Vietnamese Caramel Ginger Chicken – juicy chicken bites glazed in a Vietnamese caramel sauce with a good dose of ginger. 5 ingredients. 12 minute braise. Serve over jasmine rice with Asian Slaw for a dinner everybody will gobble up!
Vietnamese Caramel Ginger Chicken
When you see today’s recipe, you’re going to doubt me. How can a recipe with so few ingredients that’s so fast to make be as good as I promise??
Answer: Because the Vietnamese have been making this for centuries!
The caramelisation cooking method used in today’s recipe is a traditional Vietnamese technique. Proteins such as chicken, pork, egg and sometimes vegetables are braised in a simple mixture of sugar and water (or coconut juice), seasoned with fish sauce and flavoured with aromatics such as ginger, garlic and chilli.
At first the mixture looks thoroughly unimpressive – watery and foamy. Like this:
But just give it a mere 12 minutes, and this is what it looks like:
I know, right?? Incredible. We should know better than to doubt the Vietnamese!
And here’s a nice close up for you, including the inside – proof of juiciness:
Vietnamese caramel this-and-that
Vietnamese caramel sauce is not new to these parts! Long time astute readers may recognise this as similar to a sticky Vietnamese Coconut Caramel Chicken that I shared many years ago. That is made with whole bone-in chicken thighs and takes around an hour to make. Also, other members of the Vietnamese Caramel Family – fan favourite Vietnamese Caramelised Pork Bowls (quick) and slow-cooked Vietnamese Caramel Pork (juicy bites!)
Today’s recipe might be my favourite, for it’s speed and the lovely pops of ginger flavour.
What you need for Vietnamese Caramel Ginger Chicken
Here’s all you need to make today’s miracle dish:
Boneless chicken thighs – Thighs work best because they will stay juicier for the required simmer time for the sauce to reduce down into a glaze. But if you want to make this with chicken breast, I’ve popped directions in the recipe notes – best to take it out of the pan partway so it doesn’t overcook.
Brown sugar – This is what makes the caramel glaze! Brown rather than white sugar, for extra caramely flavour.
Fish sauce – The “secret ingredient” that gives the sauce more depth of flavour than just using salt or soy sauce. You can substitute with soy sauce, but the glaze won’t have quite the same flavour.
Ginger – We use quite a lot, for lovely gingery flavour! 1/3 cup finely julienned.
Garlic could be substituted.
Chilli (optional) – For a faint background hum of warmth. I use Birds Eye but Thai chilli or other chilli of choice would be fine. This dish is not spicy by any means, the spiciness of a single chilli is reduced through the cooking process and overpowered by the sweetness.
Eschalots (optional) –Also known as French onions, and called “shallots” in the US. They look like baby onions, but are finer and sweeter than regular onions so they disappear into the glaze better.
Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots” ie the long green onions. Substitute with finely sliced red or regular onions, or skip it. It’s not so common in traditional Vietnamese caramel dishes but it does add extra flavour (I tried with and without).
How to make Vietnamese Caramel Ginger Chicken
Very easy, low maintenance and quick! No marinating required, and just a 12 minute braise.
Toss the chicken in the fish sauce and chilli (if using). Then just set aside while you prepare and measure out the other ingredients. Marinating isn’t required – plenty of flavour infusion into the chicken happens during the braise. But you could leave it overnight, if you wanted to.
Use a large non-stick pan else the liquid will take ages to reduce. Mine is 30cm/12″. If yours is smaller or the liquid is taking way too long to reduce down into a glaze, remove chicken with slotted spoon and reduce the liquid by itself (it will be fast).
Caramel – Put the oil and sugar in a pan over medium heat and stir.
Melt – As the pan heats up, the sugar will melt and form a caramel. As soon as it has melted, take the pan off the stove before adding the chicken. ⚠️ This is a precaution step – because the caramel does sizzle a bit when you add the chicken. If your stove runs very hot or you’re a little…..err…. overly enthusiastic when tossing the chicken in, I’d hate for caramel bits to splash on you. By taking it off the stove, we don’t need to worry.
Chicken -Slide the chicken in carefully (don’t throw it in!), eschalots and ginger. Toss briefly to coat, then return to the stove. The caramel may harden but that’s ok, it will re-melt on the stove.
Cook – Stir the chicken until it changes from pink to white but the inside will still be raw. Add water then let it come up to the simmer.
Braise 10 to 12 minutes – Simmer for 10 to 12 minutes until the sauce reduces down into a brown glaze that coats the chicken. This is what it looks like at the start – not very appetising! It’s very low maintenance – just stir every couple of minutes.
Midway – Here it is halfway through. You can see the chicken is starting to be stained by the sauce colour. What you can’t see is all the lovely flavour being absorbed by the chicken! 🙂
Glaze! Then after 10 to 12 minutes, this is what it looks like. The liquid will have reduced right down and transformed into brown stick glaze that coats the chicken. At this stage, you will want to stir quite regularly to ensure the sauce doesn’t catch and burn on the base of the pot. Just reduce the heat it you’re concerned.
And that’s it! It’s ready to eat!
What to serve with Vietnamese Caramel Ginger Chicken
Serve over jasmine rice or other plain rice of choice (or cauliflower rice if you’re going the low-carb thing). It’s not a sauce stir fry but you definitely won’t miss the sauce because the glaze is more intense flavoured than a typical saucy stir fry. So you can eat it with plain rice because every rice grain the chicken touches will be graced with the tasty Vietnamese caramel sauce!
For a lovely fresh side salad, I’d suggest a crunchy fresh Asian Slaw. Else, my ever-trusty Smashed Cucumbers (perfect juicy freshness to contrast with this sticky goodness) or Asian Sesame Dressing which you can use for “anything” – leafy greens, steamed broccoli or carrots.
Enjoy! – Nagi x
Recipe credit: Adapted from Eat Like a Viet cookbook by Jenny Lam, after eating this at PhatLon, her Vietnamese restaurant in Perth! I dialled down the saltiness (fish sauce) and added eschalots because I think they make it even tastier.
Watch how to make it
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Vietnamese Caramel Ginger Chicken
Ingredients
- 1 kg / 2 lb skinless chicken thigh fillets , cut into large 5cm/2″ pieces (Note 1)
- 3 tbsp fish sauce
- 1 bird’s eye chilli or Thai chilli , deseeded, finely minced (optional) – Note 2
- 3 tbsp vegetable oil
- 1/4 cup brown sugar , tightly packed
- 1/3 cup ginger , finely julienned (about 5 cm/2″ thick piece)
- 2 eschallots , halved then finely sliced (sub half red onion) (Note 3)
- 1/2 cup boiling water
Garnishes & serving:
- Fresh coriander/cilantro or green onion slices (recommended)
- Red chilli , finely sliced (optional)
- Jasmine rice , white rice or other plain rice of choice
Instructions
- Toss chicken with fish sauce and chilli, then set aside while you prepare the other ingredients. You could marinate even overnight but it's not necessary.
- Pan size – Use a large non-stick pan (mine is 30cm/12", must be large). Else, be prepared to remove chicken at end to speed up sauce reduction. See Note 4!
- Caramel – Mix oil and sugar in the cold pan, then turn onto medium high heat. As soon as the sugar is melted, remove the pan from the stove then carefully add the chicken (⚠️ it will sizzle so don't throw it in!) . Add ginger and shallots, toss briefly. The caramel may harden, that's ok, it will re-melt.
- Cook outside of chicken – Then put the pan back on the stove and stir just until the chicken changes from pink to white all over, but not browned, and definitely not cooked through.
- Simmer 10 min – Add water, stir, bring to a simmer. Simmer very rapidly, still on medium high (or even high!), for 10 to 12 minutes, until the liquid reduces right down to a glaze. It might take longer if your pan is smaller or your stove is weaker, that's ok. Stir every now and then while watery, then once it's reduced down to a glaze, toss regularly to get nice colour on the chicken. The further you take it, the better the colour!
- Serve with jasmine rice or other plain rice garnished with extra slices of chilli and fresh coriander if desired. Smashed cucumbers or Asian Slaw would be a terrific side!
Recipe Notes:
1. Chicken – I cut most into 4, some into 3. You want them quite large so they don’t dry out during the required simmer time. Breast – not recommended, it will dry out by the time the sauce reduces. However, if you want to use breast, I’d probably use the whole breast (2), split in half (to make 4 thin steaks), start the cook in the caramel, take them out, let the sauce reduce to a glaze then coat. Bit risky to get timing right without overcooking. 2. Chilli – optional, adds the tiniest background hint of heat (longer you cook fresh chilli, less spicy it is, also the sweet dominates here). 3. Eschalots –Also known as French onions, and called “shallots” in the US. Look like baby onions, but have purple-skinned flesh, are finer and sweeter, so they disappear into the glaze better than regular onions. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots” ie the long green onions. Sub with finely sliced red or regular onions. 4. PAN / sauce reduction / caramelisation – You need a large pan (30cm/12″+) so the chicken isn’t crowded else the liquid takes AGES to reduce. Also, be brave and simmer super rapidly so the liquid reduces faster, and once it’s reduced down to a sticky glaze, stir the chicken in the oil left in the pan to get the nice caramelisation on it. If you’re pan is too small, remove chicken after 12 minutes using slotted spoon and reduce liquid down to glaze (fast, without chicken). then toss chicken back in. 5. Leftovers will keep for 3 days in the fridge. Freezing – haven’t tried but I see no reason why it wouldn’t freeze perfectly well! Nutrition per serving, chicken only (no rice).
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Dozer’s way of sulking about being on a strict gastro-intestinal dog food diet for the next 7 days – spitting his food out on the ground. Seriously. What a brat! (Mind you, his natural greediness means he ends up hoovering the floor clean. But still. The attitude!)
Anne says
This was delicious and everyone loved and have said it’s now thermite fav dish from RTE recipes 😀😋
Heather says
Made this last night and will definitely make it again. Like other comments I didn’t need to add any water, the chicken released plenty.
April says
I made this for dinner and my oh my was it good! Mine didn’t get quite as dark red as Nagi’s but it was still a yummy caramel. Definitely will make again!
Clare says
Yet another easy and tasty recipe, Nagi and Dozer – thanks. Did it with segmented chicken wings – took no time – easy and delicious Friday night footy meal. Thanks 😊
Kev says
Just cooked it tonight,
Big thumbs up from everyone
Laura says
This was amazing Nagi! I followed the recipe exactly and it turned out perfectly. I made your garlic rice and the smashed cucumber salad to go with it and my husband and I almost ate the whole thing ourselves. Thank you!
Mel says
This was amazing. and so easy. Thank you so much. This recipe will be on weekly rotation in our house!
Lorraine says
YUM, YUM, YUM, YUM YUM and so, so easy. Interestingly the last of my leftovers (I only feed one) recaramelised in the microwave on day 3! Big thanks to my sister who shared you with me. You are now my “go to” recipe page and your book is amazing! Congratulations
Camo says
I’ve done this twice now. Both tatsed great. First time I did it in a wok and it took ages, Second in a shallow heavy frypan and it caramilsed much quicker.
Peter says
I did it !! Realy delicious, however I didn’t get as dark colour as yours. But anyway it was pretty nice diner. Next time I’m going to add grated lemon grass. Caramel, fish sauce and lemon grass fits very well, so why not to try ??
Caroline says
I made this for dinner and it was so delish! Another great easy recipe! For people having issues with there being too much liquid & it not reducing – try using half the amount of chicken (500g). I’ve found with other recipes if I have too much chicken in the pan, it’s just too much liquid, even on the highest heat. Half the amount of chicken allowed my pan to get super hot & it coloured perfectly in 12 mins. Delicious thanks!!!
Mike says
Hey I’m making it now and I’m getting the same. I think heaps of liquid came out of the chicken so maybe chicken quality is a factor. Update soon haha
Marion Joyce says
Smashing! Got 10/10 from two teenage boys. Winner winner chicken dinner!
Sammy says
This recipe dropped in my inbox this week and starred it to make for dinner tonight. Oh my!! It was incredible. Will definitely be a staple meal in my household. Thanks Nagi!
Elaina says
Made this tonight, absolutely incredible! I made it in my cast iron pan, and it worked perfectly. Thanks for another winner, Nagi!
Elaina says
Forgot to give this 5 stars! X
Scott says
Hi Nagi , love your recipes but this was my first blah. Not sure what your medium hot is but I had this simmering vigoursly for nearly an hour and still had liquid in the pan. I think it was oil that was never going to go away. I won’t cook it again but will do many of your other recipes. Cheers Scoot
Peter says
Probably too much water !. I had already bad experience with quite other dish, but know you must be carefull with adding water. My advise: start with less water as sugested. You can always add if necessary.
Michael Clark says
Hey I’m making it now and I’m getting the same. I think heaps of liquid came out of the chicken so maybe chicken quality is a factor. Update soon haha
Mike says
So took about 45mins all up. Didn’t look as dark at the end but good lord it’s delicious 🤤. Next time I don’t think I’ll add water, just let the chicken liquid do the magic.
Marcel Villeneuve says
Nagi,
I made this recipe yesterday and did not get the dark glaze on the chicken. What did I do wrong. Yes, I cook it for the required time.
Sue says
Just had this for dinner. WOW it was soooooooo good. Have to admit that I was a tad worried at the 9 min mark that it wasnt going to turn into a glaze, but it was like magic, and there it was at 10 1/2 minutes, then I snatched it very quickly off the stove when it looked like it was going too far. Had it with the smashed cucumber, not really a fan of cucumber, but it worked completely with this dish! Another win for Nagi xxx
Kathryn Goble says
Do you think chicken legs would work as well????
Anne says
My husband absolutely loved this…..didn’t have fish sauce so used soy sauce but still turned out yummy….so thank you!