Siem Reap, Cambodia: Best Things to Do, See, and Eat

Charming restaurant Jomno serves Cambodian cuisine interpreted in contemporary ways. Housed in a traditional Khmer home, the interiors channel a sort of cottage-core aesthetic: sage green windows framing a lush garden, white linen, soft lighting, and a weathered wooden roof. The Battambang sausages are a highlight, made with charcoal grilled beef; and pork sausage served with an eggplant salsa, banana flower blossoms, and drizzled with a cilantro dressing. Of their many plant-based dishes, the star is the Siem Reap jackfruit curry Wellington, a mix of melt-in-the-mouth jackfruit cooked with green lentils and studded with Kampot pepper.

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Students of Phare Ponleu Selpak, a non-profit arts and circus school, perform at the Phare Circus.

Phare Circus

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The plant-based jackfruit curry Wellington at Jomno is a highlight of the modern Cambodian menu.

Jomno

Day 2

Morning

Tonlé Sap, Southeast Asia’s largest freshwater lake, is an important ecosystem that provides fish and water for nearly half of Cambodia’s population. A boat tour on the lake’s waters is the best way to explore the tapestry of fishing villages scattered around its periphery, where locals commute by boat. In the rainy season, the lake fills up and water floods the villages, but the homes are built on stilts up to 26 feet tall, giving the impression that the houses are floating on water.

Afternoon

As a legacy of past wars, undetonated landmines continue to plague people across Cambodia and pose a danger to local communities. At the APOPO Visitor Center on the outskirts of Siem Reap, travelers can learn all about how African pouched rats are trained to sniff out landmines and other explosives buried in large swathes of forests and farms. You can watch these incredible rodents known as HeroRATs in action and get a chance to hold them: interaction with humans is a vital part of their training.

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At the APOPO Visitor Center, travelers can learn about the “HeroRATs” that are trained to sniff out landmines.

Chaitali Patel

Since the fall of the Khmer Rouge, Siem Reap has been at the forefront of the revival of Cambodia’s rich artistic and cultural traditions. At Artisans Angkor, a guided tour takes you through weaving, woodcarving, sculpture. and lacquerware sections, where you can see craftspeople at work and shop for handmade products at their on-site boutique.

The cozy Common Grounds Coffee on Hap Guan Street, also called Kandal Village, is a great spot for a coffee before checking out the galleries and boutiques, many housed in traditional homes. This is the place to find designer textiles, eclectic homeware, and art.

Evening

Closer to sunset, the Siem Reap riverfront springs to life as stalls fire up their grills, lights come on, and locals stop by for a bite. The Psar Chas (“Old Market”) facing the river is the best place to get a feel of a local market with its distinct wet and dry sections. For a smaller, organized, and curated handicraft shopping experience, head to the Made in Cambodia Market, just across from Shinta Mani Angkor, where stalls sell paintings, spices, Cambodian textiles, silver jewelry, and lacquerware. With a focus on creating more Khmer jobs, almost everything sold here is made in the country as opposed to being imported from China or Vietnam.

Cap the day with a stellar meal at Chef Joannès Rivière’s Cuisine Wat Damnak. Set in a traditional wooden Khmer house, the restaurant offers two tasting menus that take diners on a journey through Cambodia, marrying exceptional local flavors with French cooking techniques. Expect seasonal variations as almost all ingredients are sourced from local farms and villages. Pair it all with cocktails infused with spices or locally brewed beer

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Cuisine Wat Damnak has two tasting menus that marry exceptional local flavors with French cooking techniques.

Regis Binard