The best Korean Fried Chicken - crispy coated buttermilk fried chicken smothered in a spicy Korean-inspired gochujang sauce.
The sauce is so rich, flavourful and complex and it comes together very easily - just throw all the ingredients in a pan and bubble it up.
We love to eat this with rice, noodles, or my personal favourite - stuffed into bao buns!
One thing that I absolutely love as a recipe creator, is when I put a plate of food down in front of people, and the conversation stops the moment the first bite is taken. Just quiet, wide-eyed, satisfied munching, with the occasional 'Mmmmm' and 'oh my god, it's so good' until it's all gone.
Jump to:
That moment when everyone wants to focus all of their senses on what they're eating, and nothing else matters.
That's what happens with this Korean Fried Chicken Recipe.
I'm using my popular buttermilk chicken to start off this recipe. If you've never had it, you've got to give it a go (especially this Chicken burger version with honey mustard coleslaw). As someone who worked in fried chicken shops during school, college and university, I can confidently say I know my stuff when it comes to fried chicken.
What do we need?
For the crispy chicken:
For the Korean-style sauce:
What is gochujang?
Gochujang is a Korean fermented red chilli sauce or paste with a smoky-sweet and slightly spicy flavour. Some brands are spicier than others. I’ve prefer the paste, rather than the sauce for a stronger flavour. It's a fantastic addition to sauces and marinades, as it adds heat, richness, tang and a little sweetness. I use it in lots of recipes (beef bulgogi, Pork ramen, Korean steak grilled cheese, sticky Asian ribs to name a few).
How to make it
- First we marinade the chicken in buttermilk, salt, white pepper and garlic salt.
- Then we coat the chicken in my special secret mixture. Only joking, it's not secret. Find the full mixture in the recipe card below.
- The spicy gochujang sauce is made using a mixture of gochujang paste (<-- affiliate link), honey, brown sugar, soy sauce, garlic and ginger that's been bubbled together until sticky and syrupy.
- Then we fry the chicken until golden and crispy.
- Pour the mixture over the crispy chicken and top with sesame seeds, spring onions and a few red pepper flakes.
Enjoy silently with no distractions.
Top Tips for Success
Ensuring the coating doesn't fall off the cooked chicken:
When the chicken comes out of the oil, the coating will be securely adhered to the chicken. However, the longer you leave it before adding the sauce, the more careful you will have to be when tossing with the sauce to ensure the coating stays fully on.
How do you reheat Korean fried chicken?
I prefer this Korean fried chicken served right away, as that's when the chicken will be at it's crispiest. However, you can cool, cover and refrigerate the Korean fried chicken (for up to a day), then reheat in the oven (covered) for 10-15 minutes at 190C/380F, until piping hot throughout.
If you want to keep the chicken crispy, then fully cook both the crispy chicken and sauce, then cool and cover (keep the sauce separate from the chicken) and refrigerate for up to a day. Then reheat the chicken in the oven, uncovered, for 10-15 minutes at 190C/380F, until piping hot throughout. Reheat the sauce in a pan until piping hot.
Can I bake the chicken rather than fry it?
If you want baked chicken, then follow the recipe for my baked chicken tenders, and mix with the gochujang sauce.
More Street Food Recipes
- Pork belly Bao Buns (Gua Bao)
- Chicken Satay with Spicy Peanut Sauce
- Pad Thai with king prawns
- Chicken Lo Mein – super easy to throw together
- Pork Gyros
- Asian Sticky Chicken Wings – or cauliflower wings for a vegetarian version
- Malaysian Mee Siam – ready in 30 minutes!
Watch how to make it
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Korean Fried Chicken
Ingredients
Chicken and marinade:
- 4 chicken breasts - sliced into long thick strips
- 240 ml (1 cup) buttermilk
- ½ tsp salt
- ¼ tsp white pepper
- ¼ tsp garlic salt
Crispy Coating:
- 180 g (1 ½ cups) plain (all-purpose) flour
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 tsp ground black pepper
- ½ tsp garlic salt
- ½ tsp celery salt
- 1 tsp dried thyme
- 1 tsp paprika
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp chilli flakes
- vegetable oil for deep frying - (at least 1 litre/four cups)
Sauce:
- 2 tbsp gochujang paste
- 2 tbsp honey
- 4 tbsp brown sugar
- 4 tbsp soy sauce
- 2 cloves garlic - peeled and minced
- 2 tsp minced ginger
- 1 tbsp vegetable oil
- 1 tbsp sesame oil
- 3 spring onions - sliced into thin strips
- 1 tsp sesame seeds
- ½ tsp chilli flakes - (red pepper flakes)
INSTRUCTIONS
- Place the chicken in a bowl. Add the buttermilk, salt, pepper, and garlic salt. Mix together, cover and place in the fridge to marinade for at least 1 hour (up to overnight)4 chicken breasts, 240 ml (1 cup) buttermilk, ½ tsp salt, ¼ tsp white pepper, ¼ tsp garlic salt
- Preheat the oven to a low heat (to keep the cooked chicken warm). Heat a large pan of vegetable oil (or preheat your deep fat fryer) until hot (you can test by dropping a small cube of bread in there, if it rises immediately to the top and starts to bubble rapidly, it’s hot enough). You’ll need at least 1 litre (4 cups) of oil.vegetable oil for deep frying
- Mix together the crispy coating ingredients in a small bowl.180 g (1 ½ cups) plain (all-purpose) flour, 1 tsp salt, 1 tsp ground black pepper, ½ tsp garlic salt, ½ tsp celery salt, 1 tsp dried thyme, 1 tsp paprika, 1 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp chilli flakes
- Take the chicken out of the fridge. Lift a piece from the buttermilk and allow the excess to drip off. Dredge the chicken in the crispy coating mixture – ensuring it’s fully covered. Place on a tray and repeat until all of the chicken is coated.
- Once the oil is hot enough, add in 5 or 6 of the chicken tenders. You can add more or less depending on the size of your pan, just be sure not to overcrowd the chicken.
- Cook for 3-5 minutes until golden brown and cooked in the middle. You can check this by cutting open a piece of chicken, if it’s no longer pink in the middle, it’s cooked.
- Place on a tray in the oven to keep warm whilst you cook the rest of the chicken. **If you want to ensure the chicken stays extra crispy whilst in the oven, see my 'Top Tips for Success' section in the post.
- Meanwhile, make the sauce. Place the gochujang, honey, sugar, soy sauce, garlic, ginger, vegetable oil, and sesame oil in a saucepan and stir together.2 tbsp gochujang paste, 2 tbsp honey, 4 tbsp brown sugar, 4 tbsp soy sauce, 2 cloves garlic, 2 tsp minced ginger, 1 tbsp vegetable oil, 1 tbsp sesame oil
- Bring to the boil, then simmer for 5 minutes until thickened.
- Pour over the crispy chicken and carefully toss together, then top with the spring onions, chilli flakes, and sesame seeds before serving.3 spring onions, 1 tsp sesame seeds, ½ tsp chilli flakes
Video
✎ Notes
If doubling the recipe, please note it will take longer to fry the chicken as you'll have more batches to fry. How do you reheat Korean fried chicken? I prefer this Korean fried chicken served right away, as that's when the chicken will be at it's crispiest. However, you can cool, cover and refrigerate the Korean fried chicken (for up to a day), then reheat in the oven (covered) for 10-15 minutes at 190C/380F, until piping hot throughout. If you want to keep the chicken crispy, then fully cook both the crispy chicken and sauce, then cool and cover (keep the sauce separate from the chicken) and refrigerate for up to a day. Then reheat the chicken in the oven, uncovered, for 10-15 minutes at 190C/380F, until piping hot throughout. Reheat the sauce in a pan until piping hot. Nutritional Information is per serving. This info is approximate, as all of the flour may not be used up in coating the chicken (I've counted all of the flour as part of the nutritional info though). Also, I've included 1 ½ tbsp of oil per serving to account for the oil that is absorbed during deep frying (this is an *approximate* amount, the chicken may absorb more or less).
Nutrition
Some of the links in this post may be affiliate links – which means if you buy the product I get a small commission (at no extra cost to you). If you do buy, then thank you! That’s what helps us to keep Kitchen Sanctuary running. The nutritional information provided is approximate and can vary depending on several factors. For more information please see our Terms & Conditions.
Trent Bolte says
Easy and awesome!
Made some for myself the other day. Now planning a massive batch to take to a party next weekend. Get it right and it is still crunchy after being in the fridge.
Chris Corbishley says
Brilliant Trent,
Glad you enjoyed it and it stayed crispy after making a big batch.
Thanks
Chris & Nicky
Jasmine says
This recipe is amazing! The sauce is the perfect balance of spicy, salty and sweet. Oh my how tasty it is! Not to spicy at all. I served ours with broccoli and a smidge of whole egg mayo to help cut through the fried chicken, because who doesn't love mayo with fried chicken. Love your recipe! Thank you!!
Emil says
What kind of soy sauce do you use? Chinese or Japanese? Dark or light?
Chris Corbishley says
Hi Emil,
Its Dark Soy Sauce and we normally use the Amoy or Blue Dragon brands
Thanks
Chris & Nicky
CitoChef says
This was a spur of the moment dish and what a lovely surprise. My husband and I have been fasting and wanted something of substance, this is the dish. The flavors we a perfect compliment with a cabbage miso dressing.
It's a "Hall of Fame" dish for sure.
Chris Corbishley says
Thanks so much, So glad you enjoyed the recipe 🙂
Thanks
Chris & Nicky
Cito Cooker says
This was a spur of the moment dish and what a lovely surprise. My husband and I have been fasting and wanted something of substance, this is the dish. The flavors we a perfect compliment with a cabbage miso dressing.
It's a "Hall of Fame" dish for sure.
Priscilla Malaga says
really yummy were doing koreans fried chicken
Mbali says
Hey there! out of curiosity can i put these in the oven instead
Nicky Corbishley says
Hi Mbali, no, the batter on the chicken needs to be fried in oil, rather than baked, to go crisp.
If you want baked chicken, then follow the recipe for my baked chicken tenders, and mix with the gochujang sauce.
Trevor says
The sauce is absolutely killer.
Lynne Bougourd says
Korean Chicken! OMGoodness, it is amazing! Have done a few recipes now and am an absolute fan!
Tuscan chicken tomorrow, which looks so tasty! Thank you!
Lynne
Chris Corbishley says
Thanks Lynne,
So glad you are enjoying the recipes.
Thanks
Chris & Nicky
Shaherbano says
Aguchojung paste is not available in my country. What can I substitute it with?
Nicky Corbishley says
That's a difficult one, as gochujang has a unique flavour that is difficult to replicate. You could try mixing a tbsp of miso paste with a tbsp sriracha and a tsp of sugar. It will give you that slightly fermented flavour with heat and a little sweetness. I haven't tried it, but that's what i'd do if I couldn't get hold of gochujang.
Zac says
So good!!! The sauce is next level, do you know how long the sauce would last if I bottled it and put it in the fridge?
Becki Jo says
I was really excited because I thought this was going to be a Korean fried chicken recipe and not a fried chicken with Korean sauce recipe. Still good, just not the same.
Charlotte says
Thought this chicken would be long winded to make but it really wasn’t!
It was super easy, moist and crispy and the sauce was delicious. I couldn’t get any gachojung paste so substituted with sriracha which seemed to work fine!
Will definitely make this again!
Liz says
Our go to recipe, can't get enough of it. Moorish....simply delicious.
My husband has made this four times in the last month! Always succulent, tender, none greasy
Mary says
I watch cooking shows on TV often and have seen the chefs make Korean Fried Chicken and always think "I should make that", well tonight I made this recipe. WOW amazing. My husband and I ate the entire dish. This will be a "keeper" recipe to make time after time. THANK YOU.
Dean says
Could I substitute some of the plain flour with potato starch?
The sauce recipe is great!
Nicky Corbishley says
I think potato starch will give you a lighter, crispier coating, whereas the plain flour is a more substantial coating.
I haven't tried it, but I think it would work fine.
If you do replace with potato starch, please let me know how it goes 😀