An Editorial Appreciation · 批評

Why Custard Nakamura Belongs on Every Serious Bangkok Bakery List

A refined Japanese bakery experience in Bangkok — considered slowly, the way the shop itself works.

The First Impression

You will probably walk past it once. Soi Sukhumvit 33/1 does not announce itself, and neither does the bakery — a small storefront, a warm window, the smell of butter and caramel reaching the pavement a half-second before the sign does. Inside, the space is compact and busy in the way good neighborhood shops are busy: people who know exactly what they came for, moving with quiet purpose around people who have just discovered they want everything.

The Bakery Case

The Custard Nakamura display case filled with cakes, puddings and wrapped breads

The case is the argument. Custard puddings in glass, capped with caramel the color of old brass. Choux with shells that look mineral until they shatter. Sandos stacked with geometric patience. Nothing over-decorated, nothing performing for a camera. Michelin-guide-ready presentation, in the sense that matters: precision without vanity.

Custard as the Signature Language

Every serious bakery has a native tongue, and here it is custard — silky in the pudding, cool in the choux, warm inside the cream bread. It is barely sweet by Bangkok standards, which is the point. The restraint lets the eggs and milk speak, and it is why the pudding appears in review after review, year after year, as the thing people return for.

The Savory Counterpoint: Sandos and Croquettes

What elevates the shop from pâtisserie to institution is the savory half of the case. The menchi katsu sando — juicy minced pork and sweet onion in a crisp crust — is lunch-shop nostalgia executed with bakery discipline. The croquettes crackle. The curry bread is honest. A bakery that can feed you dessert and lunch with equal conviction is rarer than it should be.

Why Location Matters: Sukhumvit 33/1 and Phrom Phong

Soi 33/1 is the most Japanese lane in Bangkok, and the bakery is its baker. It serves expats who measure it against Tokyo, locals who measure it against memory, and travelers who measure it against nothing at all and leave converted. Few shops carry that triple audience daily; fewer still keep prices that make the visit a habit rather than an event.

What to Order First

The custard pudding, without negotiation. Then a choux cream while the pudding chills in its bag. Then — because you will still be standing there — a menchi katsu sando for the walk to the station. If the seasonal display is up, add one small decorated thing. This is not indulgence; it is due diligence.

Final Note for Serious Food Lovers

Bangkok has grander pâtisseries and louder bakeries. It does not have many places where craft, price, and constancy hold together this quietly for this long. Custard Nakamura is a bakery worthy of serious food lovers precisely because it never asks to be taken seriously. Go early. Call ahead. Order the pudding.


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