Tag: Nam Phuong
Lazy Betty, Bacchanalia, Hayakawa, and more awarded Michelin Stars
The suspense is over. Atlas, Bacchanalia, Hayakawa, Lazy Betty, and Mujo are officially one Michelin Star restaurants. 45 total restaurants rounded out Atlanta's inaugural Michelin Guide—here's what made the cut.
17 AAPI chefs teamed up for a fundraiser for families of the victims of the Atlanta spa shootings. It sold out in hours.
On March 16, the evening a man shot and killed eight people—six of them Asian women—at three different metro Atlanta spas, Thip Athakhanh, owner of Laotian restaurant Snackboxe Bistro, and Mia Orino, of Filipino pop-up Kamayan ATL, were at dinner. “We came home, saw the news, and were shocked about what happened. We knew we had to do something,” says Athakhanh.
Where to eat breakfast on Buford Highway
From Cantonese to Colombian, Vietnamese to Guatemalan
Nam Phuong
Both locations of Nam Phuong are worthwhile starting points to explore the joys of Vietnamese cuisine beyond pho and banh mi.
Best of Atlanta 2018: Food & Drink
The best of Atlanta's food and drink in 2018, including best new restaurant, new chef, zero-proof cocktail, healthy food, date restaurant, and more.
Bored with salads? Try cold Asian noodles for lunch.
I often find myself torn between eating big salads or Asian noodles for lunch. And when it's still warm out, cold noodles are the way to go. Here are five great dishes to try in metro Atlanta.
6 Atlanta soups to soothe what ails you
Never doubt the ability of a warm bowl to provide instant comfort, whether you are looking to soothe a cold, a broken heart, or a dreary day. Here are six Atlanta favorites.
Fresh on the Scene: 5Church Atlanta, Ba Bellies, 101 Steak, and Ton Ton
Get the early word on four new Atlanta restaurants: 5Church Atlanta at Colony Square, Ba Bellies in Peachtree Corners, 101 Steak in Vinings, and Ton Ton at Ponce City Market.
Nam Phuong
I sat in the foyer of Nam Phuong in Norcross, hunched over my iPhone and madly Googling the names of Vietnamese dishes I'd never heard of before. On the restaurant's back wall, a glowing white screen broadcast the restaurant's daily specials. The program running the projection rhythmically underlined the words over and over again—the PowerPoint equivalent of a broken record. The dishes were listed only in Vietnamese.