Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken is the kind of Sunday dinner that fills the whole house with warmth before anyone even sits down. I grew up watching my grandmother pull her big cast iron pot from the back of the cabinet on cold Midwest afternoons, and the smell of something slow-cooking always meant the family was gathering. This dish gives me that same feeling every single time.
Back in her farmhouse kitchen, Nonna Betty believed the best meals were the ones that did the hard work while you relaxed with the people you love. That is exactly what this Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken delivers. You spend ten minutes building the sauce – toasting the curry paste, stirring in coconut cream, nestling in that whole bird – and then the oven takes over. The chicken bastes itself in that golden coconut curry, the potatoes soak up every drop of flavor, and by the time you lift the lid, dinner is practically plated. Your kitchen is about to smell incredible.
Why This Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken Belongs in Your Recipe Box
Betty has cooked enough weeknight dinners to know that the best recipes are the forgiving ones. This Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken checks every box – big flavor, simple method, and results you can count on whether it is a busy Tuesday or a dinner party Saturday.
- One pot means one cleanup, and more time at the table
- The pot-roasting method keeps the chicken ultra juicy without any guesswork
- You have it in the oven in 10 minutes flat
- Store-bought curry paste gets elevated with fresh garlic, ginger, and lemongrass so it tastes homemade
- Potatoes cook right in the sauce and absorb all that rich coconut curry flavor
- Impressive enough for guests, easy enough for a weeknight rotation
Key Players in This Recipe
Knowing your ingredients makes a real difference with this dish. Here is what Betty always keeps in mind when she pulls this one together.
Whole Chicken: The pot-roasting method is what makes this work. The chicken sits in the sauce the entire time, which means the breast stays juicy and the thighs become fall-apart tender. Betty has never had a dry result with this technique.
Thai Red Curry Paste: In my kitchen, Maesri is the only brand I reach for. It is authentic, balanced, and not overly sweet the way many Western brands tend to be. Other pastes will work, but the sauce is only as good as the paste you start with.
Coconut Cream: Use coconut cream, not coconut milk. The cream gives you that thick, velvety sauce that clings to the chicken and potatoes. I always choose a brand that lists coconut as the only ingredient.
Kaffir Lime Leaves: These are what give Thai curry its signature fragrance. Crush them in your hand right before adding to break open the oils. Betty keeps a stash in the freezer because they keep perfectly for months.
Fresh Lemongrass, Garlic, and Ginger: These three aromatics are what transform store-bought paste into something that genuinely tastes homemade. Grate them on a microplane so they blend into the paste rather than sitting in chunks.
Fish Sauce: This is the salt of Thai cooking and it adds a savory depth you simply cannot get from table salt. Do not skip it.
Small Potatoes (skin-on): Keep them whole and skin-on. The skin holds them together while the inside turns creamy. They soak up the curry sauce and honestly become one of the best parts of the whole dish.
Thai Basil: Stir it in right at the end. It keeps its fresh, slightly aniseed flavor when added off the heat. Italian basil works in a pinch, but Thai basil is worth seeking out.
How to Make Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken
Betty’s tested technique is straightforward: build the sauce, add the chicken, and let the oven finish the job. Here is the method that works every time.
Step 1. De-Chill and Salt the Chicken Pull the chicken from the fridge 1 hour before cooking and let it sit on the counter. Pat it completely dry with paper towels, then sprinkle all over with salt. A dry, room-temperature chicken browns more evenly and cooks through without the breast drying out.
Step 2. Preheat the Oven Set your oven to 400 F (200 C). If you have a convection setting, use 180 C fan.
Step 3. Saute the Curry Paste Heat the vegetable oil in your large oven-proof pot over medium-high heat. Add the curry paste, garlic, ginger, and lemongrass. Stir constantly for 2 minutes until the paste darkens and starts to caramelize against the bottom of the pot. Betty never skips this step – it is what wakes the paste up and deepens the whole flavor of the sauce.
Step 4. Build the Sauce Pour in the chicken stock and let it simmer hard for 3 minutes until reduced by about half. Then stir in the coconut cream, the hand-crushed kaffir lime leaves, sugar, and fish sauce. The pot will smell extraordinary at this point.
Step 5. Add the Chicken and Potatoes Lower the whole chicken into the sauce breast-side up. Spoon the sauce over the top, then nestle the potatoes in around the sides wherever they fit.
Step 6. Bake Covered Put the lid on and bake for 40 minutes. Remove the lid and baste the chicken generously with the sauce using a spoon or turkey baster. Raise the oven temperature to 425 F (220 C). Bake uncovered for 10 minutes, baste again, then bake for another 10 minutes.
Step 7. Add the Beans Push the trimmed green beans down into the sauce around the chicken. Baste one more time and bake for a final 10 minutes without the lid. Adding the beans this late keeps them from turning mushy.
Step 8. Rest the Chicken Carefully lift the chicken out using tongs inside the cavity and a spatula underneath to support the weight without tearing the skin. Place it on a plate and rest for 10 minutes. Keep the lid on the pot to hold the sauce warm.
Step 9. Carve and Serve Carve the chicken into pieces and arrange on a serving platter. Stir the Thai basil leaves into the warm sauce right before serving. Spoon the sauce, potatoes, and beans over the chicken. Garnish with sliced red chili and fresh cilantro if you like, and serve alongside steamed jasmine rice.
If you enjoy one-pot chicken dinners with bold sauce, the Caramelised Soy Chicken in Garlic Ginger Broth with Rice is another deeply flavored option worth bookmarking.
What to Serve with Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken
This dish is rich and saucy, so pairing it with something fresh or light creates a satisfying balance at the table.
- Jasmine rice – the go-to choice for soaking up every bit of coconut curry sauce
- Smashed cucumber salad – cool and crisp, a natural contrast to the warm spiced sauce
- Asian cabbage and crispy noodle salad – adds crunch and a light tangy note alongside the rich curry
- Steamed jasmine rice with a squeeze of lime – simple and always effective
- Soft flatbread or naan – perfect for scooping the extra sauce from the bottom of the pot
- A simple green salad – keeps the meal feeling fresh and balanced
Making the Most of Leftovers
I typically store leftover chicken pieces submerged in the sauce in an airtight container. This keeps everything moist and actually lets the flavors deepen overnight. Stored this way in the refrigerator, it keeps well for up to 3 to 4 days.
This dish also freezes well. Betty’s method is to freeze the sauce and chicken separately in freezer-safe containers or bags, which gives you more flexibility when reheating. It holds for up to 3 months in the freezer.
For reheating, the stovetop over low heat is the best approach. Add a small splash of coconut cream or water to loosen the sauce as it warms. A 325 F oven also works well for larger portions. The microwave tends to dry out the chicken, so use it only as a last resort.
FAQs
Yes. Bone-in, skin-on thighs or leg quarters work well here. Reduce the covered bake time to about 30 minutes, then uncover and baste as the recipe directs.
Any Thai red curry paste will work. Mae Ploy is a solid alternative available at most Asian grocery stores. Just check the label and avoid brands with added sugar listed near the top of the ingredients.
Absolutely. It actually tastes better the following day as the flavors settle together. Make it fully, refrigerate overnight, and reheat gently before serving.
Thai Red Curry Pot Roast Chicken
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
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Remove chicken from the fridge 1 hour before cooking. Pat completely dry and sprinkle all over with salt.
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Preheat oven to 400 F (200 C), or 180 C fan.
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Heat oil in a large oven-proof pot over medium-high heat. Add curry paste, garlic, ginger, and lemongrass. Cook for 2 minutes, stirring, until paste darkens and caramelizes.
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Add chicken stock and simmer rapidly for 3 minutes to reduce by half. Stir in coconut cream, crushed kaffir lime leaves, sugar, and fish sauce.
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Place whole chicken into the sauce and spoon sauce all over it. Arrange potatoes around the chicken.
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Place lid on pot and bake for 40 minutes. Remove lid, baste chicken with sauce, then raise oven to 425 F (220 C). Bake uncovered 10 minutes, baste again, bake another 10 minutes.
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Push green beans into the sauce. Baste chicken again and bake a final 10 minutes without the lid.
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Remove chicken to a plate using tongs inside the cavity and a spatula underneath. Rest 10 minutes. Keep lid on pot to hold sauce warm.
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Carve chicken and place on a platter. Stir basil leaves into sauce. Spoon sauce, potatoes, and beans over chicken. Garnish with chili and cilantro if desired. Serve with jasmine rice.

