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    Home » Recipes » Pressure cooker

    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry

    Published: Apr 14, 2016 · Modified: Dec 4, 2023 by Mike Vrobel · This post may contain affiliate links · 24 Comments

    Jump to Recipe
    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry
    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry

    I loved the Thai green chicken curry you did the other day - but I couldn’t find green curry paste at my grocery store. They had red curry paste - is that OK?

    Of course it is! My pressure cooker curry recipes are a basic technique3The technique, In summary: sauté the aromatics, fry the curry paste and coconut cream, stir in the protein and the rest of the coconut milk, pressure cook, then simmer any last minute vegetables and serve. the interesting parts of the recipe is the variations - what curry paste, meat, and vegetable combination do you want to use?

    Next up on my Thai Curry tour is red beef curry. I love to use a flat iron steak from my friends at Certified Angus Beef for this curry. A flat iron steak is cut from the chuck blade roast, and is a thin, relatively fat free cut. It is as tender as steak, but has enough connective tissue to hold up in the high heat of the pressure cooker. It’s also the perfect thickness to make bite sized beef strips - I cut it in half lengthwise, then crosswise into ½ inch thick pieces. 4If you want to save money, buy chuck roast. It’s the same cut, basically - but you’ll have to do more knife work to get rid of the fat and cut the pieces to size. I prefer the easier to carve flat iron steak - especially on weeknights.

    Recipe: Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry

    Equipment

    • 6 quart or larger pressure cooker (I love my Instant Pot electric pressure cooker)
    Print
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    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry


    5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

    4.8 from 5 reviews

    • Author: Mike Vrobel
    • Total Time: 1 hour
    • Yield: 6-8 1x
    Print Recipe
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    Description

    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry recipe - spicy Thai beef in a thick curry sauce, in a hurry thanks to the pressure cooker.


    Ingredients

    Scale
    • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
    • 1 medium onion, peeled and sliced into ½ inch wedges
    • 1 red bell pepper, cored, stemmed, and sliced into ½ inch strips
    • 3 cloves garlic, crushed
    • ½ inch piece of ginger, peeled and crushed
    • Cream from the top of a (13.5 ounce) can coconut milk
    • ½ cup red curry paste (a whole 4-ounce can)
    • 8-ounce can bamboo shoots, drained
    • 2 pounds flat iron steak (or chuck blade steak, or boneless chuck roast), cut into 2-inch by ½-inch strips
    • 1 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt or 2 teaspoons fine sea salt
    • ½ cup chicken stock or water
    • 1 tablespoon fish sauce (plus more to taste)
    • 1 tablespoon soy sauce (plus more to taste)
    • Juice of 1 lime

    Garnish and Sides

    • Minced cilantro
    • Minced basil (preferably Thai basil)
    • Lime wedges
    • Jasmine rice

    Instructions

    Sauté the aromatics: Heat the vegetable oil over medium-high heat in the pressure cooker pot until shimmering. (Use Sauté mode in an electric pressure cooker.) Stir in the onion, red bell pepper, garlic, and ginger, and sauté until the onion starts to soften, about 3 minutes.

    Fry the curry paste: Scoop the cream from the top of the can of coconut milk and add it to the pot, then stir in the curry paste. Cook, stirring often, until the curry paste darkens, about 5 minutes.

    Pressure cook the curry: Sprinkle the beef with the kosher salt. Add the beef to the pot, and stir to coat with curry paste. Stir in the rest of the can of coconut milk, bamboo shoots, chicken stock, fish sauce, and soy sauce. Lock the lid and pressure cook on high pressure for 12 minutes in an electric PC or 10 minutes in a stovetop PC. Let the pressure come down naturally, about 20 minutes.

    Finish the curry: Remove the lid from the pressure cooker. Stir in the lime juice, then taste the curry for seasoning, adding more soy sauce or fish sauce as needed. Ladle the curry into bowls, sprinkle with minced cilantro and basil, and serve with Jasmine rice.

    • Prep Time: 15 minutes
    • Cook Time: 45 minutes
    • Category: Pressure Cooker
    • Cuisine: Thai

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    Stockpiling ingredients
    Stockpiling ingredients
    Thin-slicing the beef
    Thin-slicing the beef
    Sauteing the aromatics
    Sauteing the aromatics
    Frying the curry paste and coconut cream
    Frying the curry paste and coconut cream
    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry
    Pressure Cooker Thai Red Beef Curry

    Notes

    • Don’t shake the can of coconut milk - you want the solid layer of cream on the top to stay separate from the liquid underneath. That lets you fry the coconut cream with the curry paste, then add the liquid later. (If you forget, or your coconut milk is mixed, skip the cream in the “fry the curry paste” step and stir the whole can into the pot in the “pressure cook the curry” step.)
    • I like my curry hot, so I use ½ cup of curry paste - in other words, the entire 4 ounce can. If you want to cut back on the heat, only use ¼ cup of curry paste, about half the can.
    • If you look carefully at the picture, you can see two different brands of curry paste. I prefer Maesri, but I have to make a special trip to my local Asian grocer to find it. Thai Kitchen is available in regular grocery stores, and it is good enough when I don’t feel like making an extra stop.

    What do you think?

    Questions? Other ideas? Leave them in the comments section below.

    Related Posts

    Pressure Cooker White Rice
    Pressure Cooker Thai Green Chicken Curry
    Pressure Cooker Massaman Beef Curry
    Instant Pot Pepper Steak
    My list of Pressure Cooker Recipes

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    Comments

    1. Renee says

      December 05, 2022 at 7:44 am

      Made this and it was AMAZING. I was surprised at your alternate recommendation of using chuck steak, but it worked! My only concern was cooking the veggies in the beginning -- I figured that would make them too soft in the end. I was even worried about putting them in the pressure cooker from the beginning and yes, they were indeed too soft at the end. Next time, I'll split the cooking time and not add them until the last couple of minutes. That will add total cooking time, but it will be worth it.....or I'll add them completely at the end and just let them simmer in the curry while the InstaPot is still on warm. In any case, thank you-- this will be a favorite in my house.

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        December 05, 2022 at 5:03 pm

        Glad you enjoyed it!

        Reply
    2. B says

      June 23, 2022 at 7:57 pm

      I just made this last weekend - used chuck roast. No bamboo shoots. Used a smaller amount of red curry paste, but added some galangal, lemongrass, and Thai basil (had them already) and it was so good! The beef was really tender. I will make this again for sure.

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        June 23, 2022 at 8:38 pm

        I’m glad you enjoyed it!

        Reply
    3. Katherine says

      September 18, 2019 at 8:44 am

      the whole family loved it, thanks. I added the capsicum after pressure cooking along with carrots, beans and diced potato. Even without lime/lemon or bamboo shoots (none on hand!) it was still delicious.

      Reply
    4. Phil says

      May 15, 2019 at 12:43 pm

      Just found your recipe. Curious, why use chicken broth instead of beef broth if you’re cooking beef? Does it overpower the intended curry flavor to much?

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        May 18, 2019 at 9:31 am

        Because I always have homemade pressure cooker chicken broth on hand, and the broth adds more body than flavor to the recipe. If you have beef broth, go ahead and use it!

        Reply
    5. Kathy_S says

      April 18, 2017 at 12:43 pm

      I don't see brown sugar listed in the ingredients list, nor do I see it in the instructions besides where it states to add more as needed. Regardless we really enjoyed this recipe - next time I will add the peppers after pressure cooking and saute for a minute or two as we found that they turned to mush.

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        April 19, 2017 at 6:34 am

        Fixed, thanks. There is no brown sugar in the recipe - cut and paste will be the death of me.

        Reply
    6. Debbie says

      March 15, 2017 at 12:13 pm

      Could you make the Thai Red Curry with sliced chuck roast? Would I need to adjust the cook time?
      Thanks!

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        March 15, 2017 at 4:27 pm

        Yes, you can used chuck roast - that's actually what a flat iron steak is, a piece of the chuck. It won't change the cooking time.

        Reply
    7. Susan says

      March 06, 2017 at 11:16 pm

      We made this for the first time tonight and LOVED it so much! I found 3 Tbsp of curry paste perfect for our taste (I love Mae Ploy brand). The only change I made was to add 2 Tbsp of coconut sugar, which we liked but it didn't make it sweet overall. Thank you so much for the recipe - the green curry is next! 🙂

      Reply
    8. Mike says

      August 10, 2016 at 11:52 am

      How strong is the taste of the Coconut milk in the final result? I love curry dishes but my wife dislikes the strong milky coconut flavor that comes from many of the Thai dishes. Any possibility to lessen, remove or replace the Coconut milk? Maybe use half coconut milk and half regular or maybe half almond milk>

      Reply
      • Mike V says

        August 10, 2016 at 12:13 pm

        Try chicken broth instead.

        Reply
    9. DaWn Edwards says

      August 07, 2016 at 11:15 am

      Thank you! One more question, do you have a recipe for a Pnang curry? You got me on a roll now! 😉

      Reply
      • Mike V says

        August 07, 2016 at 11:48 am

        Sorry, don't have one for Pnang curry.

        Reply
    10. DaWn Edwards says

      August 06, 2016 at 11:51 am

      Am I able to substitute chicken for the beef? Not a big beef eater but this sounds ds delish.

      Reply
      • Mike V says

        August 06, 2016 at 12:14 pm

        Yes - do everything as listed here, but use the time under pressure from this recipe: https://www.dadcooksdinner.com/pressure-cooker-thai-green-chicken-curry/

        Reply
    11. Katie says

      July 16, 2016 at 1:51 pm

      Just contemplating taking the plunge on the Instant Pot and looking at recipes. By the time the natural pressure release is taken into account the cooking time is not that disimilar to cooking on a stove top in a conventional pan (depending on the type and cut of meat obviously). What would you say are the advantages of the Instant Pot method? Thanks

      Reply
      • Mike V says

        July 16, 2016 at 1:58 pm

        I have to disagree with your basic statement - this recipe would take 2 hours of simmering on the stovetop, instead of 10 minutes under pressure plus a 20 minute natural pressure release.

        Now, there are some pressure cooker recipes that take about the same amount of time - those I usually make on the stovetop, or use the pressure cooker because it's convenient to have the hands-off, timed cooking. The pressure cooker really shines with any recipe that would require an hour or more of stovetop simmering; it cuts that down to minutes.

        Reply
    12. Olivia says

      April 16, 2016 at 1:04 pm

      Can you use flank steak instead ? Looks delicious btw !

      Reply
      • Mike V says

        April 16, 2016 at 3:00 pm

        You can, and it will be good - but it will come out just a little tougher. Flank steak is a leaner cut of meat than flat iron or chuck.

        Reply
    13. Aaron Friedman says

      April 16, 2016 at 12:01 pm

      So why do you not use the extra cup of water/broth and the Tbs of brown sugar in this version? Also, have you tried the Chaudoc coconut milk (the can looks very similar) that has 350 calories per can instead of 750?

      Reply
      • Mike V says

        April 16, 2016 at 12:29 pm

        > Why not 1 cup chicken broth in this recipe?
        Um...because I wasn't paying attention? It worked with 1/2 cup, so if you want to cut back in the chicken curry, that's OK. (The extra 1/2 cup of liquid didn't seem to make much of a difference in the final product.)

        I've never tried the low-cal coconut milk. I assume that means the cream wouldn't be as thick (lowfat = low cream), so don't bother frying the curry paste with the cream. Dry fry the curry paste in the pot (or add a tablespoon of vegetable oil), and add the whole can of coconut milk where the recipe says to add "the rest of the can."

        Reply

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    Welcome to Dad Cooks Dinner!

    I'm Mike Vrobel, a dad who cooks dinner every night. I'm an enthusiastic home cook, and I write about pressure cooking, rotisserie grilling, and other food topics that grab my attention.

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