Ultimate Teriyaki Chicken

Ultimate Teriyaki Chicken

⏱ 25 min 🍽 Japanese 🛒 Local 🇯🇵 Authentic
⚡ Technique
2/5
🛒 Sourcing
2/5

Master the art of teriyaki with both a quick local-friendly version and the authentic Japanese technique using real mirin.

👨‍🍳

"My go-to recipe for converting teriyaki skeptics."

Ingredients

Serves 2

The Chicken

  • Chicken thighs (bone-in, skin-on)
    4 pieces (~600 g)
    patted dry
  • Neutral oil
    1 tbsp
    for searing
  • Salty Salt
    ½ tsp

The Sauce (Authentic)

  • Sweet Mirin
    4 tbsp (60 ml)
    real hon-mirin preferred
  • Umami Soy sauce
    3 tbsp (45 ml)
  • Sake
    2 tbsp (30 ml)
  • Sweet Sugar
    1 tbsp

The Sauce (Local)

  • Sweet Honey
    3 tbsp
  • Umami Soy sauce
    3 tbsp (45 ml)
  • Sour Rice vinegar
    1 tbsp
  • Garlic (minced)
    2 cloves

Garnish

  • Sesame seeds optional
    1 tbsp
    toasted
  • Color Green onion (sliced) optional
    2 stalks

Taste & Texture Profile

The Local version delivers immediate sweetness from honey. Quick and satisfying but one-dimensional.

🛒 Local Version 🇯🇵 Authentic Version

Taste Profile

Texture Profile

Instructions

✨ SHARED

Pat the chicken thigh completely dry with paper towels. Season both sides lightly with salt and pepper.

✨ SHARED

Place skin-side down in a COLD pan (no oil needed), then turn heat to medium. Press gently with a spatula for the first 30 seconds.

💡 Why start from a COLD pan? (The Science of Fat Rendering)

Starting in a cold pan allows subcutaneous fat to slowly liquefy and escape. This essentially deep-fries the skin in its own fat, creating an impossibly crispy texture without added oil.

👨‍🍳 Ryota

If you put it in a hot pan, the skin shrinks and curls up instantly. Starting cold lets the fat slowly render out.

🔬 Shunta

So that's why we don't need oil! Less washing up too!

👨‍🍳 Ryota

Exactly. And that rendered chicken fat? Save it — it makes the best scallion oil.

📚 Dive deeper in Fundamentals →
✨ SHARED

Cook for 7-8 minutes without moving. You'll hear the sizzle change from aggressive to gentle — that's when the fat has rendered.

✨ SHARED

Flip and cook the other side for 3-4 minutes until internal temperature reaches 74°C (165°F).

🛒 LOCAL ONLY

Remove chicken from pan. In the same pan (off heat), add 2 tbsp soy sauce + 1.5 tbsp honey + 1 tsp rice vinegar. Stir to combine with the fond.

💡 Why honey burns faster than mirin (Sugar Chemistry)

Honey contains high-concentration fructose which caramelizes at 110°C, much lower than sucrose (160°C). Adding it off-heat prevents bitter burning while still achieving that glossy glaze.

📚 Dive deeper in Fundamentals →
🇯🇵 AUTHENTIC ONLY

Keep chicken in pan on medium heat. Add 2 tbsp mirin + 2 tbsp soy sauce + 1 tbsp sake. Let the alcohol burn off and reduce until glossy (about 2 minutes).

💡 The Mirin Reduction: Why real mirin creates superior glaze

Real mirin (hon-mirin, 14% alcohol) undergoes simultaneous caramelization and Maillard reaction during reduction. The multiple sugar types (glucose, isomaltose) create layered complexity that single-sugar honey cannot replicate.

🔬 Shunta

This is why we never use mirin-fu (mirin-like seasoning), right?

👨‍🍳 Ryota

Exactly. Mirin-fu has almost no alcohol, so you don't get the reduction reaction. It's just sugar water with MSG.

🔬 Shunta

The real stuff costs more, but you use so little per dish...

📚 Dive deeper in Fundamentals →
✨ SHARED

Slice chicken against the grain. Drizzle remaining sauce over the top. Serve immediately with steamed rice.

FAQ

Q Can I use chicken breast instead?

Yes, but thighs give better results. If using breast, pound to even thickness and reduce cooking time by 2-3 minutes.

Q What's the difference between real mirin and mirin-like seasoning?

Real mirin (hon-mirin) is brewed like sake and has natural sweetness. Mirin-like seasoning (mirin-fu) is cheaper but contains corn syrup. For teriyaki, the difference is noticeable.

Q Can I make this ahead of time?

The chicken is best fresh, but you can make the sauce in advance and store it in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.

Q Why start with a cold pan?

Starting cold allows the fat to render slowly, resulting in extra crispy skin without burning the meat.

Q What if I don't have honey for the sauce?

You can substitute with sugar or maple syrup, but honey provides a unique gloss and depth to the teriyaki sauce.

Q The skin isn't getting crispy. What's wrong?

Ensure the chicken is patted completely dry and don't add oil to the pan. Also, avoid moving the chicken during the first 7-8 minutes.