“Very popular, fashionable, spacious, brunchy, relaxed. Good coffee, puds and gallery. Don’t miss it.
Luxe Bangkok, Luxe Asia Limited - January 2007 |
"With floor-to-ceiling windows and concrete floors, Kuppa is a chic and modern restaurant set in a loft-style house...A colourful menu offering unique international fare along with a number of Thai-inspired specialities makes this restaurant, run by interior designer Robin Jertjun Lourvanij, a popular dining spot among Thais and foreigners alike..."
Naphalai Areesorn, Thailand Tatler - January 2007 |
“This cafe restaurant is worth a visit of only to see the unique space, a former warehouse now a chic, modern interior, housing the offices of owner and interior designer Robin Lourvanij, a woman who shares her time and heart between Bangkok and Australia. Come for the coffee and don’t miss the hulking roaster machine, a centerpiece of the dining area where they roast their own blend weekly. The food is delicious: a healthy sampling of unique Thai and Western fare and good staff to fill the homesick tummies of expats and visitors.”
Charles Agar, Frommer's Thailand - January 2006 |
"A former warehouse situated in a quiet neighborhood has been transformed into a chic, modern interior, with different types of seating arrangements...This restaurant is worth a visit for the atmosphere and quality of food it offers. Kuppa provides a good sampling of unique international fare, some with Thai inspiration, to satisfy both thai and foreign diners..."
Naphalai Areesorn, Thailand Tatler - January 2006 |
"Bangkok's sophisticated thirtysomethings browse magazines and enjoy their tete-a-tete over espressos in a huge room of comfortable sofas, blond wood and brushed metal, with a giant coffee roaster in the corner. Decent international and Thai food. Art gallery upstairs."
Howard Richardson, Insight City Guide ---- Bangkok - January 2005 |
"...Kuppa serves solid, cafe-style dishes, everything from breakfast to munchies and dinner, some Thai, others Western, the rest fusion..."
Pla Muk Yak, Bangkok Post - January 2003 |
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