
So full confession, I stole the name of my recipe from my friend Alexx’s brilliant book Low Tox Life. However this actual recipe is all my own doing.
The idea is if you have a can of coconut milk and some passata or canned tomatoes and some curry powder or paste, you can make a meal.
I’ve written the recipe for using leftover cooked meat and vegetables, but you can also use raw. Just simmer in the curry sauce until everything is cooked through.
Feel free to play around with the quantities of protein and veg depending on what you have at home.
And if you do decide to run to the store and buy something to make this curry you can just change the name to ‘super simple curry’. Easy.

Buy Nothing New Curry
Ingredients
- 1-2 tablespoons curry powder or 3-4 tablespoons curry paste
- 1/2 bottle tomato passata / puree (1.5 cups) or 1 can tomatoes
- 1 can coconut milk (400mL / 14oz)
- 450 g cooked vegetables
- 400 g cooked protein
- 1 handful roast nuts or fresh herbs
Instructions
- Heat a medium saucepan on a medium high heat. Add a little oil and then stir fry the curry powder / paste for about 30 seconds.
- Add tomato passata / tomatoes, coconut milk, veggies and protein. Bring to a simmer and cook for 5-10 minutes uncovered.
- When the curry is hot. Taste and season with salt and more curry powder if needed. Serve with herbs or nuts on top.
WINE MATCH: A cold beer or a big gutsy Shiraz.
Variations & Substitutions
protein ideas – any cooked legumes, meat, fish or poultry will work. You can also simmer some eggs in the sauce – they actually work really well in a curry. And feel free to use raw meat / fish / poultry, just simmer until they’re all cooked through.
veg ideas – any veg will work. I used cooked chard but feel free to use up whatever you have in the house. Frozen peas or spinach are a great addition. As with the protein, raw veg can be used, you’ll just need to simmer until they’re cooked through. Softening an onion or two before you fry the curry powder adds extra depth of flavour.
herb ideas – I love it with coriander (cilantro), basil or mint.
nut ideas – roast cashews or peanuts are my faves but any roast nuts or seeds will work – you just want something to make it look pretty and like it’s more than just leftovers.
no tomato passata / canned tomatoes – you could use tomato paste (about 3 tablespoons + 4 tablespoons water), a punnet of cherry tomatoes or replace with chicken or veg stock.
more substantial (carb lovers) – serve with steamed rice. Or add cooked noodles.
more substantial (low carb) – extra protein, extra nuts or serve on a bed of cauliflower ‘rice’.
richer – the coconut milk makes it nice and creamy but I also love it with a few tablespoons of peanut butter or cashew butter stirred in at the end.
no coconut milk / cream – either replace with chicken or veg stock. Or skip it and serve your curry with a big dollop of Greek yoghurt for the creamy factor.
Low FODMAP – just use low fodmap veg and protein.
family-friendly – use a very mild curry powder or try garam masala. And serve with chilli oil for the heat-seekers.
pantry meal – use canned chickpeas or beans as your protein and frozen spinach, cauliflower or broccoli as your veg.
Problem Solving Guide
bland – remember to season generously. A little extra curry powder or curry paste can help. Or serve with hot sauce for extra kick.
too dry / too thick – add some water.
tough meat – sounds like it’s been over cooked. For now just slice it into smaller pieces so it’s easier to chew. Next time check earlier.
Prepare Ahead
Absolutely! Just cook as per the recipe but keep the herbs / nuts separately. Leftovers will keep in the fridge for up to 2 weeks or can be frozen. To serve, bring back to a simmer and top with herbs / nuts.


Add to my Old Favourite Recipes
Mostly raw vegetables, albeit not particularly fresh. Started with an onion as recommended, then a thinly sliced potato, and a zucchini and capsicum in bite-sized pieces. I tossed in 100g of defrosted green beans for a bit of extra green. I had a small jar of Thai red curry paste from a company whose green curry paste I hadn’t been impressed with, but it went very well with the passata and coconut milk. Chickpeas for protein and extra cashews, so vegan. Very good, although oddly for a curry, not quite as good for leftovers.
You know I think Thai curries are better when fresh because you lose some of the aromatics Mark. Do you think that’s it?
Indian curries definitely improve with age (like us!)
Could be.
Didn’t have curry powder so used some of my bulk korma powder. Used two teaspoons powder and was chastised for it being too spicy. Hahaha. This large korma jar is going to take a while to eat through.
Subbed coconut cream, frozen vegetables
And canned chicken.
A. New. Go. To.
Wonderful Bella! You’ll get through that korma powder 🙂
Combined leftovers from this korma, and from magic sausage supper. Added peanut butter. Next level. Jules. Next level. Might call it Magic korma satay.
Having said that…. Spices from the korma and the satay were practically non-existent. If they were normal levels, I don’t know if it would mix well.
But my spice-a-phobe lived it.
Mission accomplished.
oh man Bella – that sounds wonderful – you are on fire!