LogoKrathong
Long candlelit dining table set with clay dishware and linen, shallow depth of field collapsing far end into golden bokeh

Twelve Seats. One Night.
No Menu.

A Thai supper for strangers. Charcoal-roasted, hand-pounded, family-style. Bangkok · New York

See the meal
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The Meal

No menu. Just this.

Every course changes with the season, the market, and whoever is cooking that night. What follows is what it feels like.

Overhead close-up of a clay mortar with pounded red chilies and shrimp paste, hands visible at edges
First Course

The sting arrives before the bowl.

Bird's eye chili, bruised in a clay mortar with shrimp paste and lime. A nam prik that makes your scalp tighten. Eaten with raw vegetables pulled from the garden that morning, blistered long beans, and wedges of green mango that cut through the heat like cold water.

Extreme close-up of fresh bird's eye chilies, red and green, abstract texture
Second Course
Overhead shot of braised pork belly in dark clay bowl, spoon mid-pour of braising liquid, hands reaching
Second Course

Fatty. Sweet. Slow.

Pork belly braised for six hours in palm sugar and five-spice, until the fat trembles when the bowl is set down. Served in a wide clay vessel with steamed jasmine rice that has been resting since morning, and a handful of picked cilantro that wilts on contact.

Close-up abstract texture of toasted rice powder scattered on dark surface
Third Course
Overhead intimate shot of golden Massaman curry in wide ceramic bowl, kaffir lime leaf floating on surface, hands reaching from both sides
Third Course

Coconut cracked open this afternoon.

A Massaman curry that took three days — galangal roasted directly on charcoal until blackened, whole spices dry-toasted, coconut milk pressed fresh. The kind of curry that no restaurant dares put on a menu because it cannot be made fast. Served with roti that blisters at the edges.

Extreme close-up of fresh kaffir lime leaves, abstract veining texture, deep green
Fourth Course
Overhead close-up of pandan coconut ice in small ceramic cup, vivid green against cream-colored ceramic, condensation visible
Fourth Course

Cold shock. Hot tongue.

Pandan-wrapped coconut ice, pressed into a small ceramic cup and served immediately after the curry. The green is vivid, almost unreal. It lasts thirty seconds. Then someone at the table says something and everyone laughs and the evening shifts into the part where strangers exchange numbers.

Abstract close-up of pandan leaves, vivid green fibrous texture
Who Sits Here

Twelve seats. Three kinds of guest.

Intimate candlelit dinner scene, two people at a table, hands close, warm amber light, food and wine visible
The Couples

They've eaten everywhere.

They stopped telling people where they went because nobody believed them. They come here because a meal that ends with twelve strangers exchanging numbers is the story they've been hunting. This is it.

60%of seats go to couples
Overhead shot of a dinner table with people leaning in conversation, glasses raised, warm candlelight, clay dishware
The Creative Directors

They've tried every private dining room in the city.

They need a dinner their clients are still talking about in the car home. A meal that isn't a backdrop — one that is the story.

average rebookings per year
Close overhead shot of Thai dishes in clay bowls on a teak table, hands reaching for food, warm candlelight
The Expat Thais

They grew up eating dishes that don't exist on any menu here. Nahm prik maeng da. Gaeng som from their grandmother's village. They come to Krathong and find, for one night, that the food tastes like it was made for them. Because it was.

4regional Thai traditions per supper

Sound like you?

Twelve seats. Supper begins at 7pm. Ends when the last candle goes out.

Reserve Your Seat
What guests say
"I've eaten at Eleven Madison, at Noma, at a market stall in Chiang Rai at 6am. Krathong is the meal I talk about most."
PS

Priya Subramaniam

Food writer · New York

"We book a table for two clients every quarter. They always ask if we can do it again. That's never happened with anything else."
MA

Marcus Andersen

Creative Director · Brooklyn

"The Gaeng Tai Pla. I haven't tasted that since my grandmother's kitchen in Nakhon Si Thammarat. I cried. I wasn't embarrassed."
NW

Nattaporn Wattana

Architect · Manhattan

Upcoming suppers
Sat, 7 March 2026
4 seats left
Sat, 14 March 2026
Sold Out
Sat, 21 March 2026
2 seats left
Sat, 28 March 2026
6 seats left
Sat, 4 April 2026
Sold Out
Sat, 11 April 2026
8 seats left
$145per guest

All courses · All pours · Service included · No hidden fees

Sold-out? Join the waitlist when you click a date.

Seats available