Chinese Drunken Chicken (2024)

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Chinese Drunken Chicken (1)

by: Judy

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Oh, drunken chicken, how I love thee! Chinese drunken chicken, that is.

If you’ve never heard of Drunken Chicken, it’s a dish of chicken that’s been soaked in Shaoxing wine—an ingredient that’s been used on this blog many, many times. It’s a contributing ingredient to so many Chinese dishes.

Chinese drunken Chicken is usually and appetizer eaten cold or at room temperature and most common among Shanghai Cuisine. It’s delicate in flavor and taste with the Shaoxing wine providing the main flavor soit is important to get a good quality Shaoxing wine for this Chinese Drunken chicken recipe.

Another cold appetizer that you should try is is Drool worthy Chicken or Kou Shui Ji which is as one of thewoksoflife clan’s favorites.

Chinese Drunken Chicken (3)

Shaoxing (绍兴) is a city in Zhejiang province with over 2500 years of history and a very famous rice wine. Shaoxing wine really refines and enriches the flavor of many dishes, especially when preparing meats like chicken. Drunken Chicken is a great representation of Shaoxing wine’s true essence.

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Usually, this Drunken Chicken recipecalls for a few interesting ingredients, like angelica root, red dates, and wolfberries (aka goji berries). These all have certain medicinal qualities, and I decided to leave them out–except for the goji berries, which are a super food that’s much easier to find these days.

Okay, here we go. You’ll need:

Drunken Chicken: Recipe Instructions

Stage 1: Preparing the Chicken & Stock

Debone the chicken leg quarters, keeping the skin on. Keep the bones to make a homemade stock, which you’ll be using in this recipe. You might be able to ask your butcher to help you with this step!

In a small pot, add your reserved chicken bones, 2 ½ cups water, and ginger. Bring to a boil and simmer over low heat for at least 1 hour (or longer). We’ll need 1 ½ cups of chicken broth for the recipe. You can also eliminate this step if you want to use store-bought chicken stock.

Rinse off your de-boned chicken and pat thoroughly dry with a paper towel. Grab 2 pieces of aluminum foil, each about 12” long. Lay each piece of chicken onto a piece of foil, and sprinkle with ¼ teaspoon salt.

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Roll up the chicken lengthwise…

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And wrap up the chicken in the foil, twisting both sides to form a candy-like bundle.

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Steam the chicken in the foil over high heat for 20 minutes, covered. Turn off the heat and let the chicken sit in the steamer for another 5 minutes with the lid tightly closed.

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Transfer the foil wrapped chicken to an ice bath, and let it sit there for 10-15 minutes, until the chicken is completely cool. This step ensures that the juices remain locked in and improves the chicken’s overall texture.

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For Stage 2: The Brine

Now it’s time to make the brine. In a non-reactive container (I used a glass loaf pan. Anything narrow and deep, where the chicken can remain submerged, will work), add the 1 ½ cups Chicken broth, 1 ½ cups Shaoxing huadiao wine, sugar, salt, and goji berries.

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Once the chicken is cool, unwrap the chicken and place in the brine. Cover and refrigerate for 24 hours. Slice and serve cold or at room temperature. This Chinese drunken chicken dish is usually served as a cold appetizer. Remember to storethe chicken in the brine until serving and use clean utensil whenever coming contact with the brine and chicken. Consume the chicken within 3 days.

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Note: We did this dish with equal parts wine and broth. You can change the ratio according to your own tastes, whether you like a stronger or lighter wine taste. But beware…upping the ratio of wine can make the chicken bitter, so proceed with caution.

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4.91 from 11 votes

Chinese Drunken Chicken

A traditional Chinese cold appetizer, this Chinese Drunken chicken recipe made with Shaoxing wine. It has amazing flavor and texture, and is simple to make.

by: Judy

Course:Chicken

Cuisine:Chinese

Chinese Drunken Chicken (13)

serves: 4 servings

Prep: 1 day day

Cook: 1 hour hour 25 minutes minutes

Total: 1 day day 1 hour hour 25 minutes minutes

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Ingredients

For Stage 1: Preparing the Chicken & Stock

  • 2 chicken leg quarters
  • 2 ½ cups water
  • 2 large slices ginger
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

For Stage 2: The Brine

  • 1 ½ cups of your homemade Chicken broth (at room temperature)
  • 1 1/2 cups shaoxing huadiao wine (绍兴花雕酒)
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 1 tablespoon dried goji berries/wolfberries

Instructions

  • Debone the chicken leg quarters, keeping the skin on. Keep the bones to make a homemade stock, which you’ll be using in this recipe. You might be able to ask your butcher to help you with this step!

  • In a small pot, add your reserved chicken bones, 2 ½ cups water, and ginger. Bring to a boil and simmer over low heat for at least 1 hour (or longer). We’ll need 1 ½ cups of chicken broth for the recipe. You can also eliminate this step if you want to use store-bought chicken stock.

  • Rinse off your de-boned chicken and pat thoroughly dry with a paper towel. Grab 2 pieces of aluminum foil, each about 12” long. Lay each piece of chicken onto a piece of foil, and sprinkle with ¼ teaspoon salt. Roll up the chicken lengthwise, and then wrap in the foil, twisting both sides to form a candy-like bundle.

  • Steam the chicken in the foil over high heat for 20 minutes, covered. Turn off the heat and let the chicken sit in the steamer for another 5 minutes with the lid tightly closed.

  • Transfer the foil wrapped chicken to an ice bath, and let it sit there for 10-15 minutes, until the chicken is completely cool. This step ensures that the juices remain locked in and improves the chicken’s overall texture.

  • Now it’s time to make the brine. In a non-reactive container (I used a glass loaf pan. Anything narrow and deep, where the chicken can remain submerged, will work), add the 1 ½ cups chicken broth, 1 ½ cups shaoxing wine, sugar, salt, and goji berries. Once the chicken is cool, unwrap the chicken and place in the brine. Cover and refrigerate for 24 hours.v

  • Slice and serve cold or at room temperature. This dish is usually served as a cold appetizer. Remember to storethe chicken in the brine until serving and use clean utensil whenever coming contact with the brine and chicken. Consume the chicken within 3 days.

  • Note: We did this dish with equal parts wine and broth. You can change the ratio according to your own tastes, whether you like a stronger or lighter wine taste. But beware…upping the ratio of wine can make the chicken bitter, so proceed with caution.

nutrition facts

Calories: 218kcal (11%) Carbohydrates: 4g (1%) Protein: 14g (28%) Fat: 13g (20%) Saturated Fat: 3g (15%) Cholesterol: 71mg (24%) Potassium: 224mg (6%) Sugar: 2g (2%) Vitamin A: 55IU (1%) Calcium: 14mg (1%) Iron: 0.7mg (4%)

nutritional info disclaimer

TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.

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@thewoksoflife

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Chinese Drunken Chicken (18)

About Judy

Judy is the mom of The Woks of Life family. Born in Shanghai, she arrived in the U.S. at age 16. Fluent in both English and three separate Chinese dialects, she's our professional menu translator when we're eating our way through China. Dedicated to preserving disappearing recipes and traditions, her specialty is all things traditional, from mooncakes to home-style stir-fries.

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Chinese Drunken Chicken (2024)

FAQs

Why is drunken chicken called drunken? ›

Drunken chicken is aptly named due to the soaking of the chicken in Shaoxing wine. Don't fret though, this recipe is totally family friendly and the wine is purely used for flavour purposes!

Who invented drunken chicken? ›

It's also rare to come across an iconic Chinese dish without an elaborate origin story. Canonically, all we can say is that Drunken Chicken was invented in Shaoxing, which has been producing arguably the best huangjiu in China for at least 3,000 years (more on that later).

What is drunken sauce made of? ›

Sauce ingredients: oyster sauce, soy sauce, fish sauce, brown sugar, water, red chili sauce.

What's the difference between drunk and drunken? ›

Drunk is most commonly used to refer to the person when used as an adjective, as in “You are drunk.” It refers to the state of being drunk itself. Drunken is normally used to modify other sorts of nouns, like “drunken stupor” or “drunken brawl.” It refers to actions taken while the actor is in the state of being drunk.

How do Chinese food restaurants get their chicken so tender? ›

How do Chinese Restaurants tenderise chicken?
  1. marinating in a cornstarch/cornflour sludge then deep frying or blanching in water before proceeding to cook in the stir fry.
  2. egg whites – sometimes the above method is also done using egg whites.
  3. chemical tenderiser.
  4. simple baking soda / bi carbonate method.
Feb 23, 2019

How do Chinese get their chicken so crispy? ›

The chicken is then air-dried for 10 to 12 hours before being flash-fried, then oil-poached. The skin gets its signature crispiness from 10 to 12 minutes of basting with scalding hot oil right before serving.

How is Chinese chicken so moist? ›

Chinese stir-fried chicken is extra tender due to the velveting technique. Chicken is sliced into thin, even-sized pieces and then marinated briefly in a mix of baking soda, cornstarch, wine, and seasoning. This seals in moisture and tenderizes the chicken.

Why are drunken noodles called drunken? ›

There's more than one story about their name.

One explanation is that because the dish is so spicy, you would have to drink a lot to handle the spice. Another is that the extreme spice of the noodles is the only thing strong enough for inebriated people to taste.

What does drunken mean in food? ›

drunken foods Chinese; meat or fish is highly seasoned and marinated, then steamed or lightly simmered. After draining it is steeped in wine for several days before serving. A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. "drunken foods ."

Does the word drunken exist? ›

If you are looking for an adjective meaning “intoxicated,” go with “drunk.” The adjective “drunken” is rarer and normally used to modify a thing or situation characterized by heavy alcohol use (“a drunken wedding,” “a drunken brawl.”)

Why does chicken and beer go together? ›

Enhancing Chicken with Beer

The alcohol is able to penetrate deep into the meat, carrying the flavors of the brine solution with it. Beer can also break down fat, something that water cannot. You can also baste the chicken with beer.

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