Panang Curry

July 20, 2016 5 Comments

Panang Curry Serving Presentation

Sometimes also spelt as Panaeng Curry this is one of my favourite dishes. Actually to my mind the correct spelling of the dish should be "Panaeng" but Google thinks otherwise! It's sometimes stated that this dish originates from the Malaysian island of Penang. I don't buy that at all but it's a fight I will leave to others!

I'm cooking this with beef. I think that this is a dish that benefits from slower cooking, so although it can be cooked quickly using rump steak I prefer to use braising steak or similar. This will produce a dish where the melting texture of the slow cooked beef and the richness of the sauce is a heavenly combination! I'm garnishing it with some kaffir lime leaf and some mild red chillies. For around 500g of beef you need 1 pouch of Panang paste and 1 can of coconut milk. The pastes are complete but it is always a good idea to have a little lime juice to hand to adjust sweetness, if needed, to your personal taste at the end of cooking. You also adjust saltiness by adding a little more fish sauce or salt if required. I’m often asked about using a slow cooker for Thai curries, any recipe using coconut milk in a slow cooker has to be adapted so please read this article here first. Slow cooker curry.

Ingredients for Panang Curry


Make  sure you’re using the “right” type of coconut milk as it will make or break this or any other coconut based curry. Quick guide here, Coconut Milk Summary or if you would like to see the difference between different brands of coconut milk the full article is here; Cooking Thai Curry with Coconut Milk. Just use half a can to start with, if it has separated in the can to a thick part at the top of the can then use the top part. You can add the remaining coconut liquid later depending on how thick you want your curry to be. The "traditional" method of heating the milk until it separates from it's oil and using it to cook the paste is not something I recommend as can be be  hard to achieve consistent results with canned coconut milk.

Add the paste to the pan and heat for a minute or two until it starts to cook.
Heat-sauce-in-pan

Add half the coconut milk, stir through until it starts to bubble.
Add coconut milk to pan and stir

Add the meat and heat while stirring.
Add-meat-to-pan-and-cook-in-the-sauce

Add the rest of the coconut milk ensuring the meat is just covered, add water if needed. Cover pan with a tight fitting lid. You can continue to cook this on the hob or transfer to the oven at 160C. If cooking on the hob use a low heat, checking and stirring from time to time to prevent it sticking, add water if need be. Cooking time will depend on the cut of meat, about 90 mins for braising steak. It should be tender, almost falling apart. If the coconut milk has released too much oil for your taste then just scoop some from the top.

Adjust with coconut milk

Apart from serving it as a "normal" Thai curry in the top picture, this is a popular way of serving it in our house, usually while watching a football game or movie. Tastes great in a baguette or grilled sourdough bread! The origins of Panang curry suggest anyway that it was originally a very dry curry, most likely cooked as grilled meats over charcoal, so maybe this is not a too outrageous way to eat a Panang curry, tastes great and that, for me anyway, is reason enough:-) Enjoy!

Serving-Presentation-2 Panang Curry

Enjoy!

If you like this recipe please click the star rating or add a comment below!  Kop Khun Kha, Nitsa.x
star



5 Responses

Leah James
Leah James

June 02, 2023

Magic at its very best.I love Thai food and I love cooking but it’s difficult and expensive to get the ingredients to do it correctly and not do one of the easier recipes for curry paste. I don’t have to anymore as these pastes do it for me, its not that they are simply better than any others you can buy, but also way better than most of us can make and cut out hours of shopping and prepping. Really impressed, as were my guests.

Roy
Roy

November 28, 2022

First time using this mix and just as good as all the others tried so far.
Before discovering MyThaiCurry pastes my ‘go to’ recipe for a delicious coconut/peanut beef curry was called ‘Rama Bathing’ from a 1980s paperback titled ‘A Taste of Thailand’ by David Scott & Kristiaan Inwood. The Panang mix produces a very similar result, with the added treat of subtle Thai basil, nutmeg & kaffir lime overtones.
I made it with chicken instead of beef, added sliced bamboo shoots and garnished it with chillis, kaffir lime leaves and chopped roast peanuts. Served with black Thai rice it was spot on, with amazing flavour and just the right amount of heat.

Dee
Dee

March 20, 2022

Just made this with beef it was amazing so flavoursome, thank you for the magical paste and fab recipe!

Herdís D Baldvinsdottir
Herdís D Baldvinsdottir

August 07, 2021

I made chicken Panang two days ago. It was amazingly tasty thanks to Nitsa´s paste. Tonight I will cook crying tiger beef, can´t wait :) I will definetly become a regular customer. Thank you Nitsa.

Wayne Lodwig
Wayne Lodwig

May 07, 2021

First delivery this week and made chicken Panang. I must admit the result was astonishing. A stunning curry taken to another level by Nitsa’s Panang paste. I have already placed another order based on the taste, quality and level of service. So looking forward to making many more over the coming weeks – thank you so much

Leave a comment

Comments will be approved before showing up.


Also in Recipe Blog

Prik Naam Pla, Thai dipping sauce.
Prik Naam Pla, Thai dipping sauce.

July 01, 2023 1 Comment

This is the essential Thai dipping sauce you see all over Thailand. An absolute must for the Pad Kaprow recipe but also used to spice up almost any dish, particularly grilled meats or similar. And for many Thais they can't think of eating a fried egg without some Prik Naam Pla to top it. More than anything, it sums up the Thai food tastes of sour sweet and salty. Spicy? Of course that also depends on what chillies you use for this, and if you're prepared to do the extra work of separating out...

Continue Reading

Pad Kaprow or Thai Basil Beef Stir-fry
Pad Kaprow or Thai Basil Beef Stir-fry

June 15, 2023 1 Comment

Probably one of Thailand's most famous dishes served on both humble street food stalls and the poshest of restaurants. This is a simple dish with simple ingredients and with little practice, a good restaurant standard meal can be made in minutes. In Thailand this is almost always served with a crispy fried egg with a runny yolk, and the technique for cooking the egg is a crucial part of making this dish. If a crispy fried egg is not your thing of course you can eat it without, says she sadly..

Continue Reading

Thai Curry Pie
Thai Curry Pie

April 15, 2023

My first confession is that that I never thought I would be sitting here writing a recipe for a Thai Curry pie, but times change and we change with them or stagnate. My interest was sparked on my first trip back to Bangkok after the pandemic, chicken curry puffs have long been a popular Thai snack but savoury pies, usually steak and kidney, were very much something that was restricted to the Bangkok expat pub scene. All that had changed, bake shops were springing up outside the traditional to...

Continue Reading

3074
Verified Reviews