Any good basic BUDGET curry recipes?

Hey,

Thank's in advance. I was wondering if there's any tasty, BUDGET curry recipes. I live alone and have a really tight budget, I use to live in a women s shelter and another person who lived there with me. Used to make a curry, that'd last us three days! But she never showed me how to cook it. So now I want to be able to make one myself?

«1

Replies

  • Laura_beau
    Laura_beau Posts: 1,029 Member
    It depends what type of curry you are after? Indian? Thai? Japanese? Carribbean?

    My main tip would be to buy your ingredients from international/ ethnic supermarkets. Your speciality spices & ingredient will cost a fraction of what they do from the big supermarkets.

    Buy your meat & veggies from the market or special offers from supermarkets. Frozen spinach and canned chickpeas are great curry staples.

    Dried pulses are also cheap and keep for a long time (lentils etc)

    Rice is also cheap so make biriyani's too.

    Here are a few cheap and cheerful curry recipes:

    http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/7732/pumpkin-curry-with-chickpeas (Use butternut squash or sweet potatoes if you like instead of pumpkin).

    http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/2027/onepot-mushroom-and-potato-curry

    http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/1233/fragrant-chicken-curry-with-chick-peas

    Use chicken thighs as they are cheaper and more flavoursome than breasts, or turkey. Make meatballs using cheap mince and add those to your curry.
  • MadamUnique
    MadamUnique Posts: 173
    It depends what type of curry you are after? Indian? Thai? Japanese? Carribbean?

    My main tip would be to buy your ingredients from international/ ethnic supermarkets. Your speciality spices & ingredient will cost a fraction of what they do from the big supermarkets.

    Buy your meat & veggies from the market or special offers from supermarkets. Frozen spinach and canned chickpeas are great curry staples.

    Dried pulses are also cheap and keep for a long time (lentils etc)

    Rice is also cheap so make biriyani's too.

    Here are a few cheap and cheerful curry recipes:

    http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/7732/pumpkin-curry-with-chickpeas (Use butternut squash or sweet potatoes if you like instead of pumpkin).

    http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/2027/onepot-mushroom-and-potato-curry

    http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/1233/fragrant-chicken-curry-with-chick-peas

    Use chicken thighs as they are cheaper and more flavoursome than breasts, or turkey. Make meatballs using cheap mince and add those to your curry.

    Any curries, as long as its food! I'm on a budget and struggle to eat.

    Ah, I have a few local ethnic supermarkets and have some sprices and powders already as I like to make my food more flavored.

    Ugh, one thing i dislike is chickpeas. Tried eating them and they taste weird to me. No offence.

    Thank you though! :)
  • petstorekitty
    petstorekitty Posts: 592 Member
    I <3 curries as well!
    I buy my spices in bulk so a whole 'jar' only costs me under $1 but even still spices last forevah and I use a lot of them.

    you can put whatever cheap meat and veg you want in a curry. I use potatoes, peas, onions, pepper, corn..
    I buy frozen veggies b/c they are cheaper

    to make basic Indian or thai curry you use coconut milk. I reccommend light coconut milk b/c not only is it less fat/cals BUT it's thinner and you don't have to stir it to use it.

    to make the sauce you simmer the coconut milk with curry powder, turmeric, salt, pepper. if you can get it also add some cumin and ginger. adding butter makes it more flavorful but you can just put in more salt.

    then you toss in your cooked meat/veg/whatever.

    usually I'll cook the onions and meats in the pan, remove them then make the sauce in the same pan - not cleaned - so the flavors all mix.

    You can buy pre-made curry sauces and powders but using the spices on your own would prob be most cost effective.

    I put those spices in rice while it's cooking too to make more tasty rice. :)
  • sesko1961
    sesko1961 Posts: 10 Member
    I get my curry from an Amish market in southern IL. I make a curried tuna salad ... 1 can (3.5 oz) tuna, 1 Tbsp or so of plain Greek yogurt (can sub in low-fat mayo), 1 Tbsp chopped onion, 1/2 chopped apple (or 1/4 c. raisins or craisins), curry to taste. I eat this on crackers or make a sandwich.
  • UrbanLotus
    UrbanLotus Posts: 1,163 Member
    to make basic Indian or thai curry you use coconut milk. I reccommend light coconut milk b/c not only is it less fat/cals BUT it's thinner and you don't have to stir it to use it.

    Sorry but not for Indian food, no coconut milk! For basic North Indian food (I'm guessing ths is what you mean by curry recipe) - you need to make a masala (thats the base, like mirepoix or roux would be). You have to cook diced onions in oil for a while till they brown (not burn), maybe for like 10 minutes. Then puree them in a blender (I do this in huge batches and freeze it) then add that back to the pan, add diced or minced ginger and garlic and brown all that together. This is the masala. Then add chicken or whatever, cook it, add spices (coriander powder, ground cumin, turmeric, salt, garam masala. Please NO curry powder!), then add some tomato paste and water and let it simmer for a while. Done! You can substitute anything for the chicken - meat, paneer, etc, this is just a basic recipe for Indian home cooking.
  • dlegros
    dlegros Posts: 162 Member
    Sorry but not for Indian food, no coconut milk! For basic North Indian food (I'm guessing ths is what you mean by curry recipe) - you need to make a masala (thats the base, like mirepoix or roux would be). You have to cook diced onions in oil for a while till they brown (not burn), maybe for like 10 minutes. Then puree them in a blender (I do this in huge batches and freeze it) then add that back to the pan, add diced or minced ginger and garlic and brown all that together. This is the masala. Then add chicken or whatever, cook it, add spices (coriander powder, ground cumin, turmeric, salt, garam masala. Please NO curry powder!), then add some tomato paste and water and let it simmer for a while. Done! You can substitute anything for the chicken - meat, paneer, etc, this is just a basic recipe for Indian home cooking.

    That's great UL thanks for that. I recall making a recipe once that started with browning onions and peppers then pureeing - never realised it is the foundation for most recipes :)
  • UrbanLotus
    UrbanLotus Posts: 1,163 Member
    Sorry but not for Indian food, no coconut milk! For basic North Indian food (I'm guessing ths is what you mean by curry recipe) - you need to make a masala (thats the base, like mirepoix or roux would be). You have to cook diced onions in oil for a while till they brown (not burn), maybe for like 10 minutes. Then puree them in a blender (I do this in huge batches and freeze it) then add that back to the pan, add diced or minced ginger and garlic and brown all that together. This is the masala. Then add chicken or whatever, cook it, add spices (coriander powder, ground cumin, turmeric, salt, garam masala. Please NO curry powder!), then add some tomato paste and water and let it simmer for a while. Done! You can substitute anything for the chicken - meat, paneer, etc, this is just a basic recipe for Indian home cooking.

    That's great UL thanks for that. I recall making a recipe once that started with browning onions and peppers then pureeing - never realised it is the foundation for most recipes :)

    No problem! Sorry I don't have exact measurements or anything, I learned to cook just by watching my parents - but for Indian food, always err on the side of MORE spices ,onions, etc, our food is very flavorful :). OH and I forgot to mention the red chili powder, this is key!
  • justlistening
    justlistening Posts: 249 Member
    I make my North Indian curry the same way except I also add garlic or ginger with the spices. BTW. South Indians do use coconut milk in there curries so it is not incorrect, just different. Like one of the earlier posters mentioned many different curries around the world.
  • hookilau
    hookilau Posts: 3,134 Member
    Chief curry powder makes an excellent carribean curry. I am indo-trini, lots of influences making wonderful fusion style dishes. Check out carribeanpot.com for good basic recipes. I definitely reccomend the curry recipe, roti too :drinker:
  • 970Mikaela1
    970Mikaela1 Posts: 2,013 Member
    S&B curry at grocery store in appropriate aisle is good really good. Mild medium and spicy..try it like 4 bucks for a package we make about 4 lbs of curry chicken with it last night
  • hookilau
    hookilau Posts: 3,134 Member
    I make my North Indian curry the same way except I also add garlic or ginger with the spices. BTW. South Indians do use coconut milk in there curries so it is not incorrect, just different. Like one of the earlier posters mentioned many different curries around the world.

    Absolutely. I have some aunties that will use coconut milk judiciously when cooking. Others not so much, my mom included. We also add fresh ginger, chadon beni, and lots of garlic. Tomatoes also add a nice pop of acidity to balance out flavors.
  • UrbanLotus
    UrbanLotus Posts: 1,163 Member
    I make my North Indian curry the same way except I also add garlic or ginger with the spices. BTW. South Indians do use coconut milk in there curries so it is not incorrect, just different. Like one of the earlier posters mentioned many different curries around the world.

    Yup should have specified North Indian, I'm punjabi - know nothing about South Indian cooking lol. People are usually talking about cooking North Indian food and I often see them saying you have to use coconut milk for a "curry" - just clarifying that you don't, we never used it in my house and generally it's not part of basic "curries"
  • hookilau
    hookilau Posts: 3,134 Member
    to make basic Indian or thai curry you use coconut milk. I reccommend light coconut milk b/c not only is it less fat/cals BUT it's thinner and you don't have to stir it to use it.

    Sorry but not for Indian food, no coconut milk! For basic North Indian food (I'm guessing ths is what you mean by curry recipe) - you need to make a masala (thats the base, like mirepoix or roux would be). You have to cook diced onions in oil for a while till they brown (not burn), maybe for like 10 minutes. Then puree them in a blender (I do this in huge batches and freeze it) then add that back to the pan, add diced or minced ginger and garlic and brown all that together. This is the masala. Then add chicken or whatever, cook it, add spices (coriander powder, ground cumin, turmeric, salt, garam masala. Please NO curry powder!), then add some tomato paste and water and let it simmer for a while. Done! You can substitute anything for the chicken - meat, paneer, etc, this is just a basic recipe for Indian home cooking.

    Wait, what's wrong with curry powder?
  • in_this_generation
    in_this_generation Posts: 75 Member
    I've been dying to try this, and since it is also meatless you may consider it reasonable to make.
    http://www.food.com/recipe/sweet-potato-thai-curry-121137
  • Mdin1029
    Mdin1029 Posts: 456 Member
    Trader joes sells a curry masala sauce in jar. Put in a pot with chicken breast cut small. Simmer for about 40 minutes on low heat. So tasty, easy, and cheap.
  • lizzardsm
    lizzardsm Posts: 271 Member
    bump!
  • Lupercalia
    Lupercalia Posts: 1,857 Member
    Sorry but not for Indian food, no coconut milk! For basic North Indian food (I'm guessing ths is what you mean by curry recipe) - you need to make a masala (thats the base, like mirepoix or roux would be). You have to cook diced onions in oil for a while till they brown (not burn), maybe for like 10 minutes. Then puree them in a blender (I do this in huge batches and freeze it) then add that back to the pan, add diced or minced ginger and garlic and brown all that together. This is the masala. Then add chicken or whatever, cook it, add spices (coriander powder, ground cumin, turmeric, salt, garam masala. Please NO curry powder!), then add some tomato paste and water and let it simmer for a while. Done! You can substitute anything for the chicken - meat, paneer, etc, this is just a basic recipe for Indian home cooking.

    That's great UL thanks for that. I recall making a recipe once that started with browning onions and peppers then pureeing - never realised it is the foundation for most recipes :)

    No problem! Sorry I don't have exact measurements or anything, I learned to cook just by watching my parents - but for Indian food, always err on the side of MORE spices ,onions, etc, our food is very flavorful :). OH and I forgot to mention the red chili powder, this is key!

    Thanks for sharing your curry basics with us! I LOVE CURRY! :flowerforyou: :flowerforyou: :flowerforyou:
  • JeneticTraining
    JeneticTraining Posts: 663 Member
    Bump hehe
  • Wynterbourne
    Wynterbourne Posts: 2,225 Member

    Sorry but not for Indian food, no coconut milk! For basic North Indian food (I'm guessing ths is what you mean by curry recipe) - you need to make a masala (thats the base, like mirepoix or roux would be). You have to cook diced onions in oil for a while till they brown (not burn), maybe for like 10 minutes. Then puree them in a blender (I do this in huge batches and freeze it) then add that back to the pan, add diced or minced ginger and garlic and brown all that together. This is the masala. Then add chicken or whatever, cook it, add spices (coriander powder, ground cumin, turmeric, salt, garam masala. Please NO curry powder!), then add some tomato paste and water and let it simmer for a while. Done! You can substitute anything for the chicken - meat, paneer, etc, this is just a basic recipe for Indian home cooking.

    Wait, what's wrong with curry powder?

    Most pre-mixed curry powders use turmeric as the primary ingredient as a filler. Pretty, but turmeric itself doesn't have a lot of flavor. Making your own curry powder (roasting and grinding everything fresh) will allow you to get the right spice ratios and it will have a ton more flavor than anything you could get out of a pre-mixed jar or powder.
  • hookilau
    hookilau Posts: 3,134 Member
    Silly me, I've been doing it wrong all these years :laugh: I'm aware that roasting and grinding spices fresh each time is supposed to be better, I don't always have time or the inclination. I guess it comes down to personal preference.

    I understand a mixture too heavy with tumeric makes a bitter blend. Since my curries are tempered with other flavors, (coconut milk, tomato, green seasoning, etc) I've never found chief curry powder off putting enough to grind my own.
  • UrbanLotus
    UrbanLotus Posts: 1,163 Member
    Silly me, I've been doing it wrong all these years :laugh: I'm aware that roasting and grinding spices fresh each time is supposed to be better, I don't always have time or the inclination. I guess it comes down to personal preference.

    I understand a mixture too heavy with tumeric makes a bitter blend. Since my curries are tempered with other flavors, (coconut milk, tomato, green seasoning, etc) I've never found chief curry powder off putting enough to grind my own.

    Well it's more because curry powder is something that was made up by the Brits, it's not an Indian thing - we just use spices separately for authentic Indian food & isn't the same spices anyway. You don't need to roast & grind each time - I make them and store them in spice jars for years, or just buy the spices at an indian store. It's more to get the actual flavoring you want rather than using a pre-made mix you know? If you just want some vaguely Indian tasting dish, use away - but if you want actual Indian food you need the spices. It's kind of akin to using some random "stir fry sauce" or something instead of making your own - premade stuff is for inauthentic food ya know? And curry powder is misleading since people think hey you just add that to anything and you have "curry" lol.
  • zorbaru
    zorbaru Posts: 1,077 Member
    my wife makes the most basic curry. we use chicken breast but you could probably use any meat.

    just brown the meat. add enough cream to be a good amount of sauce, curry powder and fruit chutney. then let it simmer down and adjust quantities of curry/chutney to your taste.

    done.
  • Justacoffeenut
    Justacoffeenut Posts: 3,749 Member
    Bump
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    Using lentils and rice:

    cook the lentils and rice in one pot (boil for 20 mins, don't let them dry out)

    cook a curry sauce in the other, with the following:

    curry paste (you can look up online for how to make your own if it's cheaper than buying a shop one) OR oil and curry powder
    onions
    garlic
    whatever veg you like
    tomato puree
    vinegar or lemon juice

    fry the onions, garlic and paste (or oil and curry powder, you need enough oil so the spices come together in a paste) - add the veg, tomato puree and vinegar/lemon juice and cook until the veg is cooked

    when the rice and lentils are done, stir the sauce through the rice and lentils. Adjust the quantities so you get the right proportion of sauce to lentils, i.e. enough for the colour and flavour of rhe sauce spread through the lentils adequately.

    This actually tastes better reheated the next day and it's filling, so it's easy to make batches of it and store it in containers in the fridge or freezer.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    also, the same sauce recipe I already posted can be adapted to make other curries, by adding the protein, e.g. meat, fish (a kind that will survive being in curry, prawns, egg (boil them, then cut into chunks and stir in the curry), baked beans (just pour a tin of them into it) - you can even add tuna mayonnaise, and it goes really well for a creamy tuna curry

    if you're cooking meat from raw, then put it in right at the beginning when you cook the garlic, onions and paste, and ensure it's cooked for long enough to be cooked through. If you're using precooked meat (I usually keep boiled chicken breasts in the fridge for a protein food I can just grab for salads and sandwiches) then cut it into the right sized pieces and stir it through at the end.

    many, many variations...
  • MadamUnique
    MadamUnique Posts: 173
    Sorry on the late reply, but thank you! I get my money on Friday and I'm defo going to attempt these! Thank you ♥
  • barbara4599
    barbara4599 Posts: 114 Member
    Thanks for sharing, I've been craving curry lately and have some new ideas here. Lentils are a big favorite, they're tasty and cheap. Here's what I'm having for lunch today:

    http://www.food.com/recipe/egyptian-red-lentil-soup-94673
  • mindygeske
    mindygeske Posts: 120 Member
    bump
  • hungryhobbit1
    hungryhobbit1 Posts: 259 Member
    My go-to recipe is pretty affordable, if you can get fish sauce and Mae Ploy from an Asian market where the prices are lower.

    Combine crunchy peanut butter, mae ploy, (sweet chili sauce) a dash of fish sauce, fresh minced garlic, and curry powder. Whisk until mixture becomes a paste, or add a bit of water to make sauce. When I run out of curry powder I do it the longer way and use a combination of spices (someone listed them above.) If your curry powder doesn't have much spice you might want to add some sriracha or red chili. Makes a great simmering sauce for chicken and veggies. Add a squeeze of lime right before eating.

    I change the proportions a little every time depending on what flavor and consistency I'm going for. (Fish sauce is really the only thing you can overdo) Mae Ploy has a lot of sugar so I try not to go too crazy with it. This is also tasty with coconut milk, but then you have to up all the spices to keep it flavorful.
  • Sierrasdawn2
    Sierrasdawn2 Posts: 13 Member
    bump..yum yum yum