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Home Collections Curries

Beef Rendang

By:Nagi
Published:26 May '17Updated:11 May '25
609 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

The KING OF ALL CURRIES is here!!! Beef Rendang has incredible depth of flavour, with complexity and many layers of spices. It’s straight forward to make, though it does take time and perhaps a trip to the Asian grocery store (though Sydney-siders will find everything at Woolies). Watch the video and drool!

The King of all Curries, Beef Rendang is straight forward to make and has incredible deep, complex flavours. Quick recipe video provided! recipetineats.com

Beef Rendang

This Beef Rendang recipe is from a payroll lady at a company I used to work for. It’s her Malaysian mother’s recipe. I still remember, so many years later, how we used to bond over food at the water cooler!

I actually first published this recipe a couple of years ago but I’ve made some minor improvements that will make your life easier without changing the flavour at all. Plus I made a recipe video!

Beef Rendang is the king of all curries!

The King of all Curries, Beef Rendang is straight forward to make and has incredible deep, complex flavours. Quick recipe video provided! recipetineats.com

What is Beef Rendang?

Beef Rendang is a Malaysian curry and is considered by many to be the king of all curries! To say it’s extravagantly delicious is an understatement. There are very few curries in this world with such amazingly complex flavours.

Originally from Indonesia though now more well known as a Malaysia curry, the sauce is made with aromatic spices like cinnamon, cardamom and star anise as well as fresh aromatics including lemongrass, garlic, ginger and galangal.

Unlike many curries, Beef Rendang is a dry curry which means there is not loads of sauce. However, the meat is so ridiculously tender and has a thick coating of sauce on each piece, so when the meat literally falls apart at a touch, it mixes through rice, flavouring it like saucy curries.

If you love South East Asian curries, Beef Rendang is without a doubt one of the best!

Here in Sydney, you can get all the ingredients for Beef Rendang at Woolworths and Coles. Seriously!

Beef Rendang Spice Paste

How to make Beef Rendang

Though there’s a fair few ingredients in this, some of which may not be familiar to you and are certainly not everyday ingredients even in my world, it’s actually quite a straightforward recipe:

  1. Blitz curry paste ingredient in food processor;

  2. Brown the beef;

  3. Cook off the curry paste – releases amazing flavour!

  4. Add everything else in and slow cook until the beef is ultra tender.

An interesting cooking method with Beef Rendang is the way it gets the deep brown colour. All throughout the video, right up until the very end, you will notice that the sauce is a pale brown colour. It’s not until the very end when the sauce reduces right down and the oil separates that it turns brown, essentially the browning of the beef in the oil of the sauce.

The King of all Curries, Beef Rendang is straight forward to make and has incredible deep, complex flavours. Quick recipe video provided! recipetineats.com

This Beef Rendang can be made in a slow cooker, but I find it easiest to make it all on the stove. Especially given it starts on the stove with the browning of the beef and spice paste, then finishes on the stove with the reducing of the sauce and browning of the beef (this part cannot be done in a slow cooker).

This is one of those recipes that just gets better with time. So whenever possible, I try to make this a day or two in advance. It also freezes extremely well.

I serve this with my Restaurant Style Coconut Rice because it’s my copycat of the coconut rice you get at the posh modern Asian restaurants! – Nagi xx

PS You see those bits stuck on the  beef that could be shredded coconut?? It’s not. It’s bits of shredded BEEF. Because it’s so tender by the end, when you’re stirring it, some bits do flake off. YUM!

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The King of all Curries, Beef Rendang is straight forward to make and has incredible deep, complex flavours. Quick recipe video provided! recipetineats.com

WATCH HOW TO MAKE IT

Beef Rendang recipe video!

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The King of all Curries, Beef Rendang is straight forward to make and has incredible deep, complex flavours. Quick recipe video provided! recipetineats.com

Beef Rendang

Author: Nagi | RecipeTin Eats
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 3 hours hrs
Total: 3 hours hrs 20 minutes mins
Curry, Slow cooking
Asian, Malaysian
4.97 from 191 votes
Servings6
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RECIPE VIDEO above. Beef Rendang is a Malaysian curry and is an extravagantly rich dish that is easy to prepare but takes time and patience to slow cook. Unlike many curries, this is a "dry" curry which means the beef is not swimming in sauce. Though you may think that the sauce is often the best part of a curry, the beef is "fall apart at a touch" tender and covered in a thick, saucy curry which then mixes through the rice so it is not in the least bit "dry"! This can be made in a slow cooker (see notes) but I recommend making this on the stove for best results.

Ingredients

Spice Paste

  • 12 dried chilies, rehydrated in boiling water, or 12 large fresh (Note 1a)
  • 1 small onion, finely chopped (Note 1b)
  • 5 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3 lemongrass stalks, white part only, sliced (Note 2)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp fresh galangal, finely chopped (Note 3)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp fresh ginger, minced
  • 2 tbsp oil (vegetable, canola or peanut oil)

Curry

  • 2 lb/ 1 kg chuck steak, or other slow cooking beef, cut into 4cm / 1.6″ cubes (Note 4)
  • 1 tbsp oil (vegetable, peanut, canola)
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 1/4 tsp clove powder
  • 3 star anise
  • 1/2 tsp cardamon powder
  • 1 lemongrass stick, bottom half of the stick only and smashed (Note 5)
  • 400ml / 14 oz coconut milk (1 standard can)
  • 2 tsp tamarind puree / paste, or tamarind pulp soaked in 1 tbsp of hot water, seeds removed (Note 6)
  • 4 large kaffir lime leaves (or 6 small) , very finely sliced (Note 7)
  • 1/3 cup desiccated coconut (finely shredded coconut)
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar or grated palm sugar
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Place Spice Paste ingredients in a small food processor and whizz until fine. NOTE: If using dried chilli and you know your food processor is not that powerful, chop the chilli first.
  • Heat 1 tbsp oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat. Add half the beef and brown, then remove onto plate. Repeat with remaining beef.
  • Lower heat to medium low. Add Spice Paste and cook for 2 – 3 minutes until the wetness has reduced and the spice paste darkens (don’t breathe in too much, the chilli will make you cough!).
  • Add remaining Curry ingredients and beef. Stir to combine.
  • Bring to simmer, then immediately turn down the heat to low or medium low so the sauce is bubbling very gently.
  • Put the lid on the pot and leave it to simmer for 1 hr 15 minutes.
  • Remove lid and check the beef to see how tender it is. You don’t want it to be “fall apart at a touch” at this stage, but it should be quite tender. If it is fall apart already, remove the beef from the pot before proceeding.
  • Turn up heat to medium and reduce sauce for 30 – 40 minutes, stirring every now and then at first, then frequently towards the end until the beef browns and the sauce reduces to a paste that coats the beef. (Note 9) 
  • The beef should now be very tender, fall apart at a touch. If not, add a splash of water and keep cooking. Remove from heat and serve with plain or Restaurant Style Coconut Rice.

Recipe Notes:

1a. Chillies – 12 dried chillies or long red fresh chillies (cayenne pepper) (seeds in) makes a fairly spicy curry but it’s not “blow your head off” spicy because the long cook time tempers the spiciness. You can adjust the level of spiciness to your taste – use 6 for a mild curry. To reduce spiciness, you can deseed the chilli – I do not do this. 
If using dried chillies, rehydrate in boiling water (use lots, ignore the measly splash I used in the video, that was a mistake).
1b. Onion: Use a brown, white or yellow onion about the size of a tennis ball. Or half a large one  or 6 shallots/eschallots chopped
2. Lemongrass: to prepare, peel the reedy green shell to reveal the softer white part on the bottom half of the lemongrass. Slice the white part and very pale green part only – the green part is too reedy.
If lemongrass is hard to come by, you can use PASTE: 2 tsp in the spice mix and add an extra teaspoon when you add the coconut milk etc. 🙂
3. Galangal is like ginger but it has a more sour and peppery flavour. If you can’t find it, just substitute with more ginger and a grind of black pepper.
4. Beef – You can use any slow cooking cut of beef for this recipe but chuck is best. As with all slow cooked beef recipes, the fattier beef, the juicier the meat will be when cooked. Gravy beef and beef cheeks are also good. Brisket will work but has less fat throughout so not as juicy.
It is best to buy one piece and cut it yourself into large cubes about the size of golf balls. Larger cubes are better for this dish because this is not only slow cooked but also cooked down to reduce the sauce to almost a “paste” like consistency and if you use small pieces of beef, they may fall apart and shred in the pot when you stir the curry. It is much easier to handle larger pieces.
5. Smash the lemongrass to help the flavour infuse into the curry. Use the side of your knife, a meat mallet or a tin.
6. Tamarind puree is made from tamarind fruit. It is quite tart, but not as sour as lemon. You can buy tamarind puree from the Asian section of large supermarkets in Australia (or Asian grocery stores). If you are using tamarind pulp (sticky block of dried tamarind), soak it in 2 tbsp of hot water and remove the seeds, then use as per recipe directions.
You can substitute the tamarind with 2 tsp of vinegar (white or brown, but not balsamic) or lemon juice.
7. Kaffir Lime Leaves – there is no substitute for the earthy lime flavour you get from fresh kaffir lime leaves so I really recommend buying fresh ones. They freeze well and last for ages and are commonly found in many South East Asian dishes. You can substitute with dried kaffir lime leaves. As a last resort, you can use 1 tbsp of lime juice + the rind of 1 lime, but the flavour will not be quite the same.
8. Slow Cooker – To make this in a slow cooker, do the steps up to searing the beef in a pan then pour the contents in your slow cooker. Pour 1/2 cup water into the pan and bring to simmer, making sure to scrape all the brown bits off the bottom of the pan to mix in with the water, then pour the water into the slow cooker (make sure you scrape in as much of the brown bits as you can!). Slow cook on low for 6 hours. Then pour the curry into a pot and follow the recipe steps to reduce the sauce.
Pressure cooker / instant pot – follow slow cooker steps but cook on high for 30 minutes, allow to depressurise naturally for 10 minutes before releasing steam.
9. This is what happens when the Sauce reduces: Once the sauce reduces right down, the oil will separate (see photo in post). Then you end up browning the beef in that oil – this is where the deep brown Rendang colour comes from. Rendang is not a wet, saucy curry, it all reduces down into a sticky paste that coats the beef. 
By this time, the beef should be “fall apart at a touch” and there will be bits of shredded beef that looks like coconut that stick to the beef.
10. Simple Lightly Pickled Cucumber Side that goes with this well: Slice cucumbers on the diagonal and place into a bowl. For each cucumber you are using, sprinkle over 1 tsp of rice wine vinegar, a small pinch of salt and white sugar (each). Leave to lightly pickle for at least 20 minutes, up to 24 hours.
11. STORING: Rendang, like other slow cooked things, just gets better with time. Great on the day it’s made, fantastic the next day and the next. Freezes well too.
12. Originally published in November 2014, updated to improve as follows: original recipe used whole cardamon and cloves, these are impossible to pick out and I don’t like crunching into them. So I now use powder. Also, in authentic recipes, the curry paste goes in first then the beef is added. Doing it this way, the beef does not brown. I like browning beef first because you get that gorgeous caramelisation that adds flavour.

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 323gCalories: 675cal (34%)Carbohydrates: 10.9g (4%)Protein: 63.4g (127%)Fat: 42.1g (65%)Saturated Fat: 24.7g (154%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 17.4gCholesterol: 179mg (60%)Sodium: 847mg (37%)Fiber: 3.1g (13%)Sugar: 5.4g (6%)
Keywords: beef rendang
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

 

 

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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

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609 Comments

  1. Yvon̈ne Smith says

    May 18, 2025 at 7:27 pm

    5 stars
    Made this for dinner tonight, and we were not disappointed. Very flavourful even though I subbed lemongrass paste instead of lemongrass stalks, and lemon juice instead of tamarind. Only had gravy beef in the freezer, so it took a little longer to get tender, and consequently was a little dry. Next time will definitely use chuck. Great recipe though 👌

    Reply
  2. Nina says

    April 3, 2025 at 8:31 pm

    5 stars
    My second time making this. First time I cut the pieces too small. And all the meat fell apart. This time they were too big so wasn’t tender at all after one and a quarter hours when you’re supposed to take the lid off and turn up the heat. All worked out fine except that as I had to cook it for longer the star anise crumbled and couldn’t be seen but we kept biting into little bits of ‘wood’. Although not in the recipe @recipetin I’d suggest removing the star anise and cinnamon sticks when you take the lid off to avoid this happening. It’s going to be perfect when I make it for the third time!

    Reply
  3. Lindsey says

    March 16, 2025 at 6:24 pm

    Agreed, it should definitely say ‘Rendang’ is an Indonesian curry popular in Malaysia, rather than ‘a Malaysian curry originating in Indonesia.’ My mum is Indonesian and we grew up eating rendang so will definitely try this recipe to compare!

    Reply
  4. Vanessa says

    December 30, 2024 at 6:06 am

    5 stars
    This was absolutely delicious! We used leftover Christmas beef. Definitely making again. We were blown away by the flavour!

    Reply
  5. Laura says

    October 9, 2024 at 2:51 pm

    5 stars
    I starting making this on Friday and finished off the cooking on Sunday afternoon to serve Sunday night – OMG! incredible. I served with Roti and rice. Every guest loved it. Amazing. Leaving it in fridge for 24 hours plus before continuing cooking enhanced the flavours. THANK YOU Nagi. I”m a new FAN of yours.

    Reply
  6. Ariane G says

    October 5, 2024 at 9:55 pm

    5 stars
    Sensational! Love love love this one. It’s the best curry hands down. I used 9 chillies and the heat was at its limit for me. I’ll scale it back a little next time. Had a side of cucumber, tomato and coriander just like the locals. Perfection.

    Reply
  7. Olivia says

    September 25, 2024 at 1:47 am

    5 stars
    Phenomenal recipe! I substituted ancho chilies because we cannot take too much heat! It was wonderful.

    Reply
  8. Helene says

    August 27, 2024 at 8:49 pm

    5 stars
    This was so delicious! I reduced the chilli drastically and I baked the dish in a 150 degree C oven for 3 hours, which reduced the sauce nicely.

    Reply
  9. steven lau says

    August 26, 2024 at 3:32 pm

    Hi bro, when do you add the desiccated coconut?

    Reply
    • Vicki says

      September 5, 2024 at 6:33 pm

      Did you read the instructions or watch the video? It’s step 4.

      Reply
  10. steven lau says

    August 26, 2024 at 3:31 pm

    bro, when do you add the desiccated coconut?

    Reply
  11. Mon says

    August 18, 2024 at 8:53 am

    5 stars
    We had the best Rendang at Bernadettes Waroeng in Seminyak. This came close. Couldn’t find the galangal, but added more ginger and pepper. We loved it. Can’t wait for the leftovers.

    Reply
  12. Gareth Steed says

    August 11, 2024 at 3:35 pm

    I love you to pieces, Nagi, but you have just alienated an entire country. Rendang originates in Minangkabau in Sumatra, Indonesia, therefore it is not a ‘Malaysian’ dish but an Indonesian dish. It would be like saying vegemite is British as it is similar to marmite. 😉

    Reply
    • Lindsey says

      March 16, 2025 at 6:23 pm

      Agreed, it should definitely say ‘Rendang’ is an Indonesian curry popular in Malaysia, rather than ‘a Malaysian curry originating in Indonesia.’ My mum is Indonesian and we grew up eating rendang so will definitely try this recipe to compare!

      Reply
  13. Grant Kavanagh says

    August 10, 2024 at 5:54 am

    5 stars
    Perfect plus with restaurant rice and some Asian stir fried veges with a splash of honey & soy. First time cooking it and was a bit stressed with 40 to go as meat not tended and too much sauce but in the end plus another 15 mins, best I have ever had.

    Reply
  14. Salma says

    August 6, 2024 at 10:16 pm

    Hi,

    I’m hoping to make this and I’m struggling to believe 1kg will make six portions simply because my husband loves rendang and eats a lot. I understand serving size is completely different in my husband’s universe lol. How large of a portion is the serving size? 4 or 5 pieces of beef? 😅

    Reply
  15. Sue says

    July 28, 2024 at 9:15 am

    If I make this ahead what is the best method to reheat to serve?

    Reply
  16. OC says

    July 28, 2024 at 8:04 am

    5 stars
    Absolutely, delicious! Now that we have tried this one, we are struggling to find ones at restaurants that compete.

    Reply
  17. Nadia Francisca says

    July 22, 2024 at 10:53 pm

    Nice recipe there, but I would point out that Rendang is Indonesian dish (from Minangkabau area). In Malaysia they make the dish a little bit saucy then the original version which is really dry.

    Reply
  18. Cindy says

    July 22, 2024 at 1:30 pm

    5 stars
    I had never heard of Beef Rendang until it came out on “Curry Quest”, an episode on Bluey! Immediately I knew I had to make it. It is AMAZING. Warm, spicy and rich. The entire house smells amazing too. I’ll definitely be sharing this and making again!

    Reply
  19. Mark says

    July 22, 2024 at 11:38 am

    5 stars
    Absolutely love this recipe! I do half chuck half short rib for the extra richness from the marrow

    Reply
  20. Iggy says

    July 2, 2024 at 4:36 pm

    5 stars
    So easy, and so delicious 😋. The hardest part for me was sourcing galangal. So, I made a double batch of paste for laters, and I will ask my friends to grab me some when they are in the city. So, so good.

    Reply
    • Alyaa says

      January 13, 2025 at 2:56 pm

      Hi Iggy. I’m Malay and make rendang often. I substitute fresh galangal with galangal powder here in the cooler parts of Australia, where galangal is hard to find. If you live in NT or Qld, it’s super easy to grow in your garden. Cheers!

      Reply
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