Garlic Onion Chicken – Succulent pan-fried chicken smothered in a flavorful and robust garlic onion sauce, this is a weeknight winner! It’s quick and easy, and utterly satisfying. Since everything cooks in one pan, clean-up is a breeze too.

A large gray plate containing garlic onion chicken, green leaf salad, and steamed rice.

Over the years, I’ve gathered enough recipes that are delicious yet simple enough to make any day of the week. These weeknight meals, my true heroes, nourish my family and allow us to have a special time together every night. I am thankful for them, and one of my recipe keepers is this one-pan Garlic Onion Chicken (鶏肉のガーリックオニオンソース). It’s our all-time favorite chicken dinner that boasts crispy skin, juicy meat, and an amazing sauce. I hope it will be your weeknight dinner superhero too!

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

It’s quick! While the chicken marinates, you can make steamed rice or a quick side dish (I just tossed together a simple green salad with heirloom tomatoes). When everything else is ready, cook the chicken and serve.

It’s easy! This is one of the first dishes that I learned when I started cooking. With very basic ingredients and a minimal approach, it doesn’t get much easier. So yes, you can make it too.

It’s delicious! The criteria for good weeknight recipes have to be more than just quick and easy. If the final dish is not satisfyingly tasty, there’s no reason to keep cooking it. That’s not the case with this Garlic Onion Chicken. It’s so good that I never cease making it for my family.

A large gray plate containing garlic onion chicken, green leaf salad, and steamed rice.

3 Cooking Tips

I believe small care and attention to detail make a difference in the food you make. And it reflects your love in the most delicious way. Here are 3 tips that I recommend for making perfect garlic onion chicken!

1. Prick Chicken Skin with Fork

For this dish, I recommend using skin-on chicken thighs for better flavor and juicy meat. If you live in the US, skin-on-thighs typically include bone. You can always ask the butcher to remove it for you (they debone so fast!).

The skin, however, prevents the sauce from absorbing. So we help facilitate the marination by pricking the skin with a fork a few times.

2. Save the marinade for later

When I first started cooking on my own, I had a different assumption that the ingredient should be cooked together with the marinade so that it will become more flavorful. For some food, that may work, but not when you want to have nicely seared meat.

If you add the sauce to the frying pan together with the chicken, it ends up simmering the meat in the liquid. The chicken will never get crispy brown or any grill marks on the skin. Therefore, remove the marinate the best you could, pan-fry until golden brown, and then add the sauce to simmer down.

3. Spoon the sauce over the chicken

It is a basic tip, yet so easy to overlook. As the sauce simmers down and thicken, spoon it over the chicken several times. This allows the meat to absorb all the wonderful flavors. Even if you’re just making dinner for yourself, put your heart and soul into making it. Small care makes a difference in the end!

A large gray plate containing garlic onion chicken, green leaf salad, and steamed rice.

The Luscious Garlic Onion Sauce

If you have never grated onion for your marinade, you might be surprised by the power of this allium. It not only gives a refreshing taste, but it adds natural sweetness to the sauce.

Here, I used four cloves of garlic, which may be a little unusual in Japanese recipes, but don’t be afraid to use them. Each chicken thigh gets one garlic clove, so it’s not too bad.

We only marinate for 20-30 minutes and you may wonder if that’s enough. Don’t worry. You will be using the marinade to simmer down later and coat the chicken with this delicious sauce. The chicken will get plenty of flavor from cooking in the sauce, so you don’t need to marinate overnight. Your chicken may end up too salty, so be careful.

A large gray plate containing garlic onion chicken, green leaf salad, and steamed rice.

Other Quick, Easy, and Delicious Chicken Recipes

If you love Garlic Onion Chicken and want to try similar recipes, here are some of my recommendations. Enjoy!

A large gray plate containing garlic onion chicken, green leaf salad, and steamed rice.

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A large gray plate containing garlic onion chicken, green leaf salad, and steamed rice.

Garlic Onion Chicken

4.72 from 69 votes
Garlic Onion Chicken – Succulent pan-fried chicken smothered in a flavorful and robust garlic onion sauce, this is a weeknight winner! It's quick and easy, and utterly satisfying. Since everything cooks in one pan, clean up is a breeze too.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes
Marinate Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 55 minutes
Servings: 4

Ingredients
 
 

For the Garlic Onion Sauce

  • ½ onion (5.3 oz, 150 g; don‘t cut off root & stem/basal plate)
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 4 Tbsp sake
  • 2 Tbsp mirin
  • 3 Tbsp soy sauce
Japanese Ingredient Substitution: If you want substitutes for Japanese condiments and ingredients, click here.

Instructions
 

  • Gather all the ingredients.
    Garlic Onion Chicken Ingredients
  • Slice 4 cloves garlic and put them in a large container or bowl (I used an 8 x 8 inch or 20 x 20 cm baking dish).
    Garlic Onion Chicken 1
  • Peel ½ onion but don‘t cut off the root section as it‘s easier to grate when the layer is connected. Using a grater (my favorite is this one), grate as much as you can, keeping the juice (I left 30% of it—it’s hard to grate everything).
    Garlic Onion Chicken 2
  • To the garlic, add the grated onion with juice, 4 Tbsp sake, and 2 Tbsp mirin.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 3
  • Add 3 Tbsp soy sauce and mix it all together.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 4
  • With a fork, prick the skin of 4 boneless, skin-on chicken thighs. This will help absorb the marinade.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 5
  • Season the chicken with half of the ½ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt and half of the ½ tsp freshly ground black pepper on the skin side.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 6
  • Season the other side with the remaining salt and freshly ground black pepper.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 7
  • Add the chicken and keep in the refrigerator for 20–30 minutes to marinate.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 8
  • In a non-stick frying pan, heat 1 Tbsp neutral oil on medium heat. When the pan is hot, add the chicken, skin side down. Make sure to leave the marinade behind; the sauce will burn quickly, so do not add at this time.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 9
  • Be sure to add all the garlic.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 10
  • Pan-fry the chicken until the skin side is nicely golden brown, about 3 minutes. Do not flip until then.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 11
  • After you flip over the chicken, lower the heat to medium low. Put the lid on, leaving slightly ajar, and cook for 6–7 minutes.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 12
  • Remove the lid and see if the chicken is cooked through (the internal temperature should be 165ºF or 74ºC). If the chicken is done, wipe off the excess oil with a paper towel. Then, add the reserved marinade into the pan.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 13
  • Simmer on medium-low heat for 2–3 minutes. Use a spoon to coat the chicken with the pan sauce.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 14
  • When the sauce has been reduced and thickens slightly, turn off the heat. Serve the chicken on a plate and pour the sauce over. Serve immediately.
    Garlic Onion Chicken 15

To Store

  • You can keep the leftovers in an airtight container and store it in the refrigerator for up to 3–4 days or in the freezer for up to a month.

Nutrition

Calories: 332 kcal · Carbohydrates: 7 g · Protein: 20 g · Fat: 22 g · Saturated Fat: 8 g · Trans Fat: 1 g · Cholesterol: 111 mg · Sodium: 733 mg · Potassium: 304 mg · Fiber: 1 g · Sugar: 3 g · Vitamin A: 91 IU · Vitamin C: 4 mg · Calcium: 25 mg · Iron: 1 mg
Author: Namiko Hirasawa Chen
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Japanese
Keyword: chicken
©JustOneCookbook.com Content and photographs are copyright protected. Sharing of this recipe is both encouraged and appreciated. Copying and/or pasting full recipes to any website or social media is strictly prohibited. Please view my photo use policy here.
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Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on May 2, 2011. The post has been updated with new images and content in November 2019.

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4.72 from 69 votes (51 ratings without comment)
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Hi Nami,
Do you know if this dish freeze well with all marinated sauce and chicken and bring along to cook at camping ? Thanks

This recipe is so delicious and addictive that it should be categorized as a narcotic. I just made this recipe for the first time and had to stop my kids from drinking the sauce.5 stars

Hi, will it be nice if I use beef steak instead of chicken?

This is the best.
My kids and wife love it when I make this… which is weekly these days. The sauce, the juicy chicken thighs, the short prep time – it makes this a no brainer. So quick to make, and with so much flavour.

I wish we had some chicken skin, but our supermarket normally has boneless/skinless thighs. We have a japanese grater we use for daikon etc – i wonder if this is the secret to the recipe and if I should grate onion for some other dishes like the chicken meatballs?5 stars

We modified the recipe for grilling and it is delicious.
We make it with chicken breast, pound until thin and uniform in size.
Marinate and then save for later. I put the marinade in a small pan and heat
We put the marinade over the chicken when it comes off the grill and then put it in the over for a few minutes.
It is one of our favorite meals and great for left overs!!5 stars

Can I cook the chicken thighs in the oven skin up? Then spoon the marinade over it?

Is this recipe better because the garlic is sliced lengthwise as opposed to crosswise, is lengthwise just the Japanese way of doing it? I always thin slice crosswise but am now going to try it your way.

Have you got some favourite kids dinner recipes dishes your kids love that you have a list of them so I can cook for my kids and save the recipes to my kids recipes page?!

So I literally made this about an hour ago and I can say I love it! My first bite I was kind of “eh…” but then the garlic surfaced beautifully, and then tempered with the mirin and sake…lovely!

I made this today. My husband was raving about how delicious this was! He said it’s the best chicken recipe I’ve ever used and wants me to do it again soon😄
Thank you for sharing it. I love the way you give step by step instructions with photos. May I ask if your e-cookbook contains the same detailed instructions? I’m not a great cook, but with the photos and clear step by step instructions, even I can succeed!5 stars

My enquiry is about braised herb chicken with Shio Koji – I want to cook it for four people – do I just double everything please5 stars

Can I use normal brown onion instead of sweet onion?

Greetings, Nami! Love your blog and learned new Japanese recipes I’ ve never encountered before 🙂 I’m not sure if it’s been addressed already but I don’t seem to read when to add the onion sauce and assumed it to be on step 3? In any case, this recipe seems delicious! I’ll try it this weekend 🙂 Thank you for being generous in sharing wondeeful Japanese recipes!

I don’t often grate onions and it was a bit annoying when the shells separated while grating. I keep the onions in the fridge as well, but I think I heated the onion while grating – I did get some tears in my eyes 😉 After finishing grating I actually thought it was kind of fun doing it (I sometimes think it is unusual what I think is funny after doing it, but this perspective makes things seem positive).

The sauce/marinated was fantastic: It gave the chicken a really juicy and intrinsic flavor. After having made it tonight, I put this under my recipe list under “very fast” recipe; when the onion grating and marinating time is over, the rest of the cooking, including making the side dishes (I used udon noodles and chopped fresh vegetables with a bit of spiced lemon juice to accompany your chicken recipe) just happens so fast. From the story that you gave to this recipe, I’m now not surprised that you managed to cook this with the rice and salad within a tight time gap. I’m very impressed by you. 🙂

Just like other recipes I have tried from you I will rate it again as 5 stars. I guess that I repeat this rating over and over, but I think it’s important to declare how satisfied one is with each individual recipe. So I think it’s worth repeating myself on that: 5 stars.

Furthermore, your cookery is teaching me Japanese-style cuisine in a professional and joyful way, which adds to my enthusiasm about Japan and extending my cooking hobby. Personally, I see you as a high-class cook (and travel advisor as well; I like reading your current Japan tour) who shares her passions tremendously and such that everyone can share that enthusiasm with you.

I’m interested to hear about your new kitchen once it’s finished. My brother and his wife also recently began replacing their kitchen in their home, but they too got delayed because the plumbs from the 70s are in a severe condition. I’ll be excited to see their new kitchen once complete in August when I visit them, and perhaps get the chance to cook for them in the kitchen. The kitchen is the heart of the house and therefore should be the best part of home! At least that’s how I see it 🙂

Sorry if this respond seems a bit long, but while writing my opinion about the delicious recipe, I felt like sharing a few more comments (the kitchen topic more relevant to your recent newsletter).

ありがとうございます!

Hi Nami, this dish looks so delicious and I would like to know how did you make the side salad dish.. I will try this next weekend for sure! Dinah

Hi Nami Thank you so much for responding..I tried this dish and the whole family loved it! I started making veggie salads for every dinner as well and they are all your recipes. Once again thank you for sharing. God bless!