Street food sustains you in the first months. It is cheap, it is everywhere, and the quality is genuinely extraordinary. But at some point — and most long-term residents can tell you exactly when it happened — you realise that being fed is not the same as cooking. One is convenience. The other is something closer to home.
Cooking at home in Thailand is an act of settlement. It says: I am here long enough to have a kitchen. I am here long enough to know where to buy things. I am building a life, not staying somewhere temporarily.
Where to Find What You Miss
The question almost every British expat eventually asks is some version of: where do I find proper bacon? Or decent cheddar? Or tinned tomatoes that don't cost three times what they should?
The answer depends on where you are. In Bangkok, the options are genuinely excellent. Gourmet Market at EmQuartier and Siam Paragon carries most imported goods at a premium. Villa Market — particularly the branches at Sukhumvit 33 and Thonglor — has the most consistent Western selection in the city. Tops supermarket in larger branches stocks a reliable range of imports. For specialty items, Foodland on Sukhumvit 50 is a long-standing expat favourite with a deli counter and a meat section that cuts to order.
In Chiang Mai, Rimping Supermarket is the benchmark. It carries imported cheese, European charcuterie, a good wine section, and a fresh meat counter that most expats consider the best in the north. Tops at Maya Mall and Promenada are adequate alternatives. The Saturday morning market near Nimman also has artisan imported produce from local small suppliers worth exploring.
In Phuket and Koh Samui, the range is narrower and the prices higher — island supply chains add a premium that does not reduce over time. The dedicated expat supermarkets such as Casa in Phuket and Friendship Supermarket in Pattaya exist specifically to serve this demand and carry ranges that Tops and Lotus do not.
Start With What You Know
The instinct to immediately learn Thai cooking is understandable but it is not where to start. Start with the dishes you already know how to make. Your favourite recipes from home. The meals that feel like comfort rather than performance.
This matters more than it sounds. Cooking familiar food in an unfamiliar environment is a form of self-care. The smell of a roast in the oven, a pot of chilli on the hob, a proper English breakfast — these smells and tastes carry a kind of reassurance that nothing else in the early months quite provides.
Most ingredients you need for Western cooking are available in Thailand. Bacon, good cheese, pasta, tinned tomatoes — all accessible at the right stores. The gaps narrow the longer you live here, as you discover substitutions and local equivalents that work just as well.
Resident Reflection
The kitchen is where the transition from visitor to resident becomes physical. A fridge stocked with your preferences, a cupboard arranged to your habits, a gas hob you know how to light — these small domesticities are not trivial. They are the infrastructure of belonging.
Cooking as a Way In
One of the quieter pleasures of cooking at home in Thailand is what happens when you cook more than you need. Sharing food with neighbours is one of the most natural ways to begin relationships that might otherwise take much longer to form.
You do not need to speak fluent Thai to share a plate of food. The gesture is the communication. And the reciprocal invitations to eat that follow are among the most direct routes to genuine acceptance that Thailand offers.
Learning Thai Cooking
Once you are settled and your kitchen feels like yours, Thai cooking becomes the natural next step. It is not complicated in the way French or Indian cooking can be. The ingredient combinations are precise but the technique is straightforward. High heat, fresh ingredients, fast cooking.
The essentials are fish sauce, oyster sauce, soy sauce, palm sugar, lime, fresh chilli, galangal, lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves, and Thai basil. With these ingredients and a gas burner at high heat, a passable pad kra pao is not far away.
The most useful teacher is not a cookbook. It is watching. The woman at the market who makes fresh papaya salad in thirty seconds. The vendor at the end of your soi who has been doing the same five dishes for twenty years. Thailand is an open kitchen. Pay attention to what people are actually doing and the cooking will follow.
Which routine has become part of your life without you noticing?
The kitchen is often where we notice it first. The pan you reach for without thinking. The spice you added without measuring. The meal that stopped feeling foreign.