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| Food and Drink Thailand is a culinary paradise, but don't keep it hidden. Tell all where the best food is to be found, the best bars, the best Thai and Western restaurants as well as which cockroach infested flea pits to avoid. So tell us about your Dinning experiences in Thailand. |
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| | #63 (permalink) | ||
| Oh Fuk | Quote:
Starbucks is just a commercial enterprise selling an image to the gullible public. They fall for it every time, as can be seen by the fairly crowded cafes My own experience is that their coffee is bland and uninteresting. I used to go most days with people from work, had a double shot latte. It was OK, served in a cardboard container for some reason after a while, I managed to persuade my fellow workers to try another coffee shop. I ordered the same coffee, the double shot latte, 2/3rds the price and ridiculously strong. From then on, I had a single shot latte, at 1/2 the price of the Starbucks nonsense As for Thai coffee, it can be excellent. I take it back to the Uk and serve it to friends, who love the taste. I get pure Arabica from a local supplier in Chiang Mai, which is also very cheap by comparison.
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| | #65 (permalink) |
| Farang phoot mak Last Online: Today 05:35 PM Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Nong Khai
Posts: 7,391
| I'd prefer a plain Dunkin Donuts coffee to anything Starbucks offers. And I've had most. I don't know if DD Thailand uses the same coffee worldwide. But, as the lady in the story said, I'd have enough money remaining to buy a muffin or a bagel and a newspaper. I just won't look as cool. Last edited by Texpat : 20-07-2008 at 02:31 PM. |
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| | #67 (permalink) |
| Phuket Last Online: 10-08-2008 07:25 AM Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: NY, USA
Posts: 22
| But what's so hard to understand? Dunkin Donuts has merely trumped Starbucks' caffeine offering with caffeine plus sugared fried starch (at a comparable price). How could that fail here in the Land of Lard? |
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| | #68 (permalink) | |
| Metal Member Last Online: Today 04:44 PM Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Lurking
Posts: 1,337
| Quote:
I used to like Starbucks as it was about the easiest way to get a decent coffee in the UK. McDonalds coffee was terrible, anywhere else was instant crap like Nescafe then you could have a tall creamymoccachinowhippy so it was a no brainer. Over here I brew my own, wouldnt touch Starbucks anymore. Its like the Budweiser of coffee to me now, bland and tasteless.
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| | #69 (permalink) |
| What the Dormouse Said Last Online: Today 11:09 AM Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Rabbit Hole
Posts: 5,671
| McD's new coffee ain't bad. Not as rich tasting as Thai coffee (I continue to agree with Marmite on this point), but cheaper than Starbuck's, whose green tea really sucks. |
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| | #70 (permalink) | |
| Oh Fuk | Quote:
It always was like that!! as for the UK, before Starbucks, there were hundreds of small, often Italian, coffee shops selling excellent coffee in London. If you were in some small town, then maybe it would have been more difficult, but still possible. | |
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