Fair warning: Sour Curry is not for the timid. This is Southern Thai food at its finest – bold, punchy, complex, and unafraid to make a statement.
If you like your food with lots of personality as well as flavours that may challenge but excites and you can handle spicy food without crying, then Gaeng Som (แกงส้ม) – Sour Curry – is about to become your new obsession.
This is the curry that “wakes you up” as Jum likes to tell us. The one that clears your sinuses and makes you reach for another spoonful even as your lips tingle. It's sour, it's spicy, it's deeply savoury, and it's absolutely magnificent.
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The Origins: The Fiery Soul of Southern Thailand
Southern Thailand doesn't do anything halfway, especially not its food. The region borders Malaysia, sits between two seas, and has a climate that's hot and humid year-round. The food reflects this – it's intense, vibrant, and designed to make you sweat.
Gaeng Som literally means "sour curry," but that barely scratches the surface. Unlike the coconut-based curries that most people associate with Thai food, Sour Curry is water-based, which allows the other flavours to shine even brighter.
The sourness comes from tamarind and lime, which gives the curry its signature tang. The heat comes from plenty of Thai red chillies – Southerners don't mess about when it comes to spice and Turmeric adds earthiness and that gorgeous golden hue. You can add a touch of Shrimp paste for more umami depth and a subtle funkiness, but if you are a first-timer, you may want to skip the shrimp, there’s already a lot going on.
In Southern Thailand, you'll find Gaeng Som served with rice as an everyday meal, often featuring fish or prawns. This is Jum’s favourite dish, the one that she would eat daily growing up and the one that she misses the most being here in the UK. Well, not anymore now!

The Flavour Profile: Sour, Spicy, Complex
Let's talk about what makes Sour Curry so distinctive.
Sour is the dominant note – bright, sharp tamarind that makes your mouth water in the best possible way. It's not the gentle sourness of lime juice; it's deeper and more complex, almost fruity.
Spice comes in HOT (literally). We've rated this a 5 out of 5 on the heat scale, and we're not exaggerating. The chilli heat builds as you eat, but it never overwhelms the other flavours. Instead, it works with the sourness to create something incredibly vibrant. I’m going to warn you again, if you’re not good with spicy food, this curry will blow your head right off!
Earthy undertones from turmeric while umami from fish sauce adds savoury depth. There can be a subtle sweetness too if you’re added a touch of palm sugar, this helps marry the sour and spicy elements.
The result is a curry that's multidimensional. Every spoonful is different – sometimes the sour hits first, sometimes the heat, sometimes you notice the earthiness or the umami. It's complex in the way that great food should be.
Why It's Easier Than You Think
Traditional Sour Curry requires pounding a curry paste by hand, carefully toasting spices, and balancing the sour-spicy-salty-sweet elements until they're just right. Get the proportions wrong and you've got something that's more punishment than pleasure.
That's where our Sour Curry paste comes in.
We've already done the hard work – sourcing fresh tamarind, balancing the heat level, getting the turmeric-to-chilli ratio perfect. All you need to do is add it to water or stock, throw in your protein and vegetables, and adjust the seasoning to your taste.
The cooking process is wonderfully straightforward. Fifteen to twenty minutes from start to finish. No coconut milk to buy, no complex layering of ingredients. Just bold, beautiful flavour that tastes like you've been cooking Thai food for years.
Salmon is our favourite – the rich, fatty fish stands up beautifully to the sour, spicy broth. Prawns are classic and cook in minutes. Firm white fish like sea bass or cod works wonderfully. Vegetables like slightly unripe papaya, green beans, Chinese cabbage, bamboo or even pineapple and rhubarb all work nicely in a sour curry.
A Curry for the Adventurous
Sour Curry isn't going to be everyone's cup of tea, and that's okay. It's not trying to please everyone. It's trying to be authentic, bold, and true to its Southern Thai roots.
But for those who appreciate big flavours, who like their food to challenge them a little, who want something different from the usual coconut curry rotation – this is it. This is the curry that converts people into "I didn't know Thai food could taste like THIS" believers.
Jum's final advice? "This one is HOT but the experience is unforgettable! Enjoy!"
Ready to add some Southern Thai fire to your dinner table? Here's how to make Salmon Sour Curry that'll wake up your taste buds and keep you coming back for more.