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Food & Culinary

Cambodia Food Experiences

From Amok steamed in banana leaves to smoky street grills and Kampot pepper farms — eat, cook, and taste your way across the Kingdom with local chefs and Cambodian families.

~$25Cooking class
<$2Street eats
8Signature dishes
4Food cities
A cuisine all its own

Flavours found nowhere else

  1. 01

    Rooted in the Tonlé Sap

    Freshwater fish, rice noodles, Kampot pepper and foraged herbs — Khmer food is built on terroir, so the best versions of these dishes exist only here.

  2. 02

    Amok is just the beginning

    Beyond the national dish — coconut fish curry steamed in banana leaves — come Nom Banh Chok, Lok Lak and Bai Sach Chrouk, each with deep roots in the Khmer Empire.

  3. 03

    Cooked with locals, not for tourists

    Market-to-table classes, village home kitchens and vetted street stalls — every bite comes with the story of the ingredient and the people behind it.

Cambodian coconut seafood soup with lime and herbs
8 Signature
Khmer dishes
Fish Amok · Khmer classic
Signature experiences

Eat it, cook it, grow it

The food experiences travellers book most — hands-on, local, and unmistakably Khmer.

Cambodian woman cooking over a grill
01 — Hands-on

Khmer Cooking Classes

Cambodia's highest-demand food experience. Learn classics like Amok Trey, Nom Banh Chok and Lok Lak — most classes start with a market tour to pick fresh ingredients, then end with a shared meal you cooked yourself. Vegan and vegetarian versions are widely available.

Market-to-table ~$25 · 2–3 hrs Vegan options
~$25Per person
2–3 hrsTypical class
4Cities
Street-food vendor at a Cambodian night market
02 — Eat, don't cook

Street Food Tours by Tuk-Tuk

For travellers who want to eat their way through the city. Morning runs hit local markets and village noodle makers; evenings cover Cambodian BBQ and busy night stalls. Guides use vetted stalls and tell the story behind prahok, Kampot pepper and Tonlé Sap fish. Must-try: Kuy Teav, Lort Cha and Fish Amok.

By tuk-tuk Under $2 a bite Vetted stalls
<$2Per item
AM & PMTour options
NightMarkets
Fresh produce and spices at a Cambodian market
03 — Catch-to-plate

Kampot Pepper Farms & Tastings

A niche experience with almost no competition in the Indian market. Kampot pepper supplied France's restaurants in the colonial era and is still one of Cambodia's most prized exports. Walk the plantations, taste red, black, white and green grades — even black-pepper ice cream — then pair it with fresh Kep crab, just 25 minutes away.

Farm tastings Kep crab pairing 4 pepper grades
25 minTo Kep crab
4Pepper types
ColonialHeritage export
More ways to taste

Markets, home kitchens & sweets

Modern Khmer

Pull up a chair at the chef's table

Refined tasting menus from $30–50 built on seasonal local ingredients — elevated Amok at Malis, the social-enterprise kitchen at Spoons, modern Mekong cooking at La Baab, or dinner paired with a world-class Phare circus show.

Book a Fine-Dining Night
Where to eat

Four cities, four flavour profiles

Street market in Phnom Penh

Phnom Penh

The capital's riverside quay, the Russian Market and Malis define the city's table — from num pang sandwiches to elevated fine dining.

Street-food cart in Siem Reap

Siem Reap

Cooking classes, the Old Market and a buzzing night-market scene near Pub Street — the easiest place to start eating Khmer.

Cambodian street-food vendor near Kampot

Kampot & Kep

Pepper plantations, palm-sugar tastings and the legendary Kep crab market — Cambodia's south coast is its tastiest road trip.

Eat like a local

Dishes to put on your list

DishTypeWhat it is
Fish AmokNationalCambodia's national dish — coconut-milk fish curry steamed in banana leaves
Nom Banh ChokBreakfastRice noodles with green fish curry, herbs and bean sprouts — the classic Khmer breakfast
Lok LakMainStir-fried marinated beef with a lime-and-pepper dipping sauce
Bai Sach ChroukStreetGrilled pork over rice — the quintessential early-morning street meal
Kuy TeavNoodle soupClear pork or beef bone broth with rice-vermicelli noodles
Kampot Pepper CrabSeafoodFresh crab stir-fried with the region's prized peppercorns — best in Kep
Num PangSandwichCambodia's French-Khmer sandwich — pâté, pickled vegetables and chilli in crusty bread
Sankya LapovDessertPumpkin custard — the signature Khmer sweet
Good to know

What it costs & how long

~$25Cooking class, per person
2–3 hrsTypical class length
<$2Street-food bites
$30–50Fine-dining tasting menu
Questions, answered

Cambodia food FAQ

What is Cambodia's national dish?
Fish Amok — a fragrant coconut-milk fish curry steamed in banana leaves. It dates back to the Khmer Empire and appears on almost every cooking-class and street-food menu.
How much does a Khmer cooking class cost?
Most classes are around $25 per person and run 2–3 hours, including a guided market tour to choose ingredients and a shared meal of the dishes you cook.
Is Cambodian street food safe and affordable?
Guided tours use stalls vetted by experienced local guides, and most street-food items cost under $2 — making it the most affordable way to explore Khmer cuisine.
Which cities are best for food in Cambodia?
Siem Reap, Phnom Penh, Battambang and Kampot each have their own flavour profile — from cooking classes and night markets to riverside fine dining and pepper farms.
Are vegetarian and vegan options available?
Yes. Vegan and vegetarian versions are widely offered, including Vegetable Amok and Khmer tofu curries, and most cooking classes can adapt on request.

Hungry for the real Cambodia?

Tell us how you like to eat — hands-on classes, street-food crawls, pepper farms or chef's tables — and our local specialists will plate up a food itinerary made for you.