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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Chicken & Poultry ❯ Char Siu Chicken

Char Siu Chicken

Bill

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Bill

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Updated: 7/18/2025
Char Siu Chicken

Char Siu Chicken is an easy alternative to our popular roast pork char siu. If you can’t eat pork or just prefer chicken, this oven-roasted char siu chicken recipe is for you!

This post contains a video that will autoplay or you can choose to watch the full video via Youtube right above the recipe card. Cheers!

Why Make Chicken Char Siu?

Roast Pork Char Siu goes way back for me, when I learned how to make it (and treats like Roast Pork with Garlic Bread) from my father, a chef cooking in upstate New York. 

But after working on the blog and fielding questions from so many folks around the world for all these years—whenever I’m digging into pork char siu, I often think about the people who are missing out on that great char siu flavor because they don’t eat pork.

With this recipe, you don’t have to make any compromises. Using chicken is not only an easy substitute, it’s also pretty delicious in its own right! 

char siu chicken thigh with rice and bok choy

What Cut of Chicken to Use 

Dark meat chicken gives a similar sticky and delicious effect as pork shoulder or boneless pork butt. This recipe calls for chicken thighs, but you can also use drumsticks, leg quarters, or wings even.

If you’d like to use chicken breast, we recommend skin-on, split chicken breasts. You’ll want to check the internal temperature to avoid overcooking the white meat. For breast meat, it should be 160°F/71°C—it will come up to 165°F (74°C) with residual heat after you take it out of the oven.  

Baked Char Siu Chicken: A Make Ahead Meal

An oven-roasted char siu chicken recipe is a long overdue item on my to-cook list. While Sarah has already posted a grilled chicken char siu recipe, some days it may be too cold or rainy for the BBQ grill.

While I know there are diehard “any weather” grillers out there, sometimes it’s just more comfortable and convenient to turn on the oven. 

Char siu chicken is a perfect weeknight meal that you can prepare and marinate the night before. When you come home from work, roast the chicken, prepare a veggie, hit the button on the rice cooker, and dinner is served! 

There’s something about that combination of five spice and hoisin in the marinade that permeates the entire kitchen and is simply irresistible! Pack the leftovers for lunch, and enjoy it again the next day. 

Recipe Instructions

Trim the excess fat from the chicken thighs and discard. Combine the dark brown sugar, salt, five spice powder, white pepper, hoisin sauce, Shaoxing wine, light soy sauce, sesame oil, garlic, and red food coloring (if using) in a bowl to make the marinade (i.e. the BBQ sauce).

marinade and chicken thighs

Rub the chicken with the marinade in a large bowl or baking dish. Cover and refrigerate overnight, or at least 8 hours. 

pouring char siu marinade over chicken thighs
marinated chicken thighs with char siu sauce

About 2½ hours before you’d like to eat, take the chicken out of the refrigerator to come up to room temperature for even cooking. Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C) and set a rack in the center of the oven. 

NOTE!

Oven temperatures can vary from model to model. They also vary in how they preheat, maintain heat, and in where the heat is coming from. Using an oven thermometer to double-check the actual oven temperature is a great safeguard to monitor your food. (I say double-check, because oven thermostat calibrations can vary and sometimes be incorrect.) Regardless, check on your char siu chicken every 15 minutes, since the sugar in the marinade can scorch if the temperature is too high.

Line a sheet pan with heavy duty foil for easy clean-up, and place a sheet of parchment paper or non-stick foil on top. Evenly space the marinated chicken thighs on the sheet – they should not be touching each other. Reserve any remaining marinade.

chicken thigh on parchment-lined sheet pan

Transfer the chicken to your preheated oven, and roast for 30 minutes. Check on it every 15 minutes. If the chicken is starting to scorch or burn, tent it with aluminum foil and/or lower the oven temperature. 

While the chicken bakes, make your basting sauce. Pour the excess marinade into a small saucepan with the water. Heat the mixture to a simmer.  Add the maltose (microwave the maltose for 15 seconds at a time until softened). Mix until the maltose melts into the marinade and turn off the heat.

mixing maltose into reserved marinade
char siu basting sauce made from marinade

After 30 minutes, use a brush to baste the chicken with the cooked marinade.

basting char siu chicken thighs

Continue roasting for another 5-10 minutes, and check the internal temperature of the chicken using an instant read thermometer. It’s done when it reaches 165°F (74°C) and/or when the juices run clear when the meat is pierced to the bone. Optionally, give the chicken one last basting and another minute in the oven for that extra char siu crust.

char siu chicken

Serve with white rice and a garlicky bok choy, yu choy, or basic stir fried bok choy. Enjoy!

Char Siu Chicken recipe

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Recipe

Char Siu Chicken recipe
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5 from 22 votes

Char Siu Chicken

Char Siu Chicken is an easy alternative to our popular roast pork char siu. If you can’t eat pork or just prefer chicken, this oven-roasted char siu chicken recipe is for you!
by: Bill
Serves: 4
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 40 minutes mins
Marinating Time: 8 hours hrs
Total: 9 hours hrs
[adthrive-in-post-video-player video-id=”TfTsNYms” upload-date=”2023-02-01T19:37:39.000Z” name=”Char Siu Chicken” description=”Char Siu Chicken is an easy alternative to our popular roast pork char siu. If you can’t eat pork or just prefer chicken, this oven-roasted char siu chicken recipe is for you! (Music: Coffee Reading/The Fly Guy Five/epidemicsound.com)” player-type=”default” override-embed=”default”]

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds bone-in skin-on chicken thighs
  • 2 tablespoons dark brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon five spice powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon white pepper
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons hoisin sauce
  • 1 tablespoon Shaoxing wine (can substitute clear rice wine, dry sherry, or beer)
  • 2 teaspoons light soy sauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 2 cloves garlic (minced)
  • 5 drops red food coloring (optional)
  • 2 tablespoons water
  • 1 tablespoon maltose (can substitute honey or brown rice syrup)

Instructions

  • Trim the excess fat from the chicken thighs and discard. Combine the dark brown sugar, salt, five spice powder, white pepper, hoisin sauce, Shaoxing wine, soy sauce, sesame oil, garlic, and red food coloring (if using) in a bowl to make the marinade (i.e. the BBQ sauce). Rub the chicken with the marinade in a large bowl or baking dish. Cover and refrigerate overnight, or at least 8 hours.
  • About 2½ hours before you’d like to eat, take the chicken out of the refrigerator to come up to room temperature for even cooking. Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C) and set a rack in the center of the oven.
  • Line a sheet pan with heavy duty foil for easy clean-up, and place a sheet of parchment paper or non-stick foil on top. Evenly space the marinated chicken thighs on the sheet – they should not be touching each other. Reserve any remaining marinade.
  • Transfer the chicken to your preheated oven, and roast for 30 minutes. Check on it every 15 minutes. If the chicken is starting to scorch or burn, tent it with aluminum foil and/or lower the oven temperature.
  • While the chicken bakes, make your basting sauce. Pour the excess marinade into a small saucepan with the water. Heat the mixture to a simmer.  Add the maltose (microwave the maltose for 15 seconds at a time until softened). Mix until the maltose melts into the marinade and turn off the heat.
  • After 30 minutes, use a brush to baste the chicken with the cooked marinade. Continue roasting for another 5-10 minutes, and check the internal temperature of the chicken using an instant read thermometer. It’s done when it reaches 165°F (74°C) and/or when the juices run clear when the meat is pierced to the bone. Optionally, give the chicken one last basting and another minute in the oven for that extra char siu crust before serving.

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 564kcal (28%) Carbohydrates: 15g (5%) Protein: 38g (76%) Fat: 38g (58%) Saturated Fat: 10g (50%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 8g Monounsaturated Fat: 16g Trans Fat: 0.2g Cholesterol: 222mg (74%) Sodium: 1023mg (43%) Potassium: 504mg (14%) Fiber: 0.3g (1%) Sugar: 12g (13%) Vitamin A: 179IU (4%) Vitamin C: 1mg (1%) Calcium: 33mg (3%) Iron: 2mg (11%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
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Bill

About

Bill
Bill is the dad of The Woks of Life family. He grew up in upstate New York, working through high school and college in restaurants with his father, a chef. Rose from modest beginnings as a Burger King sandwich assembler to Holiday Inn busboy and line cook, to cooking at the family’s Chinese restaurant, while also learning the finer points of Cantonese cooking from his immigrant parents. Specializes in all things traditional Cantonese and American Chinese takeout.
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