those interested in cooking outside central Bangkok's standard circuit. If regional Thai is the draw generally, Chim by Siam Wisdom in Bangkok addresses a different slice of the Thai regional map and is worth adding to the comparison. Internationally, L'Orchidée in Altkirch and Anuwat in Phang Nga represent very different expressions of Thai cooking that committed explorers may find useful for contrast.
How It Compares
Compare Grok
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grok | Thai | ฿฿ | Easy |
| Sorn | Southern Thai | ฿฿฿฿ | Unknown |
| Baan Tepa | Thai contemporary | ฿฿฿฿ | Unknown |
| Gaa | Modern Indian, Indian | ฿฿฿฿ | Unknown |
| Côte by Mauro Colagreco | Mediterranean, Modern Cuisine | ฿฿฿฿ | Unknown |
| Sühring | German | ฿฿฿฿ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Grok good for a special occasion?
Yes, with caveats on format. The dark-toned, wood-clad interior reads as considered and occasion-appropriate without requiring a formal dining commitment. At ฿฿ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, it works well for a birthday or anniversary dinner where you want quality without the price pressure of Sorn or Baan Tepa. Groups expecting a high-ceremony tasting menu experience should look elsewhere.
Is Grok worth the price?
At ฿฿, Grok is one of the clearer value cases among Michelin-recognised Thai restaurants in Bangkok. Two consecutive Michelin Plates signal consistent kitchen standards, and the Ratchaburi-focused menu is a genuine point of difference from the broader Bangkok Thai dining scene. For the price tier, you are getting a level of culinary specificity that most restaurants in this bracket do not attempt.
What should a first-timer know about Grok?
The menu centres on Ratchaburi cuisine, a regional Thai style not widely represented in Bangkok restaurants, so expect intense herb-forward flavours rather than the central Thai dishes most visitors default to. The setting on Soi Somkid in Lumphini is quieter and more residential than Bangkok's main dining corridors, which keeps the atmosphere calmer than comparable venues. Dishes like duck confit with red curry and stir-fried minced chicken thigh with Thai herbs and five peppercorns are specifically called out in Michelin's recognition.
How far ahead should I book Grok?
Grok's booking difficulty is rated easy relative to other Michelin-recognised venues in Bangkok, so you are unlikely to need weeks of lead time. That said, Michelin Plate status in 2024 and 2025 has raised the venue's profile, and evenings on weekends will fill faster than weekday lunch slots. Booking a few days to a week out is a sensible baseline.
What should I wear to Grok?
The interior is described as elegant with dark tones and wood-clad walls, which signals a stepped-up casual approach rather than strict formality. At ฿฿ pricing, Grok is not operating at the dress-code formality level of venues like Sühring or Côte by Mauro Colagreco. Neat, presentable clothing fits the room without needing to dress for a formal occasion.
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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