Chicken Teriyaki

July 16, 2009 · Comments

in Grilled, Japanese Recipes, Poultry

Chicken Teriyaki on rice

Chicken Teriyaki (鳥照り焼き) is a lunchtime staple in Japan, filling bento boxes being carted off to offices and schools alike. Teri refers to the lacquered sheen that teriyaki sauce develops on the surface of the chicken, while yaki means grilled. Almost any cut of chicken can be used, but chicken teriyaki is most commonly prepared with the leg meat (thighs or drumsticks) which is filleted to ensure it cooks evenly. The skin is left on the chicken to keep the meat moist and it takes on a wonderful caramelized hue while getting slightly crispy as it grills.

Long before sushi became the ambassador of Japanese cuisine to the rest of the world, chicken teriyaki invaded the west, and for better or worse it came to represent the whole of the Japanese culinary repertoire. Perhaps it was the short list of approachable ingredients or the exoticism of food from the far east. Whatever the reason, it’s become so ingrained in American food culture that even Paula Deen has a teriyaki recipe.

So what makes for an authentic teriyaki sauce?

It’s simple… equal parts soy sauce, mirin, sake, and sugar.

Chicken Teriyaki Recipe

It’s not that I have anything against those fancy sweet soy marinades with ginger, garlic, chili, green onions, sesame seeds, and or fruit puree in them, but sauces with these ingredients aren’t teriyaki sauce since they cloud the teri. Ginger, sesame seeds, green onions and chili are garnishes that are occasionally added after the chicken has been cooked.

Traditionally, the unseasoned chicken is grilled over coals then basted with teriyaki sauce. To tenderize and season the chicken all the way through, I brine it first in soy sauce and sugar, grill it, then shellac a few coats of teriyaki sauce on to finish. This seems to get the best balance of color, texture and flavour. I’ve written the directions for a broiler, but just reverse the cooking order (skin up, then down) if you are using a grill.

Teriyaki Sauce

By using maltose or honey in the teriyaki sauce, the sauce gets thick without having to add any cornstarch. If you do use honey, make sure you use one without a strong flavour of its own.

Serve this chicken teriyaki whole or chopped up on a bowl of steaming hot rice with some extra sauce. The leftovers make great oyako donburi which will be a topic for another post.

Chicken Teriyaki

for brine
1/2 C water
2 Tbs dark soy sauce
2 Tbs dark brown sugar
2 Tbs mirin

4-6 skin-on filleted (boneless) chicken thighs

for teriyaki sauce
2 Tbs mild flavored honey (or maltose)
2 Tbs dark soy sauce
2 Tbs mirin
2 Tbs sake

Combine the water, soy sauce, brown sugar and mirin in large ziploc bag and add the chicken thighs. Press out as much air as you can and seal the bag. Let this sit in the fridge for at least an hour.

To make the teriyaki sauce, just add the honey, soy sauce, mirin and sake to a small sauce pan and boil over medium heat until the sauce is glossy and slightly viscous (it won’t get quite as thick as the jarred types). It should take on a caramelized taste but be careful not to burn it.

When you’re ready to grill the chicken, turn the broiler on and move the oven rack up to the upper position. Put a wire rack on a baking sheet (I use the rack out of my toaster oven), and put the chicken thighs skin side down onto the rack (the idea is to keep the meat elevated off the pan).

Grill until brown then flip so the skin side faces up. Baste the skin side with teriyaki sauce and continue to broil until the skin is golden brown with just a few charred spots. Give the chicken one final baste with the teriyaki sauce and serve.

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  • I prefer teriyaki very simple. Just like your recipe. And, havent really order teriyaki at restaurants lately, because it's just too random.
  • Teriyaki is the one Japanese dish I never got to try. (hm, maybe not the only one, on second thought, but quite likely the most ubiquitous). Oh, talking about strong tasting honeys I got myself a jar of buckwheat honey. The honey guy at the market was like "it's really strong, I mean, really strong" and he looked scared. That's promising.
    Anyway, this dish looks really tasty.

    :-)
  • I love it when you can make something so delicious from something as inexpensive as chicken thighs. This is going on my list of meals to make for next week. Thanks!
  • Beautiful!! i am so hungru now!!
  • Thanks for providing an authentic recipe for teriyaki Marc...it's good to know I have all those ingredients in my cupboard.
  • that looks amazing, I truly find Japanese cuisine to be very interesting. It's actually one of my favorite cuisines to taste and explore!
  • Oooh I miss Japan! I always wondered what that brown sugary love-juice was made of. Yummy! :)
  • Marc excellent information about a real chicken teriyaki… the golden result is pure bliss, love all the vast culinary world of the Japanese cuisine :)

    Cheers,

    Gera
  • Whats the difference between yakitori and teriyaki? Do you have a favorite brand of soy? For teriyaki I like the brand with the swan on it.
  • marc
    Hi Holly, yakitori, means "grilled bird" and usually refers to any piece of the chicken skewered and grilled. It can be basted with teriyaki sauce or just salted.
  • souful. I love how you brined the meat. I LOVE brining. does a poultry splendiforous!
  • Thanks for this recipe Mark. I love chicken teriyaki but haven't made it or had it in a very very very long time. I always used the Sushi Chef brand sauce, which I think is pretty authentic, but it so easy to make, looks like now I can just do it myself.
    In Japan is it also common to use proteins other than chicken, like beef, fish, etc with teriyaki sauce?
  • marc
    Yep, it's found on beef and fish there as well. With fish it's generally used with fattier fish like yellowtail or mackerel. It also changes names sometimes. For instance yaki tori (grilled bird) is essentially chicken teriyaki on skewers. Kabayaki is another name for teriyaki sauce when it's used on seafood like eel. Confused yet?
  • Guess we've been doing too much with our teriyaki marinades. :) We'll have to simplify it next time.
  • Amazing food photography. Nice contrast of color with the green onions. I love making teriyaki chicken using chicken drumsticks :P
  • i love this post. it's one of the most familiar Asian meals to americans yet it gets f-ed up so often. and why? it's salty and sweet and only contains a few ingredients! realistically, there's absolutely no reason on earth why people should not make their own teriyaki sauce every time. just buy the ingredients, none of them really spoil, and just make it in a bowl! i'm definitely using this - i haven't had it in so long. great post, marc!

    also, what do you think about using sake or sherry w/ some sugar as a mirin substitute. i know it's not legit, but i think the only thing people may not have to make teriyaki is the mirin. just askin'!
  • marc
    Not my most creative post, but I'm glad you found it useful:-)

    As for the substitution, sugar + sake would be ideal as that's essentially what mirin is, but sherry (or maybe even port) would do in a pinch.
  • piercival
    Marc,

    The more I cook the more I find greatness in simplicity and using quality ingredients. This dish looks visually stunning and I've cooked enough of your dishes to feel very confident that it will be amazing.

    Do you think it would be possible to add a bit of ginger juice without compromising the teri too much? Or do you have a recommendation for how to infuse the taste of ginger in a better way, without destroying the harmony?

    I will prepare next without ginger but it's really one of my favorite flavors in the world.
  • marc
    You could put some fresh grated ginger on top after it's grilled, that should really bring out the ginger flavor without effecting the shine of the sauce.

    That said, my goal here wasn't to be a teriyaki dictator. Food is always evolving as it moves from place to place and it's this evolution that makes food interesting. Otherwise we'd all be eating the same thing.

    I just find that sometimes a dish has gone through so many permutations that people loose sight of the original. It's not a bad thing, but I'm always curious about where the food we eat comes from. I just thought I'd share a more traditional teriyaki as a reminder of this dishes origins.

    Please don't let this post stop you from making chicken teriyaki your way:-)
  • Marc I love that you take simple ingredients and make stunning dishes. Looks delicious.
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