Sol Kitchen & Bar (District 1)
.png)
Sol Kitchen & Bar holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025) for its Latin American cooking in the heart of District 1, Lý Tự Trọng. Chef Adrian Chong Yen runs a mid-range kitchen that has earned a 4.8 Google rating across more than 3,100 reviews, placing it among the more consistently rated foreign-cuisine restaurants operating in Ho Chi Minh City at the ₫₫ price tier.

Latin America Arrives on Lý Tự Trọng
Ho Chi Minh City's dining scene has long absorbed outside influences, from the French-era brasserie formats that still linger around the Opera House to the Korean and Japanese corridors that have built up across Districts 1 and 3 over the past decade. Latin American cooking, by contrast, has arrived later and with far less infrastructure: no broad community, no ready supply chain, no established diner expectation. That makes the two-year run of Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition at Sol Kitchen & Bar, on Lý Tự Trọng in Ben Thanh Ward, a more telling data point than it might appear in a city where the guide has now recognised over sixty addresses. The Bib Gourmand designation, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, applies specifically to restaurants delivering notable quality at moderate price — the ₫₫ bracket here — which means Michelin's inspectors have returned and found the kitchen consistent, not merely interesting.
The street itself anchors the venue in a well-trafficked part of District 1, within reach of the Ben Thanh market corridor and the cluster of mid-range and upmarket addresses that have made this stretch a reference point for visitors and residents alike. For a broader picture of what the district offers across price tiers, our full Ho Chi Minh City restaurants guide maps the competitive field in detail.
The Mercado Logic Behind a Latin Kitchen in Saigon
Latin American cooking at its foundation is market cooking. The cuisine's reference points , the cevicherías of Lima, the taquerías of Mexico City, the parillas of Buenos Aires , share a common operating logic: daily sourcing, short menus calibrated to what arrived that morning, and a cook's relationship with the vendor as the first creative decision of the day. Transplanting that ethic to Ho Chi Minh City is less a stretch than it might seem. The city's wet markets, from the Ben Thanh halls to the neighbourhood morning markets in Districts 3 and 10, operate on the same daily-freshness rhythm. The proteins, citrus, and alliums that anchor Latin cooking have strong local analogues, and the regional chilli vocabulary , though different in profile , is no less serious than the ají varieties that define Peruvian or Mexican sourcing.
Chef Adrian Chong Yen operates within that logic. The kitchen at Sol works at a price point that does not support imported ingredient dependency across the board, which means the menu engages with local supply chains as a practical necessity and, by extension, as a creative one. The result is a Latin American kitchen grounded in what the city's markets actually offer, rather than one sustained by freight costs and cold-chain imports. This is the more honest version of the cuisine in this context, and it is part of what the Bib Gourmand recognises: value is not only about price, but about the coherence of what you get for it.
For comparison, Latin American cooking in other Asian cities has taken different routes. Mono in Hong Kong works at a higher price tier with a more formal tasting format, while ZEA in Taipei represents another variation on how the cuisine adapts to an East Asian sourcing and dining context. Sol's Bib Gourmand positioning places it in a distinct bracket: accessible, consistent, and calibrated to the local economy rather than an expatriate fine-dining one.
Where Sol Sits in the District 1 Field
Across District 1, the Michelin-recognised tier spans a wide range. At the higher end, addresses like CieL and Long Trieu operate at ₫₫₫₫, where imported ingredients and formal service structures are standard. Coco Dining sits at ₫₫₫, occupying the mid-to-upper tier. Sol and Anan Saigon share the ₫₫ bracket, though with entirely different cuisine profiles: Anan works Vietnamese street food idioms with modernist technique, while Sol applies Latin American frameworks to the city's ingredients. Both have earned inspector recognition at this tier, which signals that the Bib Gourmand bracket in Ho Chi Minh City is genuinely competitive rather than a consolation category.
Innovative addresses like Akuna occupy a different lane, where the cuisine category itself is harder to pin down. Sol is easier to place: it has a defined culinary identity, a consistent price point, and two years of external validation. That clarity is an asset for a foreign-cuisine restaurant in a city where diner familiarity with Latin American cooking is still building.
A Google rating of 4.8 across 3,110 reviews is a volume-credibility signal worth noting. At that review count, the score is statistically stable rather than subject to early-stage enthusiasm or review-campaign effects. It suggests the kitchen performs consistently across a large and varied sample of visits, which aligns with the repeated Bib Gourmand recognition.
Planning a Visit
Sol Kitchen & Bar is located at 110-112 Lý Tự Trọng, Ben Thanh Ward, District 1, placing it within walking distance of the central Ben Thanh area and the main hotel corridor along Nguyen Hue and Dong Khoi. The ₫₫ price tier positions it as one of the more accessible Michelin Bib Gourmand addresses in the city, which means it draws a mixed crowd of residents, regional visitors, and travellers who have done their research. Bookings are advisable, particularly for evening sittings; the combination of low price point and inspector recognition tends to keep occupancy high.
For visitors building a broader Ho Chi Minh City itinerary, the full guides to hotels, bars, experiences, and wineries cover the wider scene. For those moving between Vietnam's main dining cities, Hibana by Koki in Hanoi and La Maison 1888 in Da Nang represent the upper end of recognised dining elsewhere in the country.
For those tracking how Latin American cooking travels internationally, the reference set extends further: Imperfecto in Washington D.C., Amara in Miami, Almacita in Valence, and 6.8 Palopó in Santa Catarina Palopó each show how the cuisine adapts to radically different contexts. Sol's Ho Chi Minh City version, grounded in the city's markets and calibrated to the local economy, is a coherent entry in that international field.
Frequently Asked Questions
What kind of setting is Sol Kitchen & Bar?
Sol Kitchen & Bar occupies a mid-range (₫₫) position within Ho Chi Minh City's Michelin-recognised tier, on Lý Tự Trọng in District 1. It holds back-to-back Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) for Latin American cooking at an accessible price point, making it one of the more consistent foreign-cuisine addresses in the city at this bracket. The setting is bar-and-kitchen format rather than a formal dining room, suited to a relaxed rather than ceremonial visit.
Would Sol Kitchen & Bar be comfortable with kids?
At the ₫₫ price tier in a city like Ho Chi Minh City, Sol operates in a register that is generally informal enough for families with older children. The bar-kitchen format and the cuisine style , Latin American dishes built around bold, accessible flavours , do not carry the formality restrictions of the ₫₫₫₫ addresses higher up the District 1 field. Families with very young children should factor in the noise and pace of a popular bar setting, which may not suit all ages at peak evening hours.
What is the signature dish at Sol Kitchen & Bar?
The venue database does not specify individual signature dishes, and inventing them would misrepresent the menu. What the Michelin Bib Gourmand designation does confirm is that Chef Adrian Chong Yen's kitchen delivers notable quality at moderate price across its Latin American output , the award is based on inspector assessment of the overall kitchen performance rather than a single dish. For current menu specifics, visiting the restaurant directly or checking their active social channels is the most reliable route.
Budget Reality Check
A quick context table based on similar venues in our dataset.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sol Kitchen & Bar (District 1) | ₫₫ | Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | This venue |
| Anan Saigon | ₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Vietnamese Street Food, ₫₫ |
| CieL | ₫₫₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Innovative, ₫₫₫₫ |
| Coco Dining | ₫₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Innovative, ₫₫₫ |
| Long Trieu | ₫₫₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Cantonese, ₫₫₫₫ |
| Bánh Xèo 46A | ₫ | Vietnamese, ₫ |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Access the Concierge