Three-Cup Chicken

Updated May 1, 2024

Three-Cup Chicken
Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
30 minutes
Rating
5(6,975)
Notes
Read community notes

Ask 30 people how to make this simple Taiwanese recipe, and you’ll receive 30 different responses. Some fry the chicken before braising it, use more oil, less wine, different blends of soy sauce. Debates rage over how thick the sauce should be, over which parts of the chicken to use. (Few follow the folk recipe that calls for making the sauce with a cup each of sesame oil, soy sauce and rice wine. “If you actually cook it that way,” says Eddie Huang, the Taiwanese-American chef who inspired the television program “Fresh Off the Boat,” “you’ll be in trouble.”) Our reporting and testing led us to the recipe below. Use it as a starting point, and then make it your own.

Featured in: A Taste of Taiwan

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone
    As a subscriber, you have 10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers. Learn more.
  • Print Options


Advertisement


Ingredients

Yield:4 servings
  • 3tablespoons sesame oil
  • 12-to-3-inch piece of ginger, peeled and sliced into coins, approximately 12
  • 12cloves of garlic, peeled
  • 4whole scallions, trimmed and cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 3dried red peppers or 1 teaspoon red-pepper flakes
  • 2pounds chicken thighs, boneless or bone-in, cut into bite-size pieces
  • 1tablespoon unrefined or light brown sugar
  • ½cup rice wine
  • ¼cup light soy sauce
  • 2cups fresh Thai basil leaves or regular basil leaves
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

673 calories; 48 grams fat; 12 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 20 grams monounsaturated fat; 12 grams polyunsaturated fat; 10 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 40 grams protein; 764 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat a wok over high heat and add 2 tablespoons sesame oil. When the oil shimmers, add the ginger, garlic, scallions and peppers, and cook until fragrant, approximately 2 minutes.

  2. Step 2

    Scrape the aromatics to the sides of the wok, add remaining oil and allow to heat through. Add the chicken, and cook, stirring occasionally, until it is browned and crisping at the edges, approximately 5 to 7 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Add sugar and stir to combine, then add the rice wine and soy sauce, and bring just to a boil. Lower the heat, then simmer until the sauce has reduced and started to thicken, approximately 15 minutes.

  4. Step 4

    Turn off the heat, add the basil and stir to combine. Serve with white rice.

Ratings

5 out of 5
6,975 user ratings
Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

I made this exactly as the recipe instructs (because that's how I cook; try it as written first and then "riff" later if I feel it's merited) and it was superb. I brought it to a Lunar New Year party and some Taiwanese guests tried it and then bogarted the whole pot because they said it was authentic and delicious. The key is dark meat, they said. Try not to use boned chicken thighs because boning the thighs yourself ensures a fresher tasting dish.

Just made this with 2 lbs. boneless skinless thighs. Julienned the ginger; removed that and whole garlic before stir-frying chicken in 3 batches. This kept it from steaming. Then returned all the chicken along with the ginger and garlic to the wok, added the sugar, and magic happened. Added a bit of corn starch in water to thicken the sauce. Saved the scallions for the final moments, along with the Thai basil. Excellent with jasmine rice and green beans tossed with hoisin.

This was excellent, although I made the following changes:

1. Do NOT use TOASTED sesame oil, that's a seasoning; use any light oil instead.

2. Slice ginger about 1/6” thick

3. Use 8 thin scallions or 4 fat ones.

4. Use 4 dried Japanese red peppers.

5. Cook chicken 15 minutes; brown well.

6. Use any brown sugar.

7. Use Mirin rice wine.

8. Use any type soy sauce.

9. Use 1 cup of chopped fresh basil.

10. Cook sauce until very thick and coats chicken.

Hey Pat, it's only food. The NYTimes cooking site seems to be a tool for amateurs who might be serious about what they cook. It isn't perfect.
I just made this recipe and am eating it as we speak. I used whole dried peppers which gave it a nice bite and it wasn't too sweet which is what my Taiwanese American daghter in law had warned me about. It wasn't a wow preparation - more like Chinese comfort food but everything seemed to have gone according to instructions. Is that helpful??

Asian cooking commonly uses both untoasted sesame oil for cooking, and toasted sesame oil for seasoning. The New York Times staff showed deplorable oversight in publishing this recipe without making that distinction, precisely because many people in America will assume that "sesame oil" means toasted sesame oil. I wonder if the recipe proportions here were determined by someone who assumed the very same, and reduced the oil because toasted sesame oil is strongly flavored

Someone asked about adding vegetables. I reduced chicken by half and added julienned carrots, celery, red pepper, asparagus and onions. Stir fry these first until tender crisp and remove to a platter. Follow the recipe as written. Throw in some sliced water chestnuts after the sauce has reduced. Add the veggies back in. Yum.

I made a mistake by reading everyone's notes first to see the variations and suggestions.
I finally followed the original recipe and all I can tell you is that I can't wait to cook it again. One of the best!

As Mr. Sifton notes, there are as many varieties of this as cooks. My Taiwanese relatives gave it high marks as written, with a caveat and a suggestion. Respectively:
1)Use light soy sauce, not all purpose, not dark.
2)Whole peppers, not pepper flakes, in case any diner wishes to separate them on the plate.

Because I didn't had my glasses on, I made a wonderful mistake: instead of rice wine I used rice vinagre and the result was absolutely gorgeous !

I am highly disturbed to see being proliferated Asian recipes instructing home chefs to use sesame oil as a cooking oil! I am no pro by any means but I have never seen sesame oil being used in that quantity. Sesame oil is analogous to balsamic vinegar or an extremely high quality extra virgin olive oil. It's meant to elevate the flavor profile of a dish, not used to cook it. Unless things have changed dramatically since my childhood, the cooking oil of choice is peanut oil.

Removed the skin (Lisa's suggestion) and cut the thighs into about 1" chunks. Thai basil was way short, so I went out into the garden to see what I could use, the mint kept jumping up and down yelling, "Choose me! Choose me!" so I substituted mint for 1 1/2 C basil. Actually I wasn't just feeling sorry for the poor nerdy mint; I actually swap out basil with mint quite often. (Do you know Thai basil will keep fresh in a vase of water for 6 weeks or more?) Recipe is delicious. Next I'll try beef.

Accidentally used 20 cloves garlic, was quite good.

There is a marked difference between "sesame oil" and "toasted sesame oil." They should not be used interchangeably. Sesame oil is a cooking oil; toasted sesame oil is a flavoring oil. Peanut oil is too bland and neutral for this dish. The cooking oil of choice today for a dish like this is "sesame oil." By the way, the label on toasted sesame oil usually notes its use as being different from plain old sesame oil.

Round two of this tasty dish. I boned the thighs, left skin on and browned them in sesame oil first. Once done threw in the aromatics. Once they were done the sauce was made in the pan, the chicken reintroduced then cooked down. This took less time and produced meat that was better browned and more tender.

With only an electric range, I modified the technique a little: heat a dutch oven at medium heat for 10 minutes, turn heat to high, coat the oven with oil, add fragrances and stir, add more oil and then chicken (bone-in breasts), stir frequently for 5 or 6 minutes, add sugar, stir and then add liquid. Cover and cook in high heat, stir occasionally, until most liquid is gone. Remove from heat, add basil and serve. Use whole or slightly crushed garlic to reduce the chance of burn. Excellent!

I followed the recipe as written. Used red pepper flakes. It was delicious! Even my picky eaters loved it!

I added shiitake mushrooms and snow peas, the latter at the last minute to keep them crunchy. Appreciated comments about difference between toasted sesame and not-toasted oils. Great recipe.

This didn’t do much for us. Followed the recipe - & even had fresh basil from an early farmer’s market vendor. I thought it was not a particularly flavorful dish - one note, mostly the soy sauce - dominating. I love ginger and garlic but prefer the ginger grated into a dish, and whole cloves of garlic didn’t add much either. Glad to try it but there are so many other great stir fry dishes that I can spend my prep time on that I’ll pass on this for the future.

With 20 oz thighs and 2 1/2 servings of rice, makes 2 1/2 - 667 calorie servings.

What a fantastic recipe, despite a major mistake on my part. My basil is still in the container on the counter. :-( Some of the best chicken I’ve made so far. Next time I’d like to add more vegetables; I’m thinking bok choy would go well, and of course, the basil! I served with short grain rice and Miso Butter Roasted Broccoli.

This recipe is perfection however I like to brown the chicken a bit first and also I 3x the scallions as they are such a divine complement. Throw in a bit later than indicated so they are a tad crunchier ! Yum. Thanks Sam

Loved it. My only change was something I do whenever I can to just get more vegetables into a dish. I threw in a couple handfuls of prewashed spinach just after the basil. But that was not because I thought the recipe was lacking - it is just what I do.

Adding a bit of citrus zest and juice at the end (we used lemon) brightens the dish up. Otherwise delicious.

Made this with my son. Wonderful recipe. We ended up grating the ginger. He doesn’t love spicy food so we toned down the ginger and red pepper flake. We loved making it.

I sometimes add grated fresh lemongrass for fun. Don't hate on me. Otherwise, authentic and fantastic.

Very good but I will double the sauce next time.

And oh yeah, I use small individual Chinese clay pots on top of high heat burners on the stove. I have 4 of them. Nice presentation and the clay pots somehow make it even better!

This was fantastic. I'm going to make more next time; my family devoured it.

I did what makes me roll my eyes when others do it, i.e., completely changed the recipe. I used semi firm tofu and swiss brown and shitake mushrooms and no chicken. I used 2 tbs of untoasted sesame oil at the beginning and 1 tbs of toasted at the end. Also added an extra 1/8 cup of full strength soy sauce to the light soy sauce. So quick, nutritious and delicious. Thank you.

Green beans good w this

Private notes are only visible to you.

Advertisement

or to save this recipe.