At Ms.Jigger, lunch is no longer a meal wedged between meetings – it’s a small, necessary act of escapism. On weekdays, ‘Pranzo Perfetto’ offers a swift detour into Italian comfort, served between 11.30am and 2.30pm. It’s an exercise in moderation, but only just: think thin slices of beef carpaccio with rocket and parmesan, or salmon laced with orange and balsamic caviar, followed by wagyu-laden fettuccine, wood-fired pizza or a Luganega sausage so robust it barely needs the mash. At B750, it’s suspiciously affordable. Weekends are slower, messier, built for lingering. The set menu is bolstered by free-flow antipasti – an unedited table of bruschetta, olives, seabass laced with fennel seed, and fried dough balls slicked in tomato and anchovy. Focaccia arrives stuffed with mortadella and mascarpone, an edible shrug at restraint. Served from 11.30am until 5pm, this is not brunch. It’s a deliberate pause, wrapped in the swagger of Italy and timed perfectly to ruin dinner. Everyday. Starts at B750. Reserve via 02-056-9999 and msjigger.kimptonmaalai@ihg.com or via Line @Ms.Jigger. Ms.Jigger, Kimpton Maa-Lai Bangkok, 11.30pm-5pm
There’s been barely a drop of rain in Bangkok lately – just enough cloud to spare us the molten pavements, not enough to spoil anyone’s hair. June may have only just begun, but the city’s already burning through the month with a kind of feverish glee, refusing to do anything by halves.
It kicked off with Kula Shaker, whose live show felt like a brief, euphoric time-warp – flares, fuzz, and the ghost of late-90s Britpop echoing across Lido Connect. Then came Chef Umberto Bombana’s long-anticipated return, all truffle-laced reverence and the sort of dishes that silence a room. Pawtrait drew the sentimentalists with pets-turned-muses, while Bangkok Community Pride turned up with its usual mix of defiance, sequins and joy, reminding everyone that celebration can be a form of resistance.
Now, with the weekend creeping up, the energy doesn’t so much rise as roll over from the night before. There's something nearly absurd in how much is happening at once – pop-up exhibitions in Sukhumvit galleries, DJ sets bleeding into street sounds, even a tea pairing workshop that promises to soothe away the hangover you haven’t earned yet.
So yes, we’re barely halfway through June. But this is a city that doesn’t do halfway. Not in heat, not in rain, and certainly not in rhythm.
Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of top things to do this June.