This is another dish I used to buy from the local Japanese grocer like pirikara. I heard it is a very classic dish found at any Japanese home, bento box, street food stall, or restaurant. When I followed some online recipe and made this dish by myself, I realized how delicious it could be. The one I bought from the grocer had been sealed in the package and stored in cold temperature for hours. By the time I used it, I had to warm it up in a microwave. It still tastes good. However, the freshly made one tastes like a totally different dish. It has exceptional flavor as the inside is juicy and tender while the outside (shell) is crispy.

In Japan, this dish is called karaage which refers to a cooking technique involving deep frying flour coated ingredients. Even though you could have fish or vegetable karaage, nowadays, karaage usually refers to chicken karaage. My recipe is close to a traditional karaage recipe in which minimum marination is used.

Even though, I am not a big fan of deep-fried food and deep frying, the ingredients and technique used in this dish is simple. If you only eat it occasionally, it is still a wonderful dish.

Karaage

Japanese Fried Chicken (Karaage) 日式炸鸡(唐揚)

A extremely falvorful dish. The inside is juicy and tender, while the shell is crispy. Suitable for side dish, main dish, lunch box, or even snack.
Prep Time 20 mins
Cook Time 15 mins
Total Time 35 mins
Course Main Course, Side Dish
Cuisine fusion, Japanese

Equipment

  • 8“ sauce pan
  • large bowl
  • A large zipbag

Ingredients
  

  • 1 pound deboned chicken thighs
  • 1-2 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp ground black pepper
  • 4 tbsp starch (preferably potato)
  • 3-4 tbsp all-purpose flour (could be replaced by starch)
  • 4 cups neutral flavor oil
  • 1 tbsp cooking wine (optional)
  • 1 tbsp soy sauce (optional)
  • 1 tsp white pepper powder (optional)
  • 1 tsp garlic powder (optional)

Instructions
 

  • Cut the chicken thighs to 1-1.5" pieces
  • Put the sliced chicken pieces into the bowl, add all seasonings, mix well, and marinate for 15-20 mins
  • Add the starch and marinated chicken to the zipbag, and shake to mix well
  • Add the oil to the sauce pan, put the pan to the stove top, and turn the heat to high
  • Pour the starch-coated chicken pieces onto the cutting board, sprinkle the all-purpose flour, and mix to coat the chicken pieces with the flour
  • Once the oil is hot, turn the heat to medium. Add 5-6 pieces to the oil, and fry for 120-180 seconds.
  • After all the pieces are done frying, let them rest for 3-5 mins. Turn the heat to high.
  • Refry the pieces, 5-6 pieces each batch for 2-5 mins (depending on your chicken piece size and oil temperature)
  • After all the pieces are refried, either let them drain for 1-2 mins, or use a paper towel to absorb the excess oil. Serve while it's still warm.

Video

Notes

  • Almost all recipes tell people to use neutral flavor oil for frying. I once only had olive oil when I wanted to fry chicken. There was some bitterness in the chicken, but the flavor is sort of special.
  • For the second layer of coating, flour is preferred.
  • Skin-on chicken thighs give more texture and flavor.
  • Keep the chicken chunk small (1") to shorten frying time and give a sort of crispy texture.
Keyword chicken karaage, fried chicken, japanese fried chicken, Japanese style chicken, karaage, 唐揚, 日式炸鸡, 炸鸡