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Peking-Style Chicken

4.7

(7)

A cutup Peking Chicken on a serving platter with sliced cucumbers celery stalks pancakes lettuce leaves and beer.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Kaitlin Wayne

This chicken dinner is inspired by Peking duck, a Chinese dish beloved by my family. Making traditional Peking duck is a time-consuming and labor-intensive affair: For ultracrisp lacquered skin, cooks dunk the bird in a pot of boiling water to render the fat and tighten the skin. They then brush the bird in a syrup—usually maltose or honey, which gives the duck its signature dark brown shine—and air-dry it for several days. Before roasting, air is blown between the skin and the meat to stretch it out, allowing extra fat to drip out during the cooking process.

With this Peking-inspired chicken, I take a different, far easier route. Since chicken is leaner than duck, I skip the boiling water bath entirely and increase the fat by rubbing vegetable oil not just on the outside of the bird but also between the skin and flesh. As the chicken roasts, the oil bubbles, stretching the skin and separating it from the meat, which makes it crisp up. Instead of using a syrup, I dry-brine the chicken with a fragrant mixture of dark brown sugar, kosher salt, and five-spice powder.

I serve the chicken like I would a Peking duck: with Chinese pancakes, sliced scallions, cucumber, and hoisin sauce. You can order the wrappers online or find them in an Asian supermarket; I recommend having at least 4–5 wrappers per person. If you absolutely cannot find them, you can use flour tortillas or lettuce wraps instead. Nothing will ever be as good as Peking duck itself, but this inspired and less-laborious chicken is what I make during the holidays when I’m homesick and want to make something fun and festive for my family and friends.

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Recipe information

  • Total Time

    1 hour 45 minutes, plus brining

  • Yield

    2–4 servings

Ingredients

¼ cup (packed) dark brown sugar
2 Tbsp. Diamond Crystal or 1 Tbsp. plus ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt
1 tsp. five-spice powder
1 3½–4-lb. whole chicken
3 Tbsp. vegetable oil
Nonstick vegetable oil spray
3 scallions, white and pale green parts only, cut lengthwise into matchsticks
½ cucumber, cut into matchsticks
Warm Peking duck wrappers or Boston lettuce leaves and hoisin sauce (for serving)

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Whisk ¼ cup (packed) dark brown sugar, 2 Tbsp. Diamond Crystal or 1 Tbsp. plus ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt, and 1 tsp. five-spice powder in a small bowl. Transfer 2 Tbsp. brown sugar mixture to another small bowl; cover and set aside.

    Step 2

    Place one 3½–4-lb. whole chicken on a rimmed baking sheet. Pat dry and season generously inside and out with remaining brown sugar mixture. Place on a wire rack set inside a rimmed baking sheet and chill, uncovered, 1–2 days.

    Step 3

    Place a rack in middle of oven; preheat to 375°. Transfer chicken to a cutting board. Using your fingers, gently separate skin from breast meat. Pat chicken dry again, then rub all over, inside and out and between skin and breast meat, with 3 Tbsp. vegetable oil. Sprinkle reserved brown sugar mixture over.

    Step 4

    Clean baking sheet and rack, then lightly coat rack with nonstick vegetable oil spray. Set back inside baking sheet and place chicken back on rack. Roast until skin is crisp and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of breast registers 155°, 60–75 minutes. Transfer chicken to a carving board and let rest 20 minutes.

    Step 5

    Carve chicken; slice or shred breast, leg, and thigh meat. Place 3 scallions, white and pale green parts only, cut lengthwise into matchsticks, and ½ cucumber, cut into matchsticks, in separate small bowls and serve with Warm Peking duck wrappers or Boston lettuce leaves and hoisin sauce.

    Step 6

    To eat, brush a wrapper with hoisin sauce and top with some chicken meat, scallions, and cucumber.

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