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Camp Oven Beef Curry — The Slow-Cook Camp Dinner

📍 Australia-wide 🗓️ Updated April 2026 ⏱️ 3 min read ✅ Expert-reviewed
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a pot of stew with a wooden spoon in it

Camp Oven Beef Curry — The Slow-Cook Camp Dinner

Written by: Camping Australia

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Time to read 3 min

Camp oven beef curry is the dinner that ends every great camping trip — slow-cooked over coals, the meat falls apart, the kitchen tent fills with the smell, and everyone wanders over with their plate. The sort of meal that makes the trip memorable.


Long, slow, almost no work once it's bubbling. Set it up after lunch and it'll be ready by dinner. Use chuck steak or gravy beef — cheap cuts that turn into something incredible after 3 hours in a camp oven.

Recipe Card
Serves 4
Prep 15 min
Cook 3–6 hrs
Method Camp oven
Difficulty Medium
Best for Camp specialist

a pot of stew with a wooden spoon in it

Photo by Árpád Czapp on Unsplash

Camp Oven Beef Curry

Serves: 6 · Prep: 20 minutes · Cook: 2.5-3 hours · Equipment: 9 or 12-inch camp oven, decent coal bed

a person eating food

Photo: Yu Hosoi / Unsplash

Ingredients

  • 1.2kg chuck steak OR gravy beef, cubed (3-4cm chunks)
  • 3 tbsp vegetable oil
  • 2 large brown onions, diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tbsp fresh ginger, grated
  • 3 tbsp curry powder (medium) OR 4 tbsp curry paste (Madras / Korma / Massaman)
  • 1 tbsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp ground turmeric
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tin (400g) chopped tomatoes
  • 1 tin (400ml) coconut milk
  • 500ml beef stock (or water + 1 stock cube)
  • 3 medium potatoes, peeled and cubed
  • 2 carrots, sliced thick
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar
  • 2 tbsp fish sauce OR soy sauce
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • Salt + pepper to taste
  • Fresh coriander to serve

To serve: steamed basmati rice OR fresh damper / naan

Method

1. Build a coal bed. Light a fire 45 minutes before you start cooking — let it burn down to a thick bed of red coals. Hardwood (red gum, ironbark) gives the best long-burning coals; eucalypt is fine but burns faster.


2. Sear the beef. Place the camp oven on a flat coal bed. Add 2 tbsp oil. When hot, brown the beef cubes in batches — single layer, 2-3 minutes per side until properly caramelised. Remove to a plate. This step is crucial — browned beef = depth of flavour. Don't skip.


3. Sweat the aromatics. Add the remaining oil, then the onions. Cook 5-6 minutes, stirring, until soft and translucent. Add garlic + ginger, stir for 1 minute.


4. Bloom the spices. Add curry powder/paste, cumin, turmeric, cinnamon. Stir constantly for 1 minute — toasting the spices unlocks the flavour. The smell is the indicator: floral and aromatic.


5. Build the sauce. Tip in the tomatoes, coconut milk, beef stock. Stir well to combine. Bring to a simmer.


6. Add the beef back. Return the seared beef + any juices. Stir to coat. Add salt + pepper.


7. Lid on, coals on top. Place the lid on the camp oven. Use coals on TOP of the lid to create even heat from above + below — roughly 8-10 coals on top, similar coal bed underneath. This mimics oven cooking.


8. Slow simmer 2 hours. Check every 30 minutes — stir, add more coals if needed (they burn out roughly every 45 mins). Liquid should be simmering, not boiling.


9. Add vegetables. After 2 hours, add the potatoes + carrots. Stir through. Lid back on, cook another 30-45 minutes until vegetables are tender and beef shreds with a fork.


10. Final season. Stir through brown sugar, fish/soy sauce, lime juice. Taste — adjust salt, sweetness, acidity. Should be rich, balanced, slightly sweet, slightly sour.


11. Serve over rice with fresh coriander on top. Damper or naan to mop the sauce.

Tips and variations

  • Cut choice: chuck and gravy beef are the right cuts — connective tissue + fat melts into the sauce. NEVER use a tender cut like rump or fillet — it'll go stringy. Lamb shoulder also works beautifully (same method)
  • Curry style: Madras for medium-hot, Korma for mild + creamy, Massaman for sweet + nutty (add 2 tbsp peanut butter and a star anise for proper Massaman). Bombay or Vindaloo paste for serious heat
  • Coconut milk vs cream: use full-fat coconut milk for proper richness. Skim coconut milk = sad watery curry
  • Vegetable swaps: sweet potato, pumpkin, eggplant, capsicum, beans, peas (frozen, last 5 min) all work. Add hardier vegs early, soft vegs late
  • If your coals burn out: the curry can move to a propane stove on lowest heat to finish. Keep the lid on
  • Tastes BETTER the next day. Make a double batch — the second night's reheated curry is genuinely superior
  • Without a camp oven: a heavy cast iron Dutch oven on a low gas stove works almost as well — 3 hours on the lowest possible heat with the lid on
  • Make damper while it cooks — see our Camp Cooking Damper recipe. Kneed the dough during step 8, bake in foil in the coals during step 9

Our take

The slow-cook camp dinner that turns a Saturday afternoon into the meal of the trip. Build the fire mid-afternoon, get the curry going by 4pm, then sit with a beer while it does its thing. By 7pm everyone's gathered around with plates, and you're the camp hero.


Camp oven cooking is one of the great Australian outdoor traditions. Once you've nailed the coal management, the world of slow-cooked meals opens up — curries, stews, casseroles, roasts. Worth the small learning curve.

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