Dan Cooks
Better Than Takeout: Crispy Orange Chicken with Broccoli Fried Rice
Tender chicken thighs, a bright tangy glaze, and smoky wok-fried rice — all on the table in under an hour. This is the weeknight dinner the whole family will ask for again.
There's a certain kind of weeknight magic that happens when the whole family smells something good coming from the kitchen and just shows up. No one has to be called twice. That's exactly what this orange chicken does in our house. It's got that bright, sticky-sweet glaze — the kind you get from a good takeout spot — but when you make it yourself, you control everything. The chicken is crispier, the sauce is fresher, and the fried rice alongside it is the kind of thing that makes everybody scrape their bowl clean. I've been cooking this for my family on busy weeknights for a while now, and I'll tell you straight: once you nail the sequencing, it comes together faster than you'd think. Start the rice first, get your mise en place tight, and the rest flows. This is Southern hospitality meeting American Chinese comfort food — and it belongs on your table tonight.
The Crispy Crust Is Everything
Cornstarch is the secret to that shatteringly crisp exterior, but it's also unforgiving if you rush it. The biggest mistake people make is salting the chicken and then immediately dredging it — salt pulls moisture to the surface fast, and wet chicken means the coating steams instead of fries. Either salt your thighs well ahead of time (40 minutes or more, uncovered in the fridge) or season them right as you're about to dredge. Nothing in between. Once the chicken is coated, get your oil hot — you want it shimmering and ready — and fry in batches. Crowding the pan drops the temperature and you end up with pale, chewy pieces instead of golden, crispy ones. When the chicken comes out, set it aside on a plate. Don't let it sit in the sauce. Toss it in at the very last second before plating, so that crust stays intact all the way to the table.
