Curry Paste Per Can of Coconut Milk Calculator

Coconut milk curry ratio planning

🍛 Curry Paste Per Can of Coconut Milk Calculator

Calculate Thai curry paste tablespoons and grams from coconut milk cans, can size, paste style, heat level, add-in load, servings, paste strength, broth dilution, intensity, and batch multiplier.

📌Curry Batch Presets

Curry Paste Inputs

Many Thai curry bases start around 2-4 tablespoons curry paste per 13.5 oz or 400 ml can of coconut milk. This calculator adjusts that base for paste type, brand strength, dilution, heat target, and how much protein or vegetables the sauce must season.

Use decimal cans for partial cans, opened cartons, or scaled test batches.
Enter oz in imperial mode or ml in metric mode when Custom is selected.
Used for paste per serving and serving density checks.
Scale recipe cards, meal prep trays, or party pots without changing can size.
Most dense curry pastes are near 15 g per level tablespoon.
Curry Paste
0 tbsp
0 g total paste
Paste Per Can
0 tbsp
per 13.5 oz can
Heat Score
0/10
balanced
Servings
0
0 tbsp each
Curry Paste Breakdown
Choose curry details, then calculate the paste ratio.

📐Quick Ratio Cards

2 tbsp
Gentle start per can
3 tbsp
Balanced per can
4 tbsp
Bold upper range
15 g
Typical tbsp paste

📊Reference Tables

Paste StyleBase Tbsp Per 13.5 oz CanNatural HeatBest Adjustment
Thai red curry paste2.5 to 4 tablespoonsMediumWorks well at the classic 3 tablespoon midpoint
Thai green curry paste2 to 3.5 tablespoonsHotUse less for concentrated pastes or sensitive eaters
Thai yellow curry paste2 to 3 tablespoonsMildRaise intensity before raising heat too far
Panang curry paste2.5 to 4 tablespoonsMediumRicher sauces often taste right at a higher ratio
Massaman curry paste2.5 to 4 tablespoonsWarmSpice depth can handle heavier protein loads
Can SizeApprox Volume2 Tbsp Rule4 Tbsp Rule
5.4 oz mini can160 ml0.8 tablespoon1.6 tablespoons
8.5 oz small carton250 ml1.3 tablespoons2.5 tablespoons
13.5 oz standard can400 ml2 tablespoons4 tablespoons
13.66 oz import can404 ml2 tablespoons4 tablespoons
14 oz large can414 ml2.1 tablespoons4.1 tablespoons
Heat Or Intensity ChoicePaste FactorFlavor CueUse When
Gentle heat or soft intensity0.70 to 0.85xCoconut-forward and mildFamily dinner or first test with a new paste
Mild to balanced0.90 to 1.00xClassic creamy curryMost weeknight Thai curry batches
Medium and bold1.05 to 1.20xNoticeable chile and aromaticsHeavy add-ins or stronger restaurant-style sauce
Hot and restaurant strong1.25 to 1.40xPaste-forward heatChili lovers and sturdy proteins
Maximum intense base1.45x plusVery strong paste characterOnly when paste strength is known
Add-In LoadAdjustmentServing CuePractical Note
Light add-ins0.92xSaucy curryLess paste keeps coconut milk round and smooth
Normal dinner load1.00xAbout 4 servings per canDefault for chicken, tofu, or mixed vegetables
Heavy protein or vegetables1.12xDense skilletExtra paste seasons more surface area
Very heavy add-ins1.22xMeal prep thick curryAdd a reserve splash of coconut milk if too strong
Brothy noodle bowl1.18xMore liquid overallBroth dilutes salt, chile, and aromatics

🔍Paste Style Snapshot

Red Curry
3 tbsp
A dependable midpoint for a 13.5 oz coconut milk can.
Green Curry
2.5 tbsp
Often hotter, so the calculator trims paste when heat is gentle.
Panang
3.5 tbsp
Rich, thick sauces usually handle a stronger paste ratio.
Massaman
3 tbsp
Warm spice depth works well with larger protein loads.

💡Curry Ratio Tips

Add paste in stages. Start with about three-quarters of the calculated paste, fry or bloom it if your recipe does that, then taste the sauce before adding the reserve.
Watch dilution and salt. Broth and vegetables soften intensity, but concentrated paste can be salty. If the heat score is high, balance with coconut milk before adding more paste.

This one small kitchen decision affects the whole meal. Use too little paste, and your sauce is a whisper of spiciness in a sea of coconut soup. Too much paste, and salt and heat dominate the dish before protein and vegetables can have their say.

Somewhere in-between these two extremes lies the proper curry paste to sauce ratio. But this balance varys according to the type of paste you’re working with, the amount of liquid you’re adding, and other ingredient going into the pot. Depending on style and brand, most Thai curry pastes shares a similar foundation of aromatics, but they will be heavier or lighter on salt and concentration.

How to Get the Right Curry Taste

You’ll typically need about three tablespoons of curry paste for each can of coconut milk to get a well-balanced dinner-level amount of heat. If you use too little red curry paste, the sauce can ends up tasting more like coconut soup with just a whisper of spice; green curry tends to run hotter, so the same amount can feel more aggressive. Yellow is milder. It often has better results with a bit of a higher ratio if you want the aromatics and turmeric to shine through. Massaman and panang pastes falls somewhere in a richer middle ground that can hold up to a bit more paste before getting too harsh.

It also depends on what you’re cooking, i.e., how much food you’re making. Less paste is fine if you’ve made a light vegetable curry with a generous dollop of sauce that will carry the flavors. With denser vegetables, meat (beef or chicken), or anything else that packs the pan, you want a little hit of seasoning in every bite, so you increase the amount when there is more food to season.

Should you add extra water or broth? It has the opposite effect. Softening the punch and stretching your sauce means that by the time it’s all mixed together, you often need a bolder base to keep the taste.

Most surprisingly: This isn’t as complicated as it seems; brand strength counts for more then you might think. A concentrated jarred import might require just a small spoonful to equal the impact of a bigger scoop of a milder, more Americanized jarred variety. Homemade fresh paste lies somewhere in-between, brighter with herb flavors, yet potentially not as salty.

Once you know what kind of paste you’ve got, how hot you want things, how much stuff you’ll add, and whether you’re going to dilute it with broth, the calculator up top takes care of the rest. It transforms those details into a total volume, a per-can number, and an initial target scoop that allows for tweaking before tasting.

Most errors arise from thinking of the first number that seems right as the last one. You pour all of it in, only to find that your vegetables is releasing liquid and making the sauce too hot or salty. More control and time comes from starting lower and frying the paste in a bit of oil/coconut cream before adding the bulk of the liquid. You can also judge the true heat level after opening up the aromatics, instead of basing it just on the raw paste on a spoon.

On the page, there are some handy reference tables that lay out the base ratio with adjustments for add-in loadings, different can sizes, and target heats. So if you have a full can but have only gotten halfway through the bag, or vice versa, these help you adjust the proportions so you’re not throwing off too much else in the process.

The tool’s heat score isn’t an exact number. Instead, it gives you a quick sense of whether the batch will be on the gentle side or pushing into the upper range of what most people consider comfortabley. The point isn’t to get it right on your first attempt: the point is to arrive in the vicinity of that correct number, so that your curry tastes curried, rather than seasoned coconut milk, and there’s some wiggle room left after all ingredents are simmered together. That’s what the calculator takes out of guessing about scale and volumes, but it leaves the final decision to the cook tasting the food at the stovetop.

Curry Paste Per Can of Coconut Milk Calculator

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