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Google: 4.3 · 808 reviews

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CuisineThai
Executive ChefSirichai 'Siri' Kularbwong
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

Singburi built a cult following in Leytonstone before relocating to a larger Shoreditch space in mid-2025, bringing its big-flavoured, generously spiced Thai cooking to a wider audience. Wild ginger chicken thighs and smoked pork belly Panang anchor a concise sharing menu that sits comfortably within London's most considered Thai casual dining tier. Recognised by Opinionated About Dining in 2025.

Singburi restaurant in London, United Kingdom
About

From East London Cult to Shoreditch Fixture

London's Thai dining scene has spent the last decade sorting itself into distinct tiers. At one end sit the high-concept rooms — places like AngloThai and Kolae, where Thai ingredients are filtered through classical European technique or regional southern traditions. At the other end, a dense middle ground of neighbourhood canteens and chain spin-offs. Between those poles, a smaller cohort has emerged: casual Thai restaurants that take the cooking seriously without the ceremony, offering sharing plates of genuine depth at prices that don't require a second thought. Singburi belongs to that cohort.

The restaurant started in Leytonstone, a corner of East London that rarely makes it onto dining maps compiled by critics based in W1. It gathered its following incrementally — the kind that travels across postcodes rather than being delivered by a press night. By mid-2025, demand had outgrown the original site, and Singburi relocated to Unit 7 at Montacute Yards on Shoreditch High Street, a development that has drawn a cluster of independent food and drink operators. The move gave the kitchen more room and gave a considerably larger group of diners access to what the Leytonstone regulars had been quietly recommending for years.

How the Cooking Sits in London's Thai Moment

The contemporary Thai cooking conversation in London has been dominated by a particular style: chefs with Thai roots or Thai training deploying global technique to reframe dishes that British diners think they already know. Farang and Plaza Khao Gaeng represent different points on that spectrum , one leaning into modern refinement, the other into regional specificity. Long Chim brings a Bangkok street-food register to the table. These are the reference points against which serious Thai cooking in London gets assessed.

Singburi's position in this peer set is defined less by technique-led reinvention and more by a commitment to flavour integrity at an accessible price. The menu is concise , a deliberate choice that concentrates effort rather than spreading it thin. Sharing plates carry heat and aromatics that read as genuine rather than calibrated to a median tolerance. Wild ginger chicken thighs and a smoked pork belly Panang have emerged as the dishes that regulars point newcomers toward, two preparations that illustrate where the kitchen's confidence lies: in the layering of spice and the handling of protein, not in decorative plating or elaborate garnish.

For deeper context on how Thai chefs are approaching tradition in Bangkok itself, both Nahm and Samrub Samrub Thai represent the source-end of the conversation , places where historical recipe research and produce sourcing set a benchmark that London's diaspora restaurants increasingly respond to.

The Room and the Counter

The Shoreditch space at Montacute Yards reflects a design approach common to the current wave of serious casual restaurants: legible, unfussy, with a counter built into the layout so the kitchen is visible. That counter serves two functions simultaneously. It lets diners watch how the food is assembled , useful in a cuisine where paste work, wok temperature, and finishing technique determine the outcome , and it provides a front-row view of the cocktail operation, which sits alongside the food programme rather than being an afterthought bolted on for revenue.

The shift from Leytonstone to Shoreditch High Street brings a different energy to the room. Shoreditch operates as one of London's higher-footfall dining corridors, and Montacute Yards draws a mix of local workers, evening diners from across the city, and visitors who have done enough research to look beyond the obvious. The room's capacity increase from the original site means walk-in availability is more realistic than it was in Leytonstone, though the restaurant's OAD recognition in 2025 has sharpened outside interest.

Recognition and Where It Places Singburi

Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list for 2025 provides the clearest external calibration for Singburi's standing. OAD's casual category is assembled from a large survey base of frequent restaurant-goers rather than a small panel of professional critics, which means inclusion reflects sustained performance across many covers rather than a single high-profile review. The restaurant's Google rating of 4.4 across 569 reviews tells a similar story: a consistent record over a meaningful sample rather than a spike driven by a press moment.

For reference, London's most discussed fine dining addresses , rooms like The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, or Moor Hall in Aughton , operate in an entirely different tier of investment, booking lead time, and occasion category. Singburi's peer set is the serious casual tier of London Thai, where the measure is flavour-to-price delivery and the consistency of a kitchen operating at volume without compromise. Within that tier, OAD recognition marks a restaurant that has passed a bar most neighbourhood operations never approach.

Chef Sirichai 'Siri' Kularbwong leads the kitchen. The cooking's emphasis on direct, high-impact flavour over elaborate presentation aligns with a strand of contemporary Thai thought , visible in Bangkok and in London , that treats restraint in plating as a way of foregrounding rather than hiding technique. The concise menu reflects the same logic: fewer dishes executed with more attention rather than a long list covering every base.

Planning Your Visit

Singburi's mid-2025 move to Shoreditch increased capacity, which eases the booking pressure that characterised the Leytonstone years. That said, OAD recognition and a strong review record mean the restaurant draws diners from well outside the immediate neighbourhood, and weekend evenings book ahead. For first visits, the sharing-plate format rewards groups of three or four who can cover more of the menu; the counter seats are worth requesting if you want to watch the kitchen or follow the cocktail programme closely.

Montacute Yards sits on Shoreditch High Street, a few minutes from Shoreditch High Street Overground station. For those building a wider East London or Shoreditch dining itinerary, our full London restaurants guide maps the broader scene. Our full London bars guide and our full London hotels guide cover the surrounding area. Further afield, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton represent the country house and destination dining tier for those whose London trip extends into the surrounding counties. Our full London wineries guide and our full London experiences guide round out the wider planning picture.

Quick reference: Unit 7, Montacute Yards, 185-186 Shoreditch High St, London E1 6HU. OAD Casual Europe 2025. Google 4.4 / 569 reviews.

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