Thai diners whet their appetites at flood café


An estimated 50,000 restaurants have shut down permanently in Thailand, and Chaopraya Antique Café owner Titiporn Jutimanon is grateful that he can keep his doors open. – AFP pic, October 9, 2021.

A THAI restaurant has taken dining with a water view to the next level – its customers perch precariously on wooden stools as murky brown floodwater laps at their tables.

Tropical storm Dianmu and heavy monsoon rains have caused flooding in 33 provinces in Thailand, inundating more than 300,000 households and claiming nine lives.

Bangkok riverside areas are bracing for flooding in the coming days and more storms are expected to hit the kingdom next week.

But the crisis has been a boon for the Chaopraya Antique Café in Nonthaburi, part of the vast sprawl of Bangkok upriver from the city centre.

In the afternoons and evenings, the restaurant is full of diners munching miang kham, a fiery leaf-wrapped appetiser, giggling and jumping on their seats as boats and rice barges cruise past the Chao Phraya River, sending waves of caramel-coloured water towards them.

When the flooding began, owner Titiporn Jutimanon intended to close the restaurant but soon realised customers did not mind being surrounded by water.

“The concept has spread by word of mouth,” he told AFP, adding that footage of the quirky eatery quickly started trending on social media.

Chaopraya Antique Café customers dine and jump on their seats as boats and rice barges cruise past, sending waves of caramel-coloured water towards them. – AFP pic, October 9, 2021.

Restaurants in Bangkok and other hotspots yoyoed in and out of restrictions on in-house dining this year, as a deadly third wave of coronavirus infections took hold.

Thai authorities allowed in-house dining to resume last month, as part of an easing of restrictions as new cases fell to around 10,000 a day, down from a peak of 23,000 in August.

According to the Thai Restaurant Association, an estimated 50,000 restaurants have shut down permanently, and Titiporn is grateful that he can keep his doors open.

“If I have to close the restaurant again, it will not survive for sure,” he said, noting that operating a flooded restaurant is a lot of hard work.

“You have to navigate your way through floodwaters while holding the food,” he said, adding that workers have to also mop up mud at the end of the day.

The experience has proved popular with young people and families.

“The economy is pretty bad these days… I think it is a very good idea. The owner has turned the crisis into an opportunity,” said customer Neung, 49.

Health authorities in many countries have advised people to not expose themselves to or swim in floodwaters.

Faecal matter from overflowing sewage, chemicals and industrial waste can cause illness, and skin infections can occur from contact with open wounds. – AFP, October 9, 2021.


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