Panang curry. Rich. A bit sweet. Spicy. A great mix of south east asian flavours. It’s the Thai curry you should be making.
Never heard of panang curry? This is a dish you need to learn about. It’s on the menus at most every Thai restaurant. And yet everybody wants the red curry. Or maybe the green. There’s lots more to Thai cuisine.
If you have heard of it, this is how I was taught to cook it. By a little Thai lady who’s name I forgot 10 years ago. OK. It was closer to 20. But she had cred. Unlocked Thai cooking for me. No canned curry paste here.
She called it kaeng phanaeng neua but it’s panang curry. One and the same. Kaeng phanaeng neua doesn’t roll off the tongue quite the same way. And FYI, auto-correct will fight you the whole way. Try it.
Not that those little cans of Maesri curry paste are a bad thing. There’s even a panang curry version. Grab a can, some coconut milk and some chicken and you’ve got a pretty good Thai curry right there.
If you are just getting into cooking Thai, that’s actually a very respectable start. I do that sometimes.
Curry paste from scratch makes a big difference
Want to dig a little deeper? Serve up panang curry that doesn’t come from a can? Have your friends to say your panang curry is better than the local hot Thai restaurant? This is how you do it. It’s not hard.
Panang curry – the ingredient list
It will take a trip to an Asian grocer though. But then you probably had to go to the Asian grocer to get decent panang curry paste. So grab a few different ingredients instead and have at it.
Your shopping list for panang curry isn’t that long. But it may seem a bit odd.
Galangal. That’s a root not unlike ginger. But not like ginger either. It’s important. Ginger is not a good substitute. Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.
Shrimp paste and fish sauce. They don’t sound tasty. They don’t smell all that good either. I know. But get over it. Mix them in and something great happens. Fish sauce makes everything taste better. Counter-intuitive. But true. Within reason. Fish sauce ice cream not so good. Actually, I’ve never tried it so I shouldn’t judge.
Thai basil is not the same as regular basil. Similar but different. More intense. And it seems to hold up better when cooked. I would leave it out if you can’t get it. Better different than just wrong.
Kaffir lime leaves. That’s the taste. The one you don’t know where it comes from. But it’s there. Always there. Whenever you have Thai. You’ll know what I’m talking about when you smell them. Trust me.
Kaffir lime leaf does make phenomenal ice cream. I have tried that. It’s amazing. If you ever see it, grab it.
Lemongrass you can probably get anywhere. Same with coconut milk. Coriander with the roots intact is hit or miss. So grab it when you see it. These are all going to be less expensive at the Asian grocer anyway.
Whole red chilies. That’s the heart of this recipe. And the heat. Hotter chilies means hotter curry. Shocking. I know.
I use kashmiri chilies from the Indian grocer. Way milder than those super mean little Thai chilies. Sometimes I go with a mix of the two.
But I like the kashmiri chilies best. Because I can add more. Deeper flavour. Not just hot. Tasty and hot. That’s the balance I look for.
Once you have the ingredients panang curry is smooth sailing
Once you have this crazy list of ingredients together, cooking it is easy. Whiz up some curry paste. Fry it off. Add the coconut milk, chicken and kaffir lime leaves. Simmer. Finish it off with the fish sauce and sugar. A bit of Thai basil.
That’s all there is too it. Not hard. Pretty easy in fact. Panang curry. Kaeng phanaeng neua. Demystified. In case it was keeping you up at night.
Seriously though, it’s a Thai curry you should get to know. It’s worth the trip to the Asian market. Try it sometime. Or order it next time you go out for Thai. Do yourself a favour. Try it.
panang curry with chicken
Ingredients
panang curry paste
- 5 whole dried chilies - your curry will be as hot as the chilies you choose.
- 3 small shallots - coarsely chopped
- 2 cloves garlic
- 1 tbsp galangal - diced
- 1 tbsp lemongrass - inner shoots only, fairly finely chopped
- 1 tbsp cilantro roots - coriander root
- 1 tsp black pepper - I use butcher's grind. It's medium coarse. If you are using fine black pepper drop this to 1/2 tsp
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 tsp shrimp paste
- enough coconut milk to puree
panang curry
- 1 tbsp neutral vegetable oil
- all the curry paste
- 1 14 oz can coconut milk (less the coconut milk you used to puree the paste)
- 3-4 chicken thighs - boneless, skinless and cut into big bite sized pieces
- 1 tbsp fish sauce
- 1 tbsp brown sugar - palm, jaggery or plain old brown sugar will do
- 4-5 kaffir lime leaves 3 whole plus 2 for garnish
- 1 cup thai basil leaves - in all
- red chilies to garnish
Instructions
panang curry paste
- Remove the stems from the chilies. Break the chilies into pieces. Cover with hot water and soak for 30 minutes.
- Combine all the panang curry paste ingredients including the rehydrated chilies in a blender. A mini food processor works well for this if you have one. Add a couple tablespoons of coconut milk and puree. If it doesn't puree add a bit more coconut milk. Sneak up on the minimum coconut milk you need to make it puree.
- You are trying to puree some pretty hard ingredients. Galangal in particular. This takes a bit of scraping back into the bowl and more time. Be patient. Remember, they used to do this with a mortar and pestle so we have it easy.
panang curry
- Heat a wok or skillet over medium heat. Add the oil.
- Fry all the curry paste for about 2 minutes. Regulate the heat so it doesn't burn.
- Add the coconut milk and 3 whole lime leaves.
- Bring to a boil and add the chicken. Cook until the chicken is just done. This takes about 10-12 minutes.
- You can use an instant read thermometer to check that you've hit 175F (best). Or cut a piece and sneak a peek (not bad). Or guess and hope you don't kill everyone (not so good). If you haven't killed anyone yet, you probably won't this time. But it is a really good idea to start using an instant read thermometer in general. The pros do. You should too.
- Add the fish sauce and sugar and stir to combine. Remove from heat. Stir in most of the basil. Keep a bit for garnish.
- Serve with jasmine rice or rice noodles. Garnish with the remaining Thai basil, julienned lime leaves and red chilies if desired.Apparently it also goes with spaghetti. Haven't tried that yet myself...
Hi Romain, I did myself a favor and tried it; it was fantastic! The only bump in the road was that I could not find fresh Galangal. I only found frozen. But I don’t think the difference was large. My wife said that it tasted just like the best curries she had in Thailand… Only better! That really says it all! Great recipe as always!!
That’s awesome! I haven’t tried frozen galangal but if it works well I will get some. Would make things easier for sure!
It was phantastic. Thank you very much.
Awesome!
Hi Romain! Just wanted to tell you how much I’m enjoying your recipes, and this particular one was a huge hit tonight with my family. I ended up using 3 dried guallijo chilies in this recipe and the spice level was perfect for us (I also used only about 2/3 of the curry paste). It was even better than our local favorite Thai restaurant. We’ve been enjoying many of your Indian curries as well. Thanks for all the recipes!
You are very, very welcome! Great to hear you are finding things you enjoy here on glebekitchenπ.
Brilliant. Love the recipe. Love the humour.
Thanks!
Haha. So happy to hear that. It has to be fun in the kitchen!
Tastes absolutely fantastic! Already made this 3 times. May I ask which coconut milk brand you were using to get this nice oil separation? I used Aroy-D but it turned out much more “emulsified”, which some people like, but for me, I prefer the authentic thai-way with visible fat separation but it seems totally random to me when and with which coconut milk this happens.
I cannot remember what brand I used. I do use Aroy-D quite often. Rooster brand sometimes. I tend to bulk buy when I’m running low and go through it as I need to. I’m not super loyal to any one brand.
Can I use a galangal paste? And still 1 tablespoon?
I imagine so but I’ve never used it so I can’t say definitively.
I meant because of the shrimp paste.
It’s a bit of a leap of faith but I’m so happy to hear you went for it!
At first I didn’t think that I would like it because it smelled so weird probably because of the fish sauce. After a couple of bites I decided that it was actually quite delicious. The 3 of us ate it all. Yum!
Wow , first for me Romain, been cooking your Indian dishes for the last year and they are amazing but this just moved it onto a different level. My eldest son spent 2 year in Thailand and there’s a serving in a takeaway container for him , I’m sure he’ll agree with me . Thank you for your dedication to this website
That is just great to hear. Thank you so much for saying! I’m delighted you are enjoying glebekitchen and especially happy you are trying more than the Indian recipes.
Made this after having good panang from a local Thai restaurant. It was delicious! Thank you for posting it.
I went down a panang rabbit hole and looked at other recipes: a lot of them call for peanuts, cumin and cardamom. Is that typical in panang or is a more regional? (I did notice that most canned panang curry paste does not contain peanuts though).
Glad you enjoyed it!
This panang recipe is pretty much what I was taught to make but tweaked to my tastes over the years. Thailand has an incredible strong food culture so cumin and cardamom could well be be a regional variation.
Thanks for the response. This recipe tasted very similar to the restaurant I ate at so I wonβt be modifying it π
I am always trying to publish recipes to help people get restaurant quality flavour at home so this is great to hear. Thank you!
If you were to use store-bought curry paste, specifically Mae Ploy Panang Curry Paste, how much of it would you use? Thank you.
I have never tried this recipe with store-bought curry paste so I really don’t know. If I had to guess I would use 3-4 Tbsp of curry paste and follow the rest of the recipe. I do that with red curry paste sometimes for a Thai red curry when I’m in a hurry.
you have galangal as an ingredient. Do you use Greater Galangal Used as a flavouring throughout Indonesia, Malaysia and parts of India, or Lesser Galangal Used as a flavouring in Indochina and Indonesia but not in Chinese cooking. Or perhaps it doesn’t matter which one uses?
Wow. You know your galangal. As far as I know we only get greater galangal here in Canada. Certainly there is no choice that I have ever seen. The galangal flavour profile is in line with the galangal taste in curry pastes from Thailand.
I was always wondering how to make panang curry! Thanks for breaking it down and making it approachable π
It’s so worth making that little bit of effort to make the paste from scratch!
Amazing taste Glebe kitchen does it again
Thank you!