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Has Anyone Tried The Three Little Pigs Soul Kitchen Resturant


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Posted

At least Richard is honest: when I told him the pork sandwich was the best I'd had since leaving the US, he said "you're lucky you weren't here three weeks ago."

My second trip was to try the ribs. They were quite tasty, and the portion was enormous. As is often the case with ribs that have been refrigerated and reheated, they were a bit dry. More sauce solved the problem.

I have to agree with the comment about needing more mustard in the potato salad, and a little vinegar would perk up the cole slaw.

My companion had Mexican dishes, and wasn't happy with either. I tried them, and had to agree they were missing something.

I'll be back in a couple of days to try the chicken.

Posted

My offer to go in there and assist good ole saint nick stands....i ate there and it needs "tweeking"bad

i attnd culinary arts in 1987..born/raised usa...been cooking over 25 yrs..

made the mistake of teaching the crew at R-mp--ng my secrets as u can see they are still selling well at the airport location...sold so well thet rebuilt a whole new kitchen for it--tell them i said "ur welcome"

id love to score a pit beef...red onion---homemade bbq sauce---horseradish--straight up---rare...

If you want to help them, why don't you just cook them a great BBQ and take it in for them to Taste.

If it's GREAT they might decide to invite you to help out with consulting or something.

Think you mentioned being from Boston.... maybe someone else said that... but what does Boston know about good BBQ?

LOL, just joking...

Posted

Think you mentioned being from Boston.... maybe someone else said that... but what does Boston know about good BBQ?

Chiang Mai could use some good Boston baked beans. That was the best thing on the old Hell's Kitchen's menu (besides the excellent deviled eggs which I also miss).

  • Like 1
Posted

I'm the one from Boston (and even won a baked bean contest against many Chef's incl. all the major hotels in Beantown). If one knows how to cook and understands food science etc. as a chef should it doesn't matter where he's from they may be able to cook anything esp. since most chef's have trained in different places to gain experience (except don't tell a Thai a falang can make Thai food - lol). Anyway Vacationman might just be a Yankee fan. Sticky Rice Balls where did you go to school? I'm a CIA man. We have a nice (American style) bbq at home here and my Thai family always asks for ribs ect.

  • 1 month later...
Posted

I dropped by for lunch on Friday, and met the new chef. She's from Boston, and is professionally trained.

Everything was already different from my previous three visits, and her influence is clear.

Look out for a unique interpretation of apple pie in the future.

Richard said he plans an opening night September 29. After 7ish.

  • 1 year later...
Posted

My girlfriend and I tried the "Three Little Pigs" restaurant today for lunch. I had the barbecue ribs and she had the barbecue chicken. Both were excellent with generous portions and not expensive. I'll return for sure. Another excellent restaurant to add to the many great restaurants in CM. smile.png

Posted

No one seems to have mentioned the Gumbo, i think its excellent.

Contains pulled pork, sausage & shrimp, fantastic rich sauce.

Gumbo special comes with rice, slaw, cornbread & iced tea.

Posted

Mmm. The gumbo sounds good. We went last week and had the catfish po'boy and the pulled pork sandwich. We put some of the slaw on the po'boy and it was a little difficult to eat, but we cut it into sections and that worked out. It was pretty good. The pulled pork sandwich was good and the beans were quite flavorful. We will try to eat here again. While we were waiting, we were watching a guy taking dough rolling it out and making flour tortillas (I assume). I might have to try something with tortillas!

Posted

I've been by this place many times and have never seen many customers. As someone else mentioned, this is often not a good sign. I am craving a big helping of red beans & rice, but I doubt it can be done right here. You need smoked ham hocks, with meat falling off the bone to do it right. Never have seen those around here.

The gumbo...do they make it up fresh and often, or is it done in a big batch, frozen, and served until the batch runs out? What is in it? You can't dick around with gumbo, that's a venial sin.

No corn bread?? Gotta have fresh hot corn bread.

Then there's the "free chips". If these are same ones served at El Diablo's they put your dental work in peril, and are best avoided, unless you are really hungry and unafraid of a little pain. Thick, over-large, hard, dangerous! As for El D's being "authentic Mexican food", please...It's a fair interpretation, and miles ahead of that joint across the road (corner Moon Muang & Ratchwithi) but authentic, it is not. I'll go in for a burrito when I'm REALLY hungry. I like their music selection, usually. The lime mint drink is very good. Backpackers haven.

The BBQ pulled pork sandwich sounds worthy of trial, but the sauce should already be in the meat (IMHO), not poured from a jar.

I'll give the place a try. If I don't like it I won't say anything. If I like it I'll give 'em a plug. I'm no twitchy "foodie", and am fairly easy to please. You've gotta be, around here, I think.

Posted

One of my favorite places. I don't care for gumbo too much but have had it there and it was O.K. Just about everything is very good there. I like the slow cooked, smoked, BBQ hamburger there even better than Duke's burgers.

If you go in the evenings you will see 3 or 4 people rolling the dough (corn) and making the tortilla chips for El Diablos. It's quite an operation!

Richard is good host and a bit of a character too. Portions are generous.

Posted

I've been by this place many times and have never seen many customers. As someone else mentioned, this is often not a good sign. I am craving a big helping of red beans & rice, but I doubt it can be done right here. You need smoked ham hocks, with meat falling off the bone to do it right. Never have seen those around here.

The gumbo...do they make it up fresh and often, or is it done in a big batch, frozen, and served until the batch runs out? What is in it? You can't dick around with gumbo, that's a venial sin.

No corn bread?? Gotta have fresh hot corn bread.

Then there's the "free chips". If these are same ones served at El Diablo's they put your dental work in peril, and are best avoided, unless you are really hungry and unafraid of a little pain. Thick, over-large, hard, dangerous! As for El D's being "authentic Mexican food", please...It's a fair interpretation, and miles ahead of that joint across the road (corner Moon Muang & Ratchwithi) but authentic, it is not. I'll go in for a burrito when I'm REALLY hungry. I like their music selection, usually. The lime mint drink is very good. Backpackers haven.

The BBQ pulled pork sandwich sounds worthy of trial, but the sauce should already be in the meat (IMHO), not poured from a jar.

I'll give the place a try. If I don't like it I won't say anything. If I like it I'll give 'em a plug. I'm no twitchy "foodie", and am fairly easy to please. You've gotta be, around here, I think.

Sometimes there are few customers and other times it's packed. We went about a month ago and it was absolutely packed with Chinese tourists. Business seems to be fine there.

As I recall, the gumbo is made every couple of days. It takes almost an entire day to simmer one pot. Not frozen. They have corn bread. I like the chips there and at El Diablos, but to each their own. Never seen any backpackers in there before. The burger is around 240 Baht so not really their kind of place. The pulled pork sandwich is excellent. Sauce is not poured from a jar. Give it a try.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

My girlfriend and I tried the "Three Little Pigs" restaurant today for lunch. I had the barbecue ribs and she had the barbecue chicken. Both were excellent with generous portions and not expensive. I'll return for sure. Another excellent restaurant to add to the many great restaurants in CM. smile.png

I finally tried this place today, and I give this fine establishment my hearty endorsement. I had the BBQ chicken, red beans, and mac & cheese sides. The mac & cheese were OK, but not great. The chicken was slow cooked on the big kettle, and the chef paid careful attention throughout the cook, which took about 1/2 hour. The chicken was impressive, with three large and tender pieces, full size like in the States, not the usual anemic, tough, bantamweight chicken that one usually finds around here.

A most pleasant surprise was the red beans, full of smoked sausage slices. Really superbly done, New Orleans style. I grew up eating red beans and rice at least weekly, and these brought back memories. Next time I will order red beans and rice for the main dish. So good!

I'll be back, soon.

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Just wanted to add to what I hope are the rave reviews for 3 Little Pigs. If you're at all familiar with Southern US cuisine, then you'll love the place. It's authentic and well-prepared, and the fellow running the place is a real character right out of a Harper Lee novel.

We had the ribs (superb, far better than Duke's or other places in CM) which came with a wide range of authentic sides while my son had a po' boy sandwich, also excellent. Service was good, price was very reasonable, portions were American. Highly recommended!

  • Like 1
Posted

We have been here several times and its always a hit and a miss. Sometimes the ribs are good, other times like chewy leather.

Macaroni and cheese - avoid at all costs.

The "free" jalapeno muffins are very good.

Skip the "Mexican" items.... Mexican do not use black olives in any dish.

Very nice clean restrooms!

Posted

We have been here several times and its always a hit and a miss. Sometimes the ribs are good, other times like chewy leather.

Macaroni and cheese - avoid at all costs.

The "free" jalapeno muffins are very good.

Skip the "Mexican" items.... Mexican do not use black olives in any dish.

Very nice clean restrooms!

It is a California thing, (olives) very spanish Californio, Calif. tamles sometimes have black olives, have heard they are catching on south of the border also. .. Mex food evolves, rice, cheese, beef, wheat, all spanish intros, all now Mex. staples.

3 little pigs does great black bean tacos.

  • 2 years later...
Posted

Well I haven't been yet, but plan to the next time there (in CM). I hope it's still opened then, tired of being a day late and a dollar short! I'll certainly chime in after my appetite is curbed. pg

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Well, I finally got to try 3LPs....I told the owner, he now has a customer for life! The gumbo was beyond delicious and it was all my wife and I could do to eat that and a pulled pork BBQ sandwich.  I was sad I didn't have room to try more. Next time I will try some tacos and do their breakfast some morning. Although...I think waiting until 10 for breakfast is a wee past my breakfast time, I will endure. I especially loved looking through the menu...it is like a history book from the past, especially if you're from down south, like I am. I can't believe I've been here for the past 9 years and have just now learned about this place....oh well, better late than never, eh? Now, if he'll just put chicken and dumplings on that menu! pg

Posted

I ate there a few years ago.  Had a pulled pork sandwich that was pretty good.  Now that you've brought it up, it may be time to head back sometime. 

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