Restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand
Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)
225ptsViral char siu, street prices, one clear order.

About Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)
Tang Jai Yang is a ฿-tier Thai-Chinese spot in Bang Kho Laem built almost entirely around one thing: char siu, the Cantonese barbecue pork that went viral before the restaurant even opened. The 4.5 Google rating across 428 reviews holds up, and at this price point the quality-to-spend ratio is hard to argue with. Book it as part of a southern riverside eating day.
A single-dish obsession that earns its reputation at street-food prices
You will spend very little at Tang Jai Yang — the ฿ price tier puts it firmly in Bangkok's everyday eating category — and you will almost certainly eat better char siu than you expected. That gap between price and quality is the whole story here. The premise is blunt: a chef perfected Cantonese-style barbecue pork, sold it online until it went viral, and then opened a physical spot in Bang Kho Laem to meet the demand. The menu is built almost entirely around that one product. If that sounds limiting, reconsider: it means every dish has been tested and refined around a single kitchen strength, and the 4.5 Google rating across 428 reviews suggests the execution holds up consistently.
For a regular who has already made the trip once, the practical question is what to order next. The short answer: since the char siu anchors nearly every item, work through the menu systematically rather than defaulting to the same plate. The pork will be familiar; the surrounding preparations are where the variation lives. Thai-Chinese cooking in this register tends to combine the fat and sweetness of Cantonese barbecue with rice, noodle, or vegetable bases that absorb the dripping well. Order something with a sauce component if you want to understand how the kitchen thinks beyond the protein itself.
The address , 171 Chan Rd, Wat Phraya Krai, Bang Kho Laem , puts this outside the central districts most visitors default to. Bang Kho Laem sits south of the river, and the trip is an easy one from Silom or Sathorn but requires intent. You are not stumbling in. That deliberateness is, in part, why the clientele skews toward people who came specifically for the food rather than for convenience. If you are already exploring the riverside neighbourhoods or pairing this with a visit to Somboon Seafood (Bang Rak), the geography starts to make sense as a day's eating plan.
Booking is rated easy, and given the informal, understated character of the space, walk-in attempts are likely viable at off-peak times , though the viral origin story means the place does pull consistent traffic. Going mid-week or early in a meal service is the sensible call if you want to avoid a wait. There are no listed hours in the database, so confirming current operating times before you travel is worth doing, particularly if you are making a dedicated trip from across the city.
Compared to other Thai-Chinese spots operating at this price point in Bangkok, Tang Jai Yang has a differentiated identity because it is genuinely specialised. Places like Kor Chun Huad and Por. Pochaya operate in adjacent territory, but Tang Jai Yang's founding story , the online virality, the single-product discipline , gives it a clearer editorial identity. That is not marketing: it shows up in the menu structure, where the char siu is not one option among many but the load-bearing element of the entire offer. For context on how this kind of casual Thai-Chinese precision plays out elsewhere in the country, Baan Heng in Khon Kaen and Heng Khao Moo Daeng in Surat Thani offer useful regional comparisons.
The venue sits comfortably alongside other Bangkok spots that deliver disproportionate quality relative to their price and setting. Chop Chop Cook Shop and Jok's Kitchen (Pom Prap Sattru Phai) operate in a similar register , informal spaces where the cooking outperforms the setting. If you are building a Bangkok eating itinerary around this tier, these are natural companions. For a broader view of where Tang Jai Yang fits in the city's restaurant picture, see our full Bangkok restaurants guide. If you are planning the wider trip, our Bangkok hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
Outside Bangkok, the same appetite for focused, single-craft Thai-Chinese cooking is well-served by AKKEE in Pak Kret and AKKEE Thai Delicacies and Tasting Counter in Nonthaburi. For something in a completely different register , casual excellence in Chiang Mai , Aeeen is worth the detour if your itinerary takes you north.
Know Before You Go
- Price tier: ฿ , budget-friendly, among Bangkok's most affordable dining
- Cuisine: Thai-Chinese, centred on Cantonese-style char siu (barbecue pork)
- Address: 171 Chan Rd, Wat Phraya Krai, Bang Kho Laem, Bangkok 10120
- Google rating: 4.5 from 428 reviews
- Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins likely viable, though off-peak timing reduces waiting
- Hours: Not confirmed in our database , check before travelling
- Getting there: Bang Kho Laem is south of the river; plan around nearby riverside stops to make the trip efficient
- Group suitability: The informal format and affordable pricing make it accessible for small groups; no private dining data available
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)?
- Order anything that puts the char siu front and centre , the Cantonese-style barbecue pork is the reason this place exists and the foundation of nearly every dish on the menu.
- For a return visit, try a preparation with a sauce-based component: it shows how the kitchen extends the pork beyond its standalone form.
- Avoid over-ordering on a first return trip. The menu is tight and focused; working through it dish by dish across visits is more rewarding than ordering broadly in one sitting.
Can Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem) accommodate groups?
- The ฿ price tier and casual format make it accessible for small groups without the booking complexity of Bangkok's fine-dining tier.
- No specific seat count or private dining information is in our database, so large groups should contact the venue directly before arriving.
- For groups wanting a more structured booking experience in Bangkok, venues like Somboon Seafood (Bang Rak) offer a higher-capacity, reservable format in a nearby neighbourhood.
What should a first-timer know about Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)?
- The entire menu is built around char siu , Cantonese barbecue pork , so do not arrive expecting broad Thai-Chinese variety. The focus is intentional and the quality reflects it.
- The venue is in Bang Kho Laem, south of the river. It requires a deliberate trip rather than a casual pass-by; factor in travel time from central Bangkok.
- Hours are not confirmed in our database. Verify before travelling, especially if making a dedicated trip. The viral reputation means the place draws consistent traffic , mid-week and early service are your safest bets for a shorter wait.
- At ฿ pricing, the risk of a disappointing visit is low. This is a sensible first stop if you are building a Bangkok eating day around the southern riverside neighbourhoods.
Compare Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem) | Thai-Chinese | ฿ | Tang Jai Yang’s chef started cooking char siu, or Cantonese-style barbecue pork, for family and friends before selling it online. There, it went viral, so he opened this understated place. Since almost every dish on the menu contains the succulent pork, you can’t really go wrong.; Tang Jai Yang’s chef started cooking char siu, or Cantonese-style barbecue pork, for family and friends before selling it online. There, it went viral, so he opened this understated place. Since almost every dish on the menu contains the succulent pork, you can’t really go wrong. | Easy | — |
| Sorn | Southern Thai | ฿฿฿฿ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Baan Tepa | Thai contemporary | ฿฿฿฿ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Côte by Mauro Colagreco | Mediterranean, Modern Cuisine | ฿฿฿฿ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Gaa | Modern Indian, Indian | ฿฿฿฿ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Sühring | German | ฿฿฿฿ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Bangkok for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)?
Order the char siu — it is the entire point of the visit. The chef built his reputation on Cantonese-style barbecue pork before this restaurant even existed, and virtually every dish on the menu features it. Pick any format that suits you, rice bowl or noodles, and you will be eating the thing that made this place.
Can Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem) accommodate groups?
It is a compact, understated spot in Bang Kho Laem — not a venue built around large-group dining. Small groups of two to four should be fine, but anyone planning a bigger table should arrive early or call ahead if contact details become available. At ฿ pricing, the bill stays low regardless of party size.
What should a first-timer know about Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem)?
This is a no-frills, single-focus spot on Chan Road in Bang Kho Laem — not a destination restaurant with a booking system. The chef originally sold his char siu online before demand pushed him to open a physical place, so expect a casual, queue-and-eat format rather than table service. Come hungry, come early, and do not overthink the menu.
What is Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem) known for?
Tang Jai Yang (Bang Kho Laem) is primarily known for Thai-Chinese in Bangkok.
Recognized By
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