
There are a lot of places to eat in Yangon. It depends on what kind of food do you want to eat. At the food stalls on the road sides or at a restaurant? Or even hotel?
I used to eat Kyae-Oh when I go back to Yangon. It is a kind of rice noodle with chicken or pork soup with different kinds of pork organs (you can eliminate them if you don’t eat those). You can order without soup too. It is called Si-chat. Some said it is Chinese food, some said it’s Burmese. Well, it is still good no matter what. One of the famous Kyae-oh houses is YKKO. They have seven or eight branches. There you can order grilled potatoes (kind of barbecue, tiny potatoes put into sticks) and grilled ladyfingers (a kind of veggie).
You can order fresh drinks too. I used to have sugar cane juice. It is freshly juiced and natural. I can’t find the address right now. One is one Sayasan Road, near Kokine Swimming pool. One is near Hledan Junction. One is near Myay Ni Gon Junction.
If you go to China town, you can see a lot of food stalls along the road too. For Thai food, Sabai Sabai is one that I recommend. The house looks colonial style and it is clean too. Another one is Phai Lin on Pyay Road. I don’t have a Yangon directory here in US. I’m sorry about that. I hope you can find the directory in hotels inside the country.
For snack, fried gourd on the bank of Inya Lake is pretty famous and it’s a place where university students used to hang out. Along the Mahabandoola Road in downtown, there are several food stalls which offer indian snacks like samusa, onion balls, grilled or fried chicken in indian style and other Burmese recipe too.
For fine dining, I suggest Karaweik. It is on the big golden mythical bird shape boat facing the serene Kandawgyi Lake and famous Shwedagon Pagoda. It is really beautiful. I guess they have buffet for evening (I ate there last year). So, I hope they still do. In the evening, they have traditional burmese dance and several other show which is free if you have dinner there.
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