Thai Red Curry with Chicken (2024)

Thai Red Curry – everything we know and love about Thai food! Big, bold Thai flavours, beautifully fragrant, the creamy red curry sauce is so good you can put anything in it and it will be amazing!

Make the easy 30 minute red curry recipe using my trick to pimp up store bought curry paste. Or go all out and make a Thai Red Curry Paste from scratch! Complete your Thai banquet with Thai Satay Skewers or Thai Fish Cakes to start.

Thai Red Curry with Chicken (1)

Thai Red Curry recipe

We’d all love to be able to have a Thai Red Curry any night of the week made withhomemade red curry paste.Freshly made, like the best Thai restaurants do every day. But it’s simply not viable.

So today, I’m sharing a recipe for how to make Thai Red Currytwo ways:

  1. 30 Minute quick versionusing curry paste in a jar – sharing my secret for how to make an AMAZING curry using curry paste in a jar!

  2. From scratch, using ahomemade red curry paste

The BEST Thai Red Curry Paste – Maesri

Thebest Thai Red Curry Pasteby a long shot is a brand called Maesri. This is also the brand I use for Thai Green Curry. Other brands tend to have less authentic flavour and are (usually) too sweet.

Sold in small cans for around $1.30 (it’s the cheapest!), it’s available in large grocery stores (Coles, Woolies, Harris), Asian grocery stores and here is the cheapest one on Amazon US.

Don’t worry if you can’t find it. This recipe is still great even with mainstream curry pastes.

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How to make jar curry paste better

Store bought curry paste in a jar lacks the freshness of freshly made curry paste. So if you just dump it into coconut milk, you’re going to be sorely disappointing.

So here is how to make curry paste in a jar taste way (way, way!) better:

Sauté the paste in oil with garlic, ginger and fresh lemongrass or lemongrass paste

Adding the fresh aromatics does wonders for improving the flavour!

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What does a Thai Red Curry Taste like??

Thai Red Curry, like most Asian curries, has a great depth of flavour. The sauce flavour is complex, it has many layers from all the ingredients in the paste that is then simmered with broth and coconut milk. It’s sweet and savoury, and it is quite rich.

The use of shrimp paste and fish sauce in the curry paste (jar or homemade) provides the saltiness as well as theumami*. However, this red curry recipe does not have a strong fishy or fermented shrimp flavour like some “hardcore” Thai restaurants. Most non-Thai nationals find those versions too fishy for their palette.

While one may assume Thai Red Curry is fiery hot, if from the colour alone, in actual fact it is not! It is actually quite mild, and generally most restaurants tend to stick with the mild level of spiciness though you will find some restaurants that dial up the heat considerably.

*Food-nerd word forsavouriness, now officially considered to be the 5th taste in food along with sweet, salt, bitter and sour.

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We love Thai Red Curry for the flavour, the creamy sauce, and how can one not love the colour!!

Complete your Thai meal with a starter of Thai Fish Cakes or Satay Skewers with Peanut Sauce, and a fresh Asian Slaw on the side. And while you can totally serve the red curry with plain steamed Jasmine rice, you could take it to the next level with Thai Fried Riceor Coconut Rice! – Nagi x

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PS If you’re wondering if the sauce is supposed to look sort of split – yes it is. The oil is actually supposed to separate. I’ve included some general commentary in the recipe notes, for those that are interested. 🙂

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Thai red curry
Watch how to make it

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Thai Red Curry with Chicken

Author: Nagi

Prep: 5 minutes mins

Cook: 20 minutes mins

Total: 25 minutes mins

Mains

Thai

4.96 from 269 votes

Servings4

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Recipe VIDEO above. A Thai Red Curry with Chicken is one of the world's most popular curries! Make this with store bought curry paste (we give it a freshness boost) OR homemade red curry paste (the fresh flavour can't be beaten!).

SPICE Level: Mild to hot BUT if using store bought paste, depends on what brand you use (Note 5).

Ingredients

Red Curry Paste – choose ONE:

  • 5 – 6 tbsp Thai Red Curry Paste (store bought, Maesri best) (Note 1)
  • 1 quantity homemade Thai Red Curry Paste

Extras – only for jar curry paste (Note 2)

  • 2 large garlic cloves , minced
  • 2 tsp fresh ginger , finely grated
  • 1 tbsp lemongrass paste or finely chopped fresh (Note 3)

Thai Red Curry

  • 3 tbsp vegetable oil (or canola or peanut)
  • 1 cup (250 ml) chicken broth/stock , low sodium
  • 400 ml / 14 oz coconut milk (full fat!)
  • 6 kaffir lime leaves (Note 4)
  • 1 tbsp sugar (white, brown or palm)
  • 2 tsp fish sauce , plus more to taste
  • 350g / 12 oz chicken thighs (boneless and skinless), cut into 0.75 / 1/3″ thick slices (Note 5)
  • 150g / 5 oz pumpkin or butternut squash, cut into 1.5cm / 3/5" cubes (~1 heaped cup)
  • 120g / 4oz green beans , trimmed and cut into 5cm/2″ pieces
  • 12 Thai basil leaves (Note 6)

Garnishes (optional) & serving:

  • Fresh red chilli slices (small chilli – spicy, large = less spicy)
  • Fresh coriander / cilantro leaves
  • Steamed jasmine rice

Instructions

  • Heat oil in a large heavy based skillet over medium high heat.

  • Add curry paste and Extras (if using jar paste) and cook for about 2 minutes so it “dries out” (See video)

  • Add chicken broth and stir to dissolve paste. Simmer rapidly for 3 minutes or until liquid reduces by half.

  • Add coconut milk, lime leaves, sugar and fish sauce. Stir, then add chicken.

  • Spread chicken out, bring to simmer, then turn heat down to medium. Simmer for about 8- 10 minutes or until Sauce reduces, the chicken is cooked and the sauce is almost at the thickness you want.

  • Do a taste test. Add more fish sauce (or even shrimp paste) to add more saltiness, sugar for sweetness.

  • Add pumpkin and beans, stir. Cook for 3 minutes or until pumpkin is just cooked through and Sauce is thickened – see video for Sauce thickness.

  • Remove from heat. Stir through a handful of Thai basil leaves.

  • Serve over jasmine rice, garnished with fresh red chilli slices and fresh coriander/cilantro leaves, if desired.

Recipe Notes:

1. Curry paste – if using store bought, try to get Maesri brand if you can, it’s the best (small can, very cheap). Sold at major grocery stores (Woolies, Coles) or Asian stores. Otherwise, use your favourite.

Use 5 tbsp if you are unsure about spiciness, or 6 tbsp (or the whole can!) if you are sure you can handle it!

Note: curry paste in jars has a more concentrated flavour than fresh homemade paste so you need less. The video shows homemade paste.

2. Extras – these are to freshen up store bought curry paste. Not required if using homemade.

3. Lemongrass paste – convenience tubes of cold pressed lemongrass paste, the next best thing to peeling / finely chopping fresh lemongrass! Can sub with 2 tsp finely minced fresh lemongrass.

4. Kaffir Lime Leaves are the leaves of a kaffir lime tree. It’s used to add earthy citrus flavours into Asian food. Sold at large grocery stores and Asian stores. Dried is an ok substitute (same amount), but I really urge you to try to find fresh if you can because it adds that “something-something” that really makes this “restaurant quality”.

5. Chicken – Thigh is best for this recipe because it’s nice and juicy. But breast and tenderloin is fine too.

6. Thai Basil looks like normal basil but has pointier leaves and a purplish tinge. It tastes like basil + aniseed. Not the end of the world if you can’t find it – ordinary basil will be an adequate substituted but only use a small handful.

7. General recipe notes:
Spiciness:Thai Red Curry is not supposed to be crazy spicy but it has a nice tingle to it.
Sauce thickness varies drastically between restaurants – at some it is almost watery, at others it is really thick and seems to be made with coconut cream. I like mine in between – a sauce that is pourable but with a gravy like consistency. I am not a fan of very sweet Red Curry, but if you are, just add more sugar.
Consistency:Thai red curry sauce doesn’t look completely smooth, it looks a bit split because of the oil and that’s the way it is supposed to be.
Stuff in it:There are no hard and fast rules about what goes into a Thai Red Curry. You’ll find Thai eggplant in curries at very authentic Thai restaurants but to be honest, I am not a huge fan of them – they are like tiny eggplants and kind of hard (also not easy to find in shops). I’d say that the two most common vegetables I’ve noticed are pumpkin and green beans or snake beans. While pumpkin may not sound “Thai”, don’t dismiss it, it is spectacular in red curry for both the texture, the sweetness and also because it soaks up the sauce.

8. Nutrition per serving, curry only.

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Nutrition Information:

Calories: 530cal (27%)

Keywords: Red curry, Thai red curry

Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

I adore Thai curries

See?

Thai Green Curry
Thai Yellow Curry
Panang curry – real deal, from scratch
Massaman Curry
Lamb Shanks Massaman Curry
Jasmine Rice
Thai Recipes
Curries

Life of Dozer

It’s lucky he’s so cute because he isn’t going to win any prizes in the spelling bee…. When he bonks his head on the door frame, it sounds hollow. I swear!

Thai Red Curry with Chicken (17)
Thai Red Curry with Chicken (2024)

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