Google: 4.6 · 594 reviews
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A Michelin Bib Gourmand holder for 2024 and 2025, Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen sits on Phangnga Road in Phuket's old town, turning out European Contemporary cooking at a mid-range price point that undercuts most of its award-level peers. The monthly-rotating menu moves between house-made pastas, a signature seafood dish, and chef-driven specials, supported by a wine list that changes alongside the food.
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Old Town Address, Rotating Kitchen
Phangnga Road is one of the more architecturally coherent stretches in Phuket's old town, lined with Sino-Portuguese shophouses whose narrow frontages and deep interior volumes create a particular kind of dining atmosphere: intimate by default, historically layered, and removed from the beach-resort circuit that defines most of the island's food conversation. Restaurants that set up here are making a specific choice about audience and character. The tourist throughput is lower than Patong or Kata, the clientele is more likely to include long-stay visitors and local professionals, and the physical spaces tend to reward attention to detail over surface spectacle.
Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen occupies one such address at 115 Phangnga Road, and the old-town setting shapes the experience before any food arrives. Sino-Portuguese shophouse proportions generally run narrow across the front and longer toward the back, which means tables are arranged in sequence rather than spread across an open floor. The effect is closer to a corridor of separate dining moments than a conventional restaurant room — a format that suits the kitchen's ambition toward focused, composed cooking rather than high-volume service.
The Case for Monthly Rotation
Monthly-changing menus have become a practical credential in Thai fine-dining circles: they signal that a kitchen is buying to what's available rather than managing a fixed supply chain, and they force a certain discipline on the team. The rotation at Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen anchors around a set of recurring formats — house-made pastas, a signature seafood dish , while the specials column carries the more experimental work, described in the venue's own framing as Chef Tsuyoshi Horie's latest efforts. This structure gives regulars a navigational framework (the pasta is the constant, the specials are the argument) without locking the kitchen into repetition.
The European Contemporary category sits in an interesting position in Phuket's dining map. At the higher price tiers, the island runs Italian-leaning rooms like Acqua and concept-driven modern Thai at PRU, which holds four Michelin stars across its tenure and prices accordingly at ฿฿฿฿. Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen enters that conversation at ฿฿, a price point that places it significantly below its Michelin-recognised peers while operating on the same award tier as the Bib Gourmand implies , value relative to quality, rather than absolute cheapness. That gap is worth noting. In Phuket's old town specifically, few European-leaning kitchens operate at this combination of price and recognition.
What the Bib Gourmand Actually Signals
Michelin's Bib Gourmand designation, awarded here in both 2024 and 2025, marks restaurants where inspectors judge the quality-to-price ratio as notably favourable. It is a different argument from a star: not that the cooking reaches a particular technical ceiling, but that what arrives at the table is worth more than the bill implies. Two consecutive years of the designation suggests the kitchen has maintained that ratio through menu cycles rather than landing it once on a strong season. Across Thailand, Bib Gourmand recognition tends to cluster around places with clear culinary identity and consistent execution , qualities that matter more to the designation than room size or formality. For broader context on how Bib Gourmand listings distribute across Thailand's dining scene, venues like Sorn in Bangkok and AKKEE in Pak Kret illustrate the range of formats and cuisines the designation covers nationally.
Among Phuket's old-town restaurants, that level of sustained international recognition is not especially common. Jampa operates nearby with its own culinary credentials, and street-food institutions like A Pong Mae Sunee represent a different register of local recognition. Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen sits in the middle tier: more formally composed than the street-food end of the old-town food culture, less expensive than the island's resort-facing fine-dining circuit.
The Wine List as Monthly Variable
The decision to rotate the wine list in step with the food calendar is a more deliberate editorial choice than it might first appear. Most mid-range restaurants in Southeast Asia maintain a static wine list built around reliable margins; changing selections monthly requires active procurement and a kitchen-sommelier relationship that keeps the floor staff educated on new bottles. The practical effect for the diner is that return visits carry less predictability, which either suits a guest's appetite for discovery or creates friction, depending on preference. For guests who use wine pairings as a framework, the rotating list increases reliance on floor recommendations , which, in a small room, tends to work better than in larger operations where staff coverage is thinner per table.
European Contemporary wine pairings in this part of the world often default to international reference points. How that plays out at Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen across any given month's menu is something the rotating format makes difficult to anticipate in advance, but the structural commitment to pairing the wine changes with the food changes is the kind of detail that marks intent. Comparable European Contemporary programs at properties like Zén in Singapore or Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol illustrate how the category handles the wine-food integration question at different price and formality levels.
Planning a Visit
Surf & Turf by Soul Kitchen is on Phangnga Road in Phuket's old town, accessible by car or songthaew from most parts of the city. The ฿฿ pricing makes it one of the more accessible Michelin-recognised options on the island , a category that at higher price points includes Baan Rim Pa Patong for Thai cooking and the resort-facing rooms further from the centre. Given the small shophouse footprint and consistent 4.7 rating across 525 Google reviews, demand for tables is measurable, and booking in advance is the practical approach, particularly on weekends or during the high season between November and April when old-town foot traffic increases. The monthly menu rotation means the specific dishes on offer shift between visits, which makes the timing of a booking relevant to what you'll encounter.
For those assembling a wider Phuket itinerary, our full Phuket restaurants guide covers the range from street food to fine dining. Supplementary guides cover hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the island. Beyond Phuket, the Michelin Bib Gourmand tier extends across Thailand to places like Aeeen in Chiang Mai, Agave in Ubon Ratchathani, Angeum in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya, and The Spa in Lamai Beach , a spread that illustrates how the designation distributes across the country's regions and formats.
Where the Accolades Land
Comparable options at a glance, pulled from our tracked venues.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf & Turf by Soul KitchenThis venue — the venue you are viewing | European Contemporary | ฿฿ | Bib Gourmand | |
| PRU | Thai, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | ฿฿฿฿ | |
| Blue Elephant | Thai | ฿฿฿ | ||
| Acqua | Italian | ฿฿฿฿ | ||
| Baan Rim Pa Patong | Thai | |||
| Chuan Chim | Thai | ฿฿ |
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