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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Rice ❯ Chicken Fried Rice

Chicken Fried Rice

Bill

by:

Bill

268 Comments
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Updated: 7/18/2025
Bowl of Chicken Fried Rice with Chili Oil

This is an easy, classic chicken fried rice recipe you can make for a quick dinner on any weeknight. It’s also heavier on the chicken than you might be used to when getting takeout.

Limited by the low prices they need to charge to get by, Chinese takeout restaurants keep the chicken pieces small and the vegetables at a minimum. Because chicken isn’t the most flavorful protein on offer, I generally choose beef, pork, or shrimp when I order fried rice. However, this recipe has juicy chunks of chicken and crunchy vegetables.

Our already popular Classic Pork Fried Rice is hard to beat if you use fresh Chinese roast pork (char siu), but for those of you who don’t eat pork—or just happen to have a chicken breast in the freezer—chicken fried rice is delicious and easy!

Note: This recipe was originally published in October 2015. We have updated it with clearer instructions, higher quality photos, and metric measurements. The recipe is still the same. Enjoy!

Customize Your Chicken Fried Rice!

Remember, this recipe is only a template. I used onions, eggs, bean sprouts, and scallions, but you can customize to your heart’s content.

Add mushrooms, peas, or carrots. Cut your chicken into smaller pieces if you like. Omit the onions, use black pepper instead of white pepper… I think you get the point.

One word of advice: if you’ve never made chicken fried rice before, then follow these directions as written just once. Then next time, you can make adjustments according to your own tastes and experiment with variations.

Happy Cooking!

Bowl of Chinese Chicken Fried Rice

Chicken Fried Rice Recipe Instructions

Combine the chicken and marinade ingredients (soy sauce, cornstarch, sesame oil, and oil). Set aside while you prepare the rest of the ingredients.

For more information and preparing chicken for stir-fries, see my post on Chicken Velveting: 101.

In a small bowl, combine the hot water, sugar, light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, salt, and white pepper. This is the sauce you’ll add to the rice. It’s much easier to have it combined and ready to go before you start cooking.

(If you have questions about light and dark soy sauce, check out our extensive article on soy sauce.)

Fluff your cooked rice with a fork or with your hands. (You can rinse your hands in cold water if the rice starts sticking to them.) If you are using cold leftover rice, try to break up the clumps as best as possible.

Heat the wok over medium high heat, and add 1 tablespoon of oil. Add the eggs and scramble them until just cooked. Start scooping them up when they look like they are almost set.

Set aside. They will continue to cook in the bowl and you will cook them again in the rice. I’m only harping on this because you don’t want dried egg bits in your chicken fried rice!

Heat the wok until just smoking and spread another tablespoon oil around the perimeter. Sear the marinated chicken in one layer for 20 seconds.

cubes of chicken searing in wok

Stir-fry the chicken until about 80% done. Remove the chicken, and set aside.

Seared chicken pieces in wok

With the wok over medium high heat, add another tablespoon of oil, and sauté the onions until translucent.

Cooking diced onions in wok

Add the rice, and use your metal spatula to flatten out and break up any large clumps.

Cooking Rice:

When it comes to fried rice, leftover rice is best. But how exactly do you make the rice in the first place?

If you have not purchased a rice cooker yet, then you really should consider it. They’re a kitchen lifesaver, and we recommend a really simple one without too many bells and whistles. Check out our Chinese Cooking Tools page for more information and some useful links to products.

If you don’t have a rice cooker, check out our instructions for foolproof stovetop rice and steamed rice.

If the rice is cold from the refrigerator, continue stir-frying to warm it up, which will take about 5 minutes. Sprinkling just a little water on large clumps of rice will help break them up more easily.

If you made the rice fresh, it will cook faster. Just make sure that the rice isn’t too wet, as it will make frying it difficult.

Adding rice to onions in wok to make fried rice

Once the rice is warmed (very important or the sauce will not mix as well and the color of the rice will not be as uniform), add the sauce mixture and mix with a scooping motion until the rice is evenly coated with sauce.

You will have to break up any remaining clumps of rice with the spatula as best as possible, but no need to be obsessive. The rice should be hot by this time.

Seasoned rice in wok

Now add the chicken and any juices from the bowl you set aside earlier and stir fry for another minute.

Adding chicken to fried rice in wok

Chicken fried rice in wok

Add the eggs, bean sprouts, and scallions, and continue stir-frying the rice for another 30 seconds.

Adding egg to chicken fried rice
Adding bean sprouts to chicken fried rice
Scallions and bean sprouts in chicken fried rice

Then gather all of the rice into the middle of the wok. This lets the sides of the wok heat up. After about 20 seconds, spread the Shaoxing wine around the perimeter of the wok, and stir-fry for another 20 seconds.

This step gives you a little of that extra “wok hei” that you taste when you get fried rice from a good Chinese restaurant.

Chicken Fried Rice

Serve with some homemade chili oil.

Bowls of Chicken Fried Rice
Chicken Fried Rice with Chili Oil

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Recipe

Chicken Fried Rice
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5 from 75 votes

Chicken Fried Rice

This classic chicken fried rice recipe is quick to make, no fuss and definitely better than takeout. Learn how to prepare yummy chicken fried rice at home.
by: Bill
Serves: 6
Prep: 25 minutes mins
Cook: 10 minutes mins
Total: 35 minutes mins

Ingredients

For the chicken and marinade:
  • 8 ounces chicken breast (about 1 large, diced into ½-inch cubes)
  • 1 teaspoon light soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon oil
You’ll also need:
  • 1 tablespoon hot water
  • ¼ teaspoon sugar
  • 1 tablespoon light soy sauce (or to taste)
  • 1 teaspoon dark soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon salt (or to taste)
  • 1/8 teaspoon white pepper (or to taste)
  • 5 cups cooked rice
  • 3 tablespoons canola oil (divided)
  • 2 eggs (beaten)
  • 1 medium onion (diced)
  • 1 cup fresh mung bean sprouts
  • 1 scallion (chopped)
  • 1 tablespoon shaoxing wine

Instructions

  • Combine the chicken and marinade ingredients. In a separate bowl, combine the hot water, sugar, light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, salt, and white pepper in a small bowl. Set aside.
  • Take your cooked rice and fluff it with a fork or with your hands (you can rinse your hands in cold water if the rice starts sticking to them). If you are using cold leftover rice, try to break up the clumps as best as possible.
  • Heat the wok over medium high heat and add 1 tablespoon of oil. Add the eggs and scramble them until just done. Remove from the wok immediately, and set aside.
  • Heat the wok until just smoking and spread another tablespoon oil around your wok. Sear the marinated chicken in one layer for 20 seconds. Stir-fry the chicken until about 80% done. Remove the chicken and set aside.
  • With the wok over medium high heat, add the final tablespoon of oil, and sauté the onions until translucent. Add the rice, and use your metal spatula to flatten out and break up any large clumps. If the rice is cold from the refrigerator, continue stir-frying until the rice is warmed up, which will take about 5 minutes. Sprinkling just a little water on large clumps of rice will help break them up more easily. If the rice was made fresh, cooking time will be faster. Just make sure that the rice isn't too wet––which will make frying it difficult.
  • Once the rice is warmed (very important or the sauce will not mix as well and the color of the rice will not be as uniform), add the sauce mixture and mix with a scooping motion until the rice is evenly coated with sauce. Break up any remaining clumps of rice with the spatula. The rice should be hot by this time. Now add the cooked chicken, along with any juices from the bowl. Stir-fry for 1 minute.
  • Add the eggs, bean sprouts, and scallions, and continue stir-frying the rice for another 30 seconds. Then gather all of the rice into the middle of the wok to let the sides of the wok heat up.
  • After about 20 seconds, spread the Shaoxing wine around the perimeter of the wok and stir-fry for another 20 seconds. This step gives you a little of that extra "wok hei" that you taste when you get fried rice from a good Chinese restaurant. Serve!

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 327kcal (16%) Carbohydrates: 41g (14%) Protein: 15g (30%) Fat: 11g (17%) Saturated Fat: 1g (5%) Cholesterol: 79mg (26%) Sodium: 735mg (31%) Potassium: 265mg (8%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 2g (2%) Vitamin A: 110IU (2%) Vitamin C: 4.5mg (5%) Calcium: 30mg (3%) Iron: 0.9mg (5%)
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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