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  2. Curry paste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curry_paste

    There are different varieties of curry paste depending from the region and also within the same cuisine. Via trade routes with southern India the curry pastes are believed to have entered Southeast Asian cuisines through the kitchens of Indianized royal courts of Southeast Asia, where the curry pastes were adapted for local taste preferences ...

  3. Red curry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_curry

    The prepared red curry paste is cooked on a saucepan with cooking oil, to which coconut milk is added. [1] Then the meat as protein source is added into the curry-base soup. Various kinds of meats could be made as red curry, such as chicken, beef, pork, shrimp, duck, or even exotic meats such as frog and snake meats. The most common however ...

  4. Thai curry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_curry

    Red, green and yellow Thai curry pastes Different types of Thai curry pastes for sale at a market in Hat Yai, in southern Thailand. Thai curries are always made with a curry paste. Common ingredients used in many Thai curry pastes are: Shrimp paste; Chillies; depending on the curry these can be dried or fresh, red or green; Onions or shallots ...

  5. List of Thai ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Thai_ingredients

    Used in certain meat dishes, most notably in matsaman curry. Phong kari ผงกะหรี่ Curry powder: Thai curries are nearly always made with fresh pastes. Curry powder is only used when making certain Indian influenced curries, as well as in stir-fried dishes (often in combination with scrambled eggs) called phat phong kari. Phong phalo

  6. Curry powder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curry_powder

    In Australia, a common curry spice is Keen’s curry powder. [11] [12] [7] The ingredient "curry powder", along with instructions on how to produce it, [13] are also seen in 19th-century US and Australian cookbooks, and advertisements. [14] British traders introduced the powder to Meiji Japan, in the mid-19th century, where it became known as ...

  7. Thai cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_cuisine

    Spices and spice mixtures used in Thai cuisine include phong phalo (five-spice powder), phong kari (curry powder), and fresh and dried peppercorns (phrik thai). Northern Thai larb uses a very elaborate spice mix, called phrik lap, which includes ingredients such as cumin, cloves, long pepper, star anise, prickly ash seeds and cinnamon. [37]