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Red curry paste Techniques

4 techniques from Red curry paste cuisine

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Red curry paste
Phrik Gaeng Phet — Red Curry Paste / พริกแกงเผ็ด
Central Thai — though red curry pastes in varying forms appear throughout Thai cuisine, the Central Thai version is the benchmark
Red curry paste (phrik gaeng phet) is the most versatile and widely used Thai paste — the foundation of gaeng phet, chu chi, and many regional variations. Unlike green paste, it uses dried red chillies (rehydrated) as the primary heat and colour source, producing a paste that is stable, richer in colour, and with a deeper, slower-releasing heat profile. The dried prik haeng (dried spur chillies) are soaked in warm water for 15 minutes, then squeezed dry before pounding — this removes excess water while retaining flavour compounds. The addition of coriander seed and cumin distinguishes this paste from green curry paste and gives it its characteristic warm earthiness.
Thai — Curry Pastes
Red Curry (Gaeng Daeng)
Red curry paste is the foundation paste of central Thai cooking — Thompson describes it as the closest to a 'standard' Thai curry paste, the preparation from which many other pastes are derived. The dried red chilli's role in the paste reflects both the history of the chilli in Thai cuisine (introduced from the New World via Portuguese traders in the 16th century, adopted with such completeness into Thai cooking that its origin is rarely remembered) and the central Thai kitchen's preference for the deeper, rounder flavour of dried chilli over the vivid freshness of green.
A curry of central Thailand built on a paste of dried red chillies that gives the preparation its name and its characteristic deep red-orange colour — richer and somewhat more intense in flavour than the fresh-chilli brightness of green curry, with the dried chillies contributing a fruity depth and a warmth that builds rather than strikes. Red curry is the most versatile of the classical Thai curries: it can take almost any protein (duck, beef, pork, seafood, tofu), any vegetable of compatible texture, and it scales from modest heat to considerable intensity depending on the quantity and variety of dried chilli used.
preparation
Red Curry Paste (Krung Gaeng Phet Daeng)
Red curry paste is central Thai in character — it reflects the cooking of the Bangkok royal court and its surrounding regions, where dried chillies from the south and aromatic herbs from the central plains came together with the shrimp paste that is the fermented foundation of most central Thai seasoning. Thompson traces the paste's components to their individual regional and historical origins and insists that the balance between its aromatic ingredients has been refined over generations of professional and domestic cooking.
The foundational red curry paste of the Thai kitchen — built on dried long red chillies soaked and pounded with lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime zest, coriander root, garlic, shallots, white pepper, coriander seed, cumin, and shrimp paste. Red curry paste is the most versatile paste in the Thai repertoire and the correct place to begin understanding paste construction: its components represent the full range of Thai aromatic materials, and its technique (Entry TH-01) is the standard from which all other pastes are variations. Red curry paste correctly made is a deep, brick-red paste of pungent, complex depth — it should smell simultaneously of dried chilli heat, lemongrass brightness, the earthy resin of galangal, and the sea floor of the shrimp paste.
preparation
Red Curry Paste (Nam Prik Gaeng Daeng)
Red curry paste — gaeng daeng — is the cornerstone of Thai cooking. Thompson's *Thai Food* presents the base recipe and its many variations in detail, emphasising that the proportions and specific varieties of chilli define the regional character. Bangkok red paste differs from Chiang Mai, which differs from Hat Yai. The recipe here represents the central Thai standard.
The central Thai red curry paste — built on dried long red chillies, lemongrass, galangal, and shrimp paste — is the most widely used curry paste in Thai cooking and the foundation upon which panang, massaman, and numerous relish derivatives are built. Its character is assertive without the freshness of green paste or the complexity of massaman — a direct, clean-heat preparation of fundamental utility in the Thai professional kitchen.
sauce making