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Good Mexican Food


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#1 grtaylor

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Posted 2006-10-15 09:05:12

I have a friend who works in Bangkok who is from California. He says the ONLY thing he misses here is good Mexican food.  So, I said I'd put a message here, asking about Mexican Restaurants.

Which is the best?

Thanks,
G

Edited by grtaylor, 2006-10-15 09:05:35.


#2 fxm88

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Posted 2006-10-15 10:02:34

http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=16596
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=17569
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=28183
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=28185
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=35674
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=38713
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=49734
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=53219
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=64628
http://www.thaivisa....showtopic=83737
etc.
etc.
etc.

#3 grtaylor

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Posted 2006-10-15 11:22:12

Point taken. I should have searched.

However, in an effort to narrow down the huge selection you gave me, I just now searched for "mexican restaurant bangkok" and got the following response:

Quote

"The error returned was:
Sorry, but we did not find any matches to display. Try again and broaden your search criteria. If you were searching for new posts since your last visit, it's possible that there are none to show."

I then tried "mexican food bangkok" and got the same result.

Anyway the general concensus seems to be: Senor Pico's, Charley Brown's, and Tia Maria in Bangkok.

Thanks.
G

#4 Ulysses G.

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Posted 2006-10-17 20:21:38

The only GOOD Mexican food that I have ever had in Thailand is at Miguel's California Cafe in Chiang Mai. Sometimes the proprietor sweats in your food, but it tastes good and may be more authentic.  :o

#5 tutsiwarrior

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Posted 2006-10-17 22:32:50

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA so get used to a closest substitute...

someone said that Senor Picos at the Rembrandt was acceptable but I say no...it is junk and a disgrace to mexican cuisine worldwide...Senor Pico is a worldwide chain... there was an outlet near my place in Bahrain...sum folks seem to think that 'fajitas' represent the best that mexican cuisine has to offer...bullshed...never heard of 'fajitas' except in the last 20 years. The test of a restaurant was always how they did their chiles rellenos...

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...

Edited by tutsiwarrior, 2006-10-17 23:01:50.


#6 on-on

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Posted 2006-10-18 13:15:05

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 09:32:50, said:

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...
I've always wondered why this is.  I'm from Texas, home of the world's favorite variety of Mexican food (and Houston no less, where we invented it), so your opinion and mine on what constitutes good Mexican food will differ, but surely we could all come together on some decent chips and salsa.  I am frequently amazed in Thailand that no one can get this right.  I freely admit that I haven't eaten everywhere, but I've tried the Mexican at a lot of places - some of them highly recommended - and everything's been (even the chips and salsa) really poor so far.  Expats here do so many other cuisines pretty well - I've had great Shwarma at the Lebanese place, pretty decent Italian and Indian, but never Mexican.  Maybe one day when I open the bar (a regular bar) that I am forever mentally planning to open I'll see if I can conquer the challenge of chips and salsa in Thailand.  I already make better salsa than anything I've had in Asia, so the real challenge is the chips.  They'd be a pain in the ass to hand-make, though it could be done, but I have yet to find any truly decent ones (Tia Rosa por vida!) off the shelf in Bangers, so I don't think there's any other option.

On a side note, I used to also miss BBQ being from Texas.  Now, the stuff they serve at The Great American Rib Company is a completely different variety than we cook in Texas, but Goddamn it's pretty good.  They're friendly guys to boot, met them at their HH location when it was new.  Anyway, hats off to Robb and Wes and the guys there who have allowed me to scratch BBQ (real smoked barbecue, not cooked on a grill like the rest of the world thinks is barbecue) off my list of stuff that you can't get an edible version of in Asia.

Edited by on-on, 2006-10-18 13:18:14.


#7 palm

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Posted 2007-04-07 12:08:25

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 22:32:50, said:

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA so get used to a closest substitute...

someone said that Senor Picos at the Rembrandt was acceptable but I say no...it is junk and a disgrace to mexican cuisine worldwide...Senor Pico is a worldwide chain... there was an outlet near my place in Bahrain...sum folks seem to think that 'fajitas' represent the best that mexican cuisine has to offer...bullshed...never heard of 'fajitas' except in the last 20 years. The test of a restaurant was always how they did their chiles rellenos...

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...

Actually the food at Tia Maria's is good (and I lived in SE Mexico on and off for a few years, so have some experience). The margaritas are nice  too. If only the place wasn't such a dump. It's certainly much tastier food than Coyote's and SenorPico's fast-food style.

#8 TRIPxCORE

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Posted 2007-04-07 15:58:32

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 08:32:50, said:

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA

You sure? I thought the Mexican food in Mexico is pretty good.   :o

#9 WaiWai

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Posted 2007-04-07 17:32:39

Quote

The only GOOD Mexican food that I have ever had in Thailand is at Miguel's California Cafe in Chiang Mai. Sometimes the proprietor sweats in your food, but it tastes good and may be more authentic.

Heh  :o ! Kinda salty, is it ?

There's a frozen brand, El Chorro, that seems not too bad (though I have to state I am Australian & have little experience of genuine Mexican food.)

#10 mackayae

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Posted 2007-04-07 20:47:52

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 22:32:50, said:

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA so get used to a closest substitute...

someone said that Senor Picos at the Rembrandt was acceptable but I say no...it is junk and a disgrace to mexican cuisine worldwide...Senor Pico is a worldwide chain... there was an outlet near my place in Bahrain...sum folks seem to think that 'fajitas' represent the best that mexican cuisine has to offer...bullshed...never heard of 'fajitas' except in the last 20 years. The test of a restaurant was always how they did their chiles rellenos...

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...
Senor Pico, Bangkok, and Senor Paco's, Bahrain, are not related. Nor are they part of a chain.

#11 brahmburgers

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Posted 2007-04-08 09:31:33

I'm also from California, and have toured Mexico extensively ...and I sorely miss Mexican food here mucho!   A couple places in Chiang Mai are ok (Art Cafe by Tapae Gate - thought their enchiladas were a bit too cheesy last time I tried 'em).  I also enjoyed Charlie Brown's near Sukumvit rd BKK - the one time I was there.  There's but one place in my town of C.Rai, but it's pricy and quality's not up to snuff.  

Mexican cuisine would dovetail well with Thailand - all the basic ingredients are already here.   I think the reason Thais can't readily make salsa is they're too quick to put sugar and other unnecessary spices in it.  The beauty of real salsa (fresh or cooked) is the taste mix of the natural ingredients.   Also, Thais would tend to use medium tomatoes (medium and large tomats in Thailand have little flavor) ...best would be to use organic cherry tomatoes - as they are bursting with flavor and are easier to grow in Thailand's climate.  Maybe I'm subjective about cherry tomats, as I just had a bumper crop of cherry tomats - I wound up giving several kilos away to my favorite hill tribe vege vendor who works off the sidewalk (local authorities won't allow her a stall to sell because she's lower class).   and yea, I'm off topic.

#12 jazzbo

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Posted 2007-04-08 13:19:43

...And all the guys from the USA who have moved to Mexico and Central America are now bemoaning they can't get good Thai food like they did in California...

#13 angsila

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Posted 2007-04-09 07:17:21

View PostTRIPxCORE, on 2007-04-07 15:58:32, said:

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 08:32:50, said:

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA

You sure? I thought the Mexican food in Mexico is pretty good.   :o


Where do you tkink East LA is?

#14 angsila

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Posted 2007-04-09 07:35:35

View Postmackayae, on 2007-04-07 20:47:52, said:

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 22:32:50, said:

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA so get used to a closest substitute...

someone said that Senor Picos at the Rembrandt was acceptable but I say no...it is junk and a disgrace to mexican cuisine worldwide...Senor Pico is a worldwide chain... there was an outlet near my place in Bahrain...sum folks seem to think that 'fajitas' represent the best that mexican cuisine has to offer...bullshed...never heard of 'fajitas' except in the last 20 years. The test of a restaurant was always how they did their chiles rellenos...

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...
Senor Pico, Bangkok, and Senor Paco's, Bahrain, are not related. Nor are they part of a chain.


They say they are from Los Angeles. I have eaten there and won't go back.

#15 tutsiwarrior

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Posted 2007-04-09 17:54:48

View Postmackayae, on 2007-04-07 20:47:52, said:

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 22:32:50, said:

ain't no such thing as 'good mexican food' outside of East LA so get used to a closest substitute...

someone said that Senor Picos at the Rembrandt was acceptable but I say no...it is junk and a disgrace to mexican cuisine worldwide...Senor Pico is a worldwide chain... there was an outlet near my place in Bahrain...sum folks seem to think that 'fajitas' represent the best that mexican cuisine has to offer...bullshed...never heard of 'fajitas' except in the last 20 years. The test of a restaurant was always how they did their chiles rellenos...

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...
Senor Pico, Bangkok, and Senor Paco's, Bahrain, are not related. Nor are they part of a chain.


I stand corrected...Senor Pacos food is crummy as well, hence the confusion...when in Bahrain better to stick to the sidewalk schwarma stands...can't go wrong...

Edited by tutsiwarrior, 2007-04-09 17:56:34.


#16 JoeInSurin

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Posted 2007-04-10 11:09:36

How far off of Sukhumvit Road is Tia Maria?

It's not in Bangkok but if your ever in Korat go to the Big Chili. They have good Mexican food and Margaritas.

#17 Clipped

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Posted 2007-04-10 23:27:31

ive been to  tia twice, the second time was only to give it a second chance...there will not be a third.

#18 farangene

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Posted 2007-04-11 13:24:08

View PostClipped, on 2007-04-10 23:27:31, said:

ive been to  tia twice, the second time was only to give it a second chance...there will not be a third.


Tia Maria served the most horrible mexican food I have ever eaten in my life.  I couldn't finish it and left to go eat somewhere else.  

I can't understand why it is still open.

#19 Mr_Dave

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Posted 2007-04-11 14:48:58

View Postfarangene, on 2007-04-11 13:24:08, said:

View PostClipped, on 2007-04-10 23:27:31, said:

ive been to  tia twice, the second time was only to give it a second chance...there will not be a third.
Tia Maria served the most horrible mexican food I have ever eaten in my life.  I couldn't finish it and left to go eat somewhere else.  I can't understand why it is still open.
I love Mexican food.
If there's a Mexican restaurant in any area where I go, I'll make the effort to try it.
I've eaten at little cantinas in West Texas and off the food trucks in South Central Los Angeles, as well as more conventional restaurants in many cities.

Tia Maria -- right here in Bangkok -- is one of my all-time favorites.
I just discovered it about 2 months ago.
Since then I've been back four times, and I'm ready to go again: perhaps this evening, before the Songkran madness begins.

I like the food at Tia Maria, because it is home style and fresh, not restaurant style.
The refried beans appear to be mashed by hand, not come from a can.
The enchilada sauce seems home-made, again, not from a can.
The Spanish rice seems to have bits of fresh tomatoes, not dried tomatoes from a food-service package.
The taco shells are crisp and warm and seem to be freshly heated, rather than just taken out of a plastic package.
All of that, and more, is what keeps me returning to Tia Maria.

The flavours and spices are mild by Mexican standards, and that suits me just fine.
But at every meal, five different hot sauces are provided for those who like more heat.

The restaurant itself is un-assuming.
Unlike the more famous Senor Pico in the Rembrandt Hotel, there is no live-band, no fancy plates.
At Tia Maria, the decor is plain, the drinks list unassuming, and the music from a CD.
That's fine with me -- I go for the food.

Tia Maria is in a very awkward location.
Too far to walk from Asoke subway or Phrom Pong skytrain.
Difficult to notice for passing traffic.
And the sign is not large or bright.
So it's a bit of a hide-a-way.
But I'm pleased to have discovered it.
The food is some of the best, home-style, Mexican food I've ever tasted.

If you need more details about how to find the location, you are welcome to send email or PM to me.
.

#20 farangene

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Posted 2007-04-11 22:31:38

It has been 2 or 3 years since I ate at Tia Maria so I will give them the benefit of the doubt.


However, I don't plan to visit there again.

#21 JR Texas

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Posted 2007-04-25 14:46:00

View Poston-on, on 2006-10-18 13:15:05, said:

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 09:32:50, said:

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...
I've always wondered why this is.  I'm from Texas, home of the world's favorite variety of Mexican food (and Houston no less, where we invented it), so your opinion and mine on what constitutes good Mexican food will differ, but surely we could all come together on some decent chips and salsa.  I am frequently amazed in Thailand that no one can get this right.  I freely admit that I haven't eaten everywhere, but I've tried the Mexican at a lot of places - some of them highly recommended - and everything's been (even the chips and salsa) really poor so far.  Expats here do so many other cuisines pretty well - I've had great Shwarma at the Lebanese place, pretty decent Italian and Indian, but never Mexican.  Maybe one day when I open the bar (a regular bar) that I am forever mentally planning to open I'll see if I can conquer the challenge of chips and salsa in Thailand.  I already make better salsa than anything I've had in Asia, so the real challenge is the chips.  They'd be a pain in the ass to hand-make, though it could be done, but I have yet to find any truly decent ones (Tia Rosa por vida!) off the shelf in Bangers, so I don't think there's any other option.

On a side note, I used to also miss BBQ being from Texas.  Now, the stuff they serve at The Great American Rib Company is a completely different variety than we cook in Texas, but Goddamn it's pretty good.  They're friendly guys to boot, met them at their HH location when it was new.  Anyway, hats off to Robb and Wes and the guys there who have allowed me to scratch BBQ (real smoked barbecue, not cooked on a grill like the rest of the world thinks is barbecue) off my list of stuff that you can't get an edible version of in Asia.


JR Texas:  Tutsiwarrier, can you say El Fenix?  Yes, I am from Texas.  The first Tex-Mex was El Fenix in Dallas, not Forth Worth (hummmm I feel an argument coming on).  And no, sadly you can't find Mexican food or Tex-Mex in Thailand (I did read somewhere that there is a place in Chiang Mai that might actually be serving Mexican food but I have yet to eat there).

You are from Texas and think that The Great American Rib Company offers people smoked BBQ like back home?  I find that hard to believe.  You no doubt have a great imagination.  The food at TGARC is OK and I am glad they are attempting to make smoked BBQ, but it is not real smoked BBQ like back home in the great nation of TEXAS.

Tutsiwarrier.......are you interesting in making genuine Mexican food and smoked BBQ?  I know how to do both...at least Texas versions of both.

#22 tutsiwarrior

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Posted 2007-04-26 11:20:34

View PostJR Texas, on 2007-04-25 14:46:00, said:

View Poston-on, on 2006-10-18 13:15:05, said:

View Posttutsiwarrior, on 2006-10-17 09:32:50, said:

there is large scope for an enterprising individual to set up a GOOD mexican restaurant in BKK, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime...
I've always wondered why this is. I'm from Texas, home of the world's favorite variety of Mexican food (and Houston no less, where we invented it), so your opinion and mine on what constitutes good Mexican food will differ, but surely we could all come together on some decent chips and salsa. I am frequently amazed in Thailand that no one can get this right. I freely admit that I haven't eaten everywhere, but I've tried the Mexican at a lot of places - some of them highly recommended - and everything's been (even the chips and salsa) really poor so far. Expats here do so many other cuisines pretty well - I've had great Shwarma at the Lebanese place, pretty decent Italian and Indian, but never Mexican. Maybe one day when I open the bar (a regular bar) that I am forever mentally planning to open I'll see if I can conquer the challenge of chips and salsa in Thailand. I already make better salsa than anything I've had in Asia, so the real challenge is the chips. They'd be a pain in the ass to hand-make, though it could be done, but I have yet to find any truly decent ones (Tia Rosa por vida!) off the shelf in Bangers, so I don't think there's any other option.

On a side note, I used to also miss BBQ being from Texas. Now, the stuff they serve at The Great American Rib Company is a completely different variety than we cook in Texas, but Goddamn it's pretty good. They're friendly guys to boot, met them at their HH location when it was new. Anyway, hats off to Robb and Wes and the guys there who have allowed me to scratch BBQ (real smoked barbecue, not cooked on a grill like the rest of the world thinks is barbecue) off my list of stuff that you can't get an edible version of in Asia.


JR Texas: Tutsiwarrier, can you say El Fenix? Yes, I am from Texas. The first Tex-Mex was El Fenix in Dallas, not Forth Worth (hummmm I feel an argument coming on). And no, sadly you can't find Mexican food or Tex-Mex in Thailand (I did read somewhere that there is a place in Chiang Mai that might actually be serving Mexican food but I have yet to eat there).

You are from Texas and think that The Great American Rib Company offers people smoked BBQ like back home? I find that hard to believe. You no doubt have a great imagination. The food at TGARC is OK and I am glad they are attempting to make smoked BBQ, but it is not real smoked BBQ like back home in the great nation of TEXAS.

Tutsiwarrier.......are you interesting in making genuine Mexican food and smoked BBQ? I know how to do both...at least Texas versions of both.


JR...you got me confused with on-on who was replying to one of my posts. Other than salsa and guacamole I haven't attempted to make mexican food while out here in the ether...real smoked BBQ requires a specialized apparatus such as what Flint's Ribs have got behind the counter in Oakland, CA...I'll do my ribs in de oven and de chicken on de grill fer de time bein'...

folks may want to try out sunrise tacos just opened on sukh btw 8 & 12 (?) as has been discussed on another thread...sounds like they got the real goods; it'll be my first stop when back in BKK on rotation from camel jockey land...

#23 palm

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Posted 2007-04-27 12:30:08

I like the food at Tia Maria, because it is home style and fresh, not restaurant style.
The refried beans appear to be mashed by hand, not come from a can.
The enchilada sauce seems home-made, again, not from a can.
The Spanish rice seems to have bits of fresh tomatoes, not dried tomatoes from a food-service package.
The taco shells are crisp and warm and seem to be freshly heated, rather than just taken out of a plastic package.
All of that, and more, is what keeps me returning to Tia Maria.

The flavours and spices are mild by Mexican standards, and that suits me just fine.
But at every meal, five different hot sauces are provided for those who like more heat.


Yep, that's what I found too. It's home style and fresh.

The restaurant just badly needs a refurbish.

#24 Soju

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Posted 2007-05-02 17:02:57

View PostJoeInSurin, on 2007-04-10 13:09:36, said:

How far off of Sukhumvit Road is Tia Maria?

It's not in Bangkok but if your ever in Korat go to the Big Chili. They have good Mexican food and Margaritas.

Interesting that wikitravel says Big Chili is in Ubon Ratchathani.  I tend to think wikitravel is incorrect on this point, but their information is quoted several times by other web sites.  There is an old post here in the Isaan forum that talks about the place being in Korat on Chakkree road and having some of the best Mexican food in Thailand and evidently someone just copied that elsewhere but erroneously attributed it to Ubon and not Korat.  Never been to Korat but will have to check the place out if I ever go there.

#25 The Skipper

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Posted 2007-05-03 06:06:20

Tia  Maria.
Could there be a worse restaurant in the entire Kingdom?
I doubt it.
The place is a dump.
AVOID.



 


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