Thanks to Made In for sponsoring! You can get my favorite cookware from Made In today with a 10% off discount on your first order over $100 using my link - madein.cc/0524-adamragusea
A tip for those of us who aren’t quick cooks: Do all of the chopping and zesting and juicing before you even start the broccoli steaming. Turned out great! Thanks Adam!
The thing I love about this is that it seems like you could apply the general technique (chicken thigh + cornstarch + one thick layer of oil + broccoli + sauce) to basically every variety of food court chinese food, since all of it is basically just chicken in sugar sauce. I'm thinking of things like sesame chicken and, my guilty pleasure, general tso's chicken.
Also have me thinking about attempting this with general tso myself. Making the sauce from scratch is no issue, but going through the effort of properly battering is a pain.
That's literally the foundation of the stir fry Chinese restaurant's business model. The chicken has been prefried, so there's a pile of fried chicken ready to be General Tso'd, or orange'd, or sesame'd, or black peppered, or kungpao'd... it's a perfectly economic model if you're serving 100 portions so you can just fry a ton of chicken to start the day.
I’ve been making chicken & broccoli like this for a while, using soy, rice vinegar, chicken base, garlic and ginger for the sauce. It’s easy enough that I don’t miss getting takeout
It's really amazing that so many people don't cook for themselves, and/or claim that healthy cooking is expensive. Serve this - or any variation of it - over brown rice and you can stretch it out while adding fiber.
@@Incomudro1963 Not gonna make the argument that it's particularly unhealthy, especially without doing the proper maffs, but it is a sizable amount of sugar. Liably far lower amounts of fat versus what you'd get in take out, and probably even lower sugar, but still. A very reasonable and normal meal for sure.
0:31 on a semi serious note, I’m very happy that you lean into this Adam. I don’t know why exactly, but something about it feels very real and fun, maybe even wholesome in a twisted kind of way. Thanks for playing along.
attempted to format the recipt *EDIT:* changed to two crowns of broccoli thank you @L83467 *_Ingredients:_* - 2 crowns of broccoli, cut into florets - Water (for steaming and shocking broccoli) - 1 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into large chunks - Salt, to taste - Cornstarch, for coating chicken - Avocado oil (or any high-heat oil) - 3 cloves garlic, minced - 1-inch piece ginger, minced - Zest of 1 orange - Juice of 1 large orange (or 2 smaller ones) - Soy sauce, to taste (approximately 1/4 cup) - Rice vinegar, to taste (approximately 2 tbsp) - 1/4 cup granulated sugar - Red chili flakes, to taste *_Instructions:_* *1.Steam Broccoli:* Heat a large, hot 12-inch pan over medium-high heat. Add a film of water and the broccoli florets. Cover (loosely) and steam for about 5 minutes until just fork-tender. Remove the broccoli and transfer to a bowl. Shock with cold running water to stop cooking and set aside. *2. Prepare Chicken:* Season the chicken chunks with salt. Coat the chicken pieces with cornstarch until they are not wet or sticky. Heat the pan again with a generous film of avocado oil. Add the chicken pieces to the pan, making sure not to overcrowd. Let them form a crust before nudging to prevent sticking. Stir-fry until golden and crispy. *3. Prepare Aromatics:* While the chicken is cooking, mince the garlic and ginger. Zest the orange and set aside. *4. Make the Sauce:* Once the chicken is cooked, add the minced garlic and ginger. Stir-fry for about a minute. Deglaze the pan with soy sauce, rice vinegar, and orange juice. Add the granulated sugar and stir well. Return the broccoli to the pan and stir to combine. The moisture from the broccoli will help prevent the sauce from burning. Adjust seasoning with more soy sauce and vinegar if needed. Scatter a bit of cornstarch over the dish and stir aggressively to thicken the sauce. *5. Finish and Serve:* Add red chili flakes and orange zest, then turn off the heat. Give the dish a final stir after cleaning up to prevent the zest from becoming bitter. Serve hot and enjoy!
@@Seraitsukara You're welcome! I was the same way. I'm sure you know, but remember that "To Taste" is more important than the exact measurement in this case.
Recently made orange chicken and spent over 2 hours trying to deep fry everything. Its so impractical I'm never doing it again thank god for this video.
What did you deep fry it in? I cook for a family of 6, and deep fry in a very large stock pot and it comes out great. It takes only minutes (maybe up to 15) per batch at 350 F. The children salivate like Pavlov's dog when I tell them I'm making orange chicken. It is quite difficult to get everything mixed back into a frying pan for 6 people though.
I have managed to find a happy medium that works for me cooking for myself. I love fried food but I hate the cleaning and filtering and everything else that comes with it. Then one day I took an 8" stainless steel pan, filled it slightly under halfway with oil, and did my frying that way. Technically a shallow fry, though I think I used a bit more oil than is usually called for with a shallow fry. But it worked damn well and gave me exactly what I was looking for (in this case, a homemade empanada). Slightly-more-than-shallow-frying seems to be the trick for me. Sure I still have to filter the oil, but the much less oil used cools down much faster and filters perfectly through my Hario V60 02 with a 02-sized filter. Sometimes I have to go for a second filter, but only sometimes... most times I don't. And I keep the oil in a smaller Ball jar. Perfect for future use.
Ethan Chlebowski has a good video with tips for deep frying at home. I usually make a massive batch of fried chicken pieces and freeze them to refry whenever I want to make this and other dishes.
Made a written recipe for myself and the folks looking for one (measurements marked ~ are approximate): ***RECIPE, MAKES TWO PORTIONS*** 2 crowns (1.75lbs~ / 800g~) broccoli 1lb (450g) boneless & skinless chicken thighs 1 large orange 1 small thumb of ginger 3 cloves of garlic 2.5 tablespoons~ soy sauce 2 tablespoons~ rice vinegar 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar. 1 teaspoon~ chilli flakes cornstarch salt oil Cut the broccoli into florets. Heat a large pan on high, throw in a film of water, put in the broccoli and cover to steam for 5 minutes or until just barely fork-tender - make sure you don't run out of water in the bottom of the pan. Dump the broccoli into a large bowl and shock it with cold running water to stop it from cooking. Pour out the water, then fill it with enough cold water to let the broccoli soak and set it aside. Cut the chicken thighs into big chunks. Season with salt and coat with cornstarch until the pieces no longer feel wet or sticky at all. Heat a clean skillet on high, add a generous film of oil and drop in the chicken pieces. Allow the pieces to form a firm crust before loosening them from the bottom of the pan by nudging them to prevent them from sticking to the pan. Stir fry the chicken pieces for at least 8 minutes, and until browned. It's okay if the chicken isn't 100% cooked as it will continue to cook in the sauce and thigh meat is difficult to overcook. Meanwhile, peel and finely chop your ginger and garlic together. Wash your hands, then zest your orange separately or on a different cutting board. Once your chicken is browned, add the ginger and garlic. Stir the chicken, ginger and garlic for about a minute to soften the pieces, then de-glaze the pan with some soy sauce and rice vinegar, be conservative as you can always add more at the end of cooking. Slice the orange and add the juice to the pan, then add the sugar and stir. When the pan starts looking dry, add the broccoli and stir to incorporate. Taste for seasoning, add more soy sauce and rice vinegar if necessary. If the sauce needs thickening, scatter some cornstarch on top of the solids and stir, you shouldn't need to worry about the starch clumping if you stir it in promptly and aggressively until it gelatinizes and thickens. Finally, add the chilli flakes and the orange zest without stirring. Turn off the heat and let the mixture cool for a minute before stirring to prevent the zest from going bitter. Taste and make final adjustments if necessary. Transfer to a plate and eat.
No it’s not, he’s trying to do it i.e. thinking about it now vs back when he was first making this style of video he was entertaining and full of character within his passionate teaching and it was good and not cringe like this. Nowhere near as cringey as these comments tho
I love how every step of your recipes has a thought process / reasoning behind it. I hate “just following” a recipe it feels like playing guitar vs actually learning how top lay guitar. Understanding the thought process makes me a much better cook 😄
Had the ingredients on hand an put it together 5 minutes after watching the video . It’s as good as any other orange chicken I have ever had. Used Cara oranges, chicken breast and cider vinegar. Served with jasmine rice and it was fabulous. Great job Adam!
While I'm not opposed to deep frying myself, I always love a channel that gives realistic and easy alternatives for the majority of people who don't have fancy equipment. Too many chefs on youtube will just expect you to have an obscure ingredient or expensive cooking implement to hand.
Accidentally opened this vid with my playback speed still set to 2x. And I gotta say, the manic coke-head rambling of a man obsessed with orange chicken was very entertaining.
Adam can i just say that i chose food tech for school and am in the middle of my exams and your recipes got me through like 85% of those lessons so thank you
I just made this and cannot thank you enough for this recipe! The corn starch coating into the pan frying is something I never thought about and it was crispier than I initially thought it would be. This is my go to recipe now for sure!
2:55 "While you were partying, I studied the stainless steel. While you wasted your days at the gym in pursuit of vanity, I cultivated inner strength. And now that your chicken is dry and burned, you have the audacity to come to me for help?"
I just made this and eating it now- THANK YOU! it's great! I've never made Chinese before but I LOVE Chinese takeout. I'm not big on deep frying anything, so this video was so helpful. I'll definitely, definitely be making it again
I love the recipe videos, and I love the philosophical chat videos. I'm glad you're only semi-retired, this seems perfect as long as your life and health allow. I really like the slightly more relaxed Adam. I can tell you care about your subscribers, but it feels like a healthy care, and not cutting pieces of yourself off to give to the never-satisfied crowd that always demands more. This feels healthy.
Bonus tip, velvet your chicken with a mixture of water and a little baking soda, letting it sit for a few minutes before coating in cornstarch. This is the trick your local Chinese American place uses to get such tender meat
I finally made this tonight and it was EXCELLENT. The ginger I got from the store was bad so I had to make it without that and the lack was noticeable, but the overall flavor is amazing. This is going to be a weeknight staple for me in the near future. Thanks, Adam!
One thing that you can do to adjust things with it is to swap the orange juice and zest along with the sugar is to use some orange or tangarine jelly or marmalade. It also thickens it some in the end. A lot of mall chicken places use it in their recipes.
Just made this and it's great. I was actually following other no deep fry orange chicken video recipes and when i tried to find the vid again i was surprised to see Adam recently uploaded his version. Some tips -The broccoli part is straightforward, just follow the video. Or steam them in a steamer and cold shock after. -You don't have to measure anything. Adam usually does his (non-baking! always measure when baking!) videos in a way that encourages cooking by feel and I always like that. Just eyeball and you'll be fine. -I did not bother with trimming the fat except for some larger pieces and it was fine. Yay laziness! -Cut the oranges into quarters, it's easier to juice them if you're weak like me, especially if the oranges are large. I used two oranges as my portion of thighs was 1.8 lbs. With two oranges and the added sugar it was very sweet, I like it like this but I could see it being a bit too sweet for some so use a little less sugar if you'd get put off by that. -if you dont have a small handheld zester like Adam does and you have a large grater instead, you might want to do the zesting in advance because it's a pain in the butt to get the zest off of it and when you're cooking it can get annoying -I added some sesame oil at the end -It isnt going to crisp up and I it's because it's a quick one pan recipe. Other recipes tell you to take the chicken out and fry again. It's still delicious. -It's not going to look as brightly orange because of the lack of deeo frying i think, it's a paler orange. When it's on a bunch of rice it won't look orange at all. Doesnt matter for the taste but it just wont look as orangey as takeout chicken.
I have cooked many years professionally and otherwise one thing I will say about Adam that I really appreciate is he has an eye for small details that really end up making a the dish. Probably one of the better food presenters on TH-cam I’ve made several of his dishes Typically in my own style but I appreciate fine tuning it by watching his videos. Like this and the discussion on cornstarch, and how to use it most people mess that up.
thank you adam! as someone with an egg allergy ive always fantasized about strip mall chinese takeout but they dont often have ingredient labels ready so i long from afar, but now i can cross something close to the genuine article off my list!
A couple things I could see really elevating this would be rice wine and coriander leaf, but it’s an interesting trick using starch in place of a deep fry in batter
This is why I subscribed. You want to cook like I want to cook. I want to make great stuff, but there are so many steps and clean up that can be skipped. Thanks for finding those for me!
Wow I made this and it worked out wayy better than I expected. Overcrowded the pan with chicken, the orange juice turned into a boiling mess, but it still worked out great. The chicken didn't stick at all, and I had plenty of time to stir it around and cook every part of it crispy.
Thank you for this recipe and technique, Adam. I am absolutely going to try this asap. Since you mentioned sugar, it reminds me of an experiment I did a long time ago. I wanted sweet-and-sour chicken, but I was thinking, what did they do at first without a sauce? I mixed green pepper, onion, carrot, pineapple, and probably more that I can't remember, and got a delicious balance of sweet/sour, with no ingredients except the food itself. That experiment really blew me away. I just haven't had much time lately to do it again.
I'm from Sudan and ive never had real orange chicken before, I've tired to make it myself following a recipe one time and i hated how bitter it ended up being! So i might try this now and see how it goes!
@PlayerSlotAvailable I blended chilli and put it through a seive, then put the remaining into the oven (50C or as low as your oven goes) for like an hour, just check frequently.The chilli "juice" can be made into hot sauce but adding garlic boiling to thicken (maybe also add a corn starch slurry)
My father absolutely loves orange chicken. It's practically the only thing he gets if we happen to go to any asian themed restaurant. So an easy way for me to cook it at home is fantastic.
As someone from a home deep frying family, we'd still do these in the pan because they're small and for a typical supper meal. The fryer was almost entirely for mass cooking fried dough squares and chicken wings during gatherings, except for the occasional turkey (and one time a goose).
Excellent, classic video, man. With a clear culinary technique to show, and clear intentions of making it totally feasible at home. Did not even skip the ad. Loved your sweater too, good splash of colour. I really enjoyed this video, and definitely will try the recipe.
Yes! I make orange chicken at home plain without deep frying and I wished it was but without the deep frying… This recipe is exactly what I was dreaming of!! Thanks Adam!
For years I’ve been making orange chicken the hard way, then I tried this method and not only is it significantly easier, but it tastes way better too. This just made orange chicken a once a year thing to an anytime I crave it thing
Great simple recipe. Possibly because I don't move as fast as Adam, my faux-fried crispy chicken ended up a bit soggy. I think it spent too much time in the pan with the liquid ingredients before serving. I think next time, I will cook the chicken completely through, then remove it from the pan, build the sauce, etc., and then add the chicken back in at the very end to just rewarm it a bit and coat it with sauce.
Just cooked this, thank you. Using corn starch rather than deep frying is a nifty trick. I'm glad I'm not the only one for whom deep frying is just an impracticality. Getting an untreated orange was a bit of a challenge, in the end I had to buy a whole bagful. I skipped the sugar, because ... no. Never had the Panda Express original though so I don't have a comparison, but this version is tasty.
You posted this days before I moved back to college without a meal plan-I’m gonna be cooking for myself all summer. This looks like the perfect dish to try. Thanks, Adam!
My current orange chicken recipe is the preppy kitchen one. It's fantastic and last time I made double when we had people over, but it's certainly very involved, and includes deep frying. I'll have to give this a go and see how it compares.
Adam... I have been dreaming of this recipe for years. I have attempted deep frying chicken for orange chicken twice and it has traumatized me. I cannot thank you enough for this video
Tried this with chicken breast (because my supermarket was out of dark meat) and leftover Chinese sweet+sour and it worked great! The cornflour isn't indistinguishable from deep fried, but when drenched in sauce it's pretty difficult to tell it's any different. Definitely a great recipe, and much easier than deep frying. Also works great with most cuts of pork, particularly fattier cuts
This is a really great one! Never imagined that some of those flavors which are really good in their own right can come together for a sum much larger than the whole. 10/10 will eat again
I made this last night and it was perfect. I used Preppry Kitchen's Orange Sauce recipe.. same ingredients as this recipe but he includes exact amounts. I had it with some cauliflower rice as a good low carb alternative to regular rice. Next time I'll probably air fry my chicken to get it crispier.
This recipe was quick and easy and it looks absolutely delicious. I must try it. I like the way you presented it. It’s Q&A quick and easy anybody can do it.‼️🤗
While as an executive Chef with 40 years under my belt I cant decipher whether or not you are an attentive culinary arts student or a well seasoned cook I inevitably draw the same conclusion...you know what your talking about. As a consummate and perpetual student I completely enjoyed your video. Thank you for your work and knowledge sir.
Here’s the “recipe” since Adam phoned it in: - Steam broccoli until just fork tender - shock until water runs cool and keep in bowl of cool water - Zest orange - keep orange zest aside - Cut chicken (Adam uses 3 boneless, skinless thighs for 2 servings) into 2-ish in pieces -Dust in corn starch and mix until pieces don’t “feel wet or sticky at all” -Add avocado oil to hot pan -Drop chicken in by hand (don’t scrape off of board) - Mince 3 cloves garlic, 1-thumb-sized piece of ginger per 3 chicken thighs - Cook chicken for 8-ish minutes until crusty enough - Add garlic and ginger, cook to soften - Add 1/4c ish of soy sauce to deglaze pan - 2ish tbsp rice vinegar - Juice of 2 regular-sized oranges - 1/4c sugar - Drop in broccoli when pan looks dry - Stir to coat - Taste sauce, adjust to taste - Turn off heat, add orange zest - Let cool for several minutes before stirring in zest
Okay, that here is something amazing. Just did it and it turned out precisely as Adam promised: some 20 minute cooking&a rich sauce full of orange aroma 🍊 Highly recommend to anyone 🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝
I know you've addressed your relationship and interest with YTPs (or lack thereof), but since you cater explicitly to those creators (who also appreciate your recipes and flair, I'm sure), I would be grateful to see your top-level analysis on YTPs as an art form - if you have any. Nothing revolutionary, but it would mean a lot coming from you.
This reminds me of how I make general tso's chicken at home. I make a batter for the chicken out of egg, cornstarch, and a splash of the General Tso's sauce. Then after cooking it to the point it has taken on decent color I then add in the sauce and reduce. Then served with broccoli and rice.
I ate a little orange chicken at a restaurant (shared dishes with family), and was seriously unimpressed. Too sweet for me. Despite that, i enjoyed this video, because I like how Adam discusses the steps and rationales for how he makes it. I may even consider trying his version, but with half the sugar.
As a former Panda Express cook, I can corroborate the "sugar sauce" comment. The recipe for the sauce, as I remember it (it's been years) basically has 1/3 parts of it being straight sugar with the rest being the various liquids (water, soy, vinegar in various differing percentages) and a dash of orange extract. Thickened in the wok with a corn starch slurry before tossing the fried chicken in.
That might be the first ever food video I have seen on youtube that is really affordable on a budget. Looks great too, guess I know what I will be making this weekend.
Yes!! Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you. I have wanted to make this dish forever but I’m in a small apartment kitchen. This is actually something I feel capable of doing.
Thank you again for another great recipe. I didn’t do it as good as you did in the video. I used a sugar alternative too because I am diabetic. A little too much liquid, but it tasted good.
I used to LOVE those Dorot garlic cubes, but I've since switched to whole, pre-peeled cloves of garlic. About 3 bucks gets you a bag of roughly 35-40 cloves. Pop them in the freezer and take out what you need. After just a minute or two at room temp you can squeeze them through a garlic press no problem. I haven't bought the cubes or even peeled a garlic clove in years.
Also, have you tried Oleo-Saccharum for the orange sauce? using sugar, orange peels, and orange juice you can extract a really tart delicious flavor with the sugar. Adds to the labor but its amazing for orange chicken
Rough type up of the recipe: One Pan Orange Chicken (Gluten Free version) Chicken thighs (1 lb for two people) Veggie like broccoli or cabbage Gluten free soy sauce Rice Vinegar Orange Garlic Ginger Steam veggies, remove and shock with cold water to stop cooking. Cut thighs into chunks Season with salt and completely coat with corn starch. (From having made it, wait a few minutes to see if corn starch is getting absorbed. Add more starch as necessary, because youll need a lot to have a thick crusr." Get pan very hot with oil Drop the chicken in to avoid getting in excess starch Nudge the chicken after a minute then stir fry. Stir fry for 8-10 minutes until they get a crust (does not have to be brown all over) Add in garlic and ginger After a minute, add in a hefty glug of soy sauce and rice vinegar. Juice in large orange. Add quarter cup of sugar. Add in steamed veggies Taste and add soy sauce and vinegar for more flavor. Add cornstarch slurry as necessary. If sauce is too thick, add soy sauce if you need salt and water if you just need to loosen things up. Final seasonings are chili flakes and a teeny bit of orange zest. Only stir the zest when things have cooled a bit to avoid bitterness.
I've made this before but used frozen orange juice concentrate for the orange flavor. I think those frozen juices are a great secret for adding a foundational taste to a dish.
If there are 3 recipes i'mma finally try soon, it's ur pan fried chicken, ur chicken stew with biscuits and this orange chicken, they look so damn good
Thanks to Made In for sponsoring! You can get my favorite cookware from Made In today with a 10% off discount on your first order over $100 using my link - madein.cc/0524-adamragusea
Thanks Adam for supplying the ytp community with clean soundbites
Perfect timing, saved me a bunch of cash.
Please can you share the written recipe?
Can I get a written recipe brosef? I like to print em oot
@@dcxh4488 same
catering to the ytp community with that 12-inch, truly a man of the people
Stainless clad.. I think he meant stainless Chad.
Callence Gaming is gonna love this one
@@negljbreakergaming last video was 7 months ago unfortunately 😞
truly a man of length
@@gumiho.c Sorry, was taking a nap
A tip for those of us who aren’t quick cooks:
Do all of the chopping and zesting and juicing before you even start the broccoli steaming.
Turned out great! Thanks Adam!
Yess!! This is my favorite format Ragusea video. Don’t get me wrong, I love the others too. But this is just CLASSIC.
Totally agree. Classic Ragusea.
You can tell that it "hits" if you've just eaten and start to feel hungry again when watching this.
@@itsmebeter3538say more, Beter
@@itsmebeter3538We live in your walls
Me too. Honestly I thought this might be what he was specifically retiring from. I'm glad he's got a few left in him.
Agree
The thing I love about this is that it seems like you could apply the general technique (chicken thigh + cornstarch + one thick layer of oil + broccoli + sauce) to basically every variety of food court chinese food, since all of it is basically just chicken in sugar sauce. I'm thinking of things like sesame chicken and, my guilty pleasure, general tso's chicken.
Also have me thinking about attempting this with general tso myself. Making the sauce from scratch is no issue, but going through the effort of properly battering is a pain.
That's literally the foundation of the stir fry Chinese restaurant's business model. The chicken has been prefried, so there's a pile of fried chicken ready to be General Tso'd, or orange'd, or sesame'd, or black peppered, or kungpao'd... it's a perfectly economic model if you're serving 100 portions so you can just fry a ton of chicken to start the day.
I’ve been making chicken & broccoli like this for a while, using soy, rice vinegar, chicken base, garlic and ginger for the sauce. It’s easy enough that I don’t miss getting takeout
It's really amazing that so many people don't cook for themselves, and/or claim that healthy cooking is expensive.
Serve this - or any variation of it - over brown rice and you can stretch it out while adding fiber.
@@Incomudro1963 Not gonna make the argument that it's particularly unhealthy, especially without doing the proper maffs, but it is a sizable amount of sugar. Liably far lower amounts of fat versus what you'd get in take out, and probably even lower sugar, but still. A very reasonable and normal meal for sure.
0:31 Adam knows his audience well
I truly thought he was talking about the sound of the steam overpowering the audio... lol. Another bit of my innocence lost 😂
This is peak
Been a while since ive seen Adam YTPs this might reinvigorate them
@@janarussell3515same. I didn't get the reference until I came to the comments. 😂
Truly a man of the people
0:31 on a semi serious note, I’m very happy that you lean into this Adam. I don’t know why exactly, but something about it feels very real and fun, maybe even wholesome in a twisted kind of way. Thanks for playing along.
Not the pause after “12 inch” 😂😂😂
He embraces the jokes. I love it
He knows his community
I was confused until you reminded me of all the YT poop's he has out there
Then what is it?
god damn he got me with that
attempted to format the recipt
*EDIT:* changed to two crowns of broccoli thank you @L83467
*_Ingredients:_*
- 2 crowns of broccoli, cut into florets
- Water (for steaming and shocking broccoli)
- 1 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into large chunks
- Salt, to taste
- Cornstarch, for coating chicken
- Avocado oil (or any high-heat oil)
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 1-inch piece ginger, minced
- Zest of 1 orange
- Juice of 1 large orange (or 2 smaller ones)
- Soy sauce, to taste (approximately 1/4 cup)
- Rice vinegar, to taste (approximately 2 tbsp)
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- Red chili flakes, to taste
*_Instructions:_*
*1.Steam Broccoli:* Heat a large, hot 12-inch pan over medium-high heat.
Add a film of water and the broccoli florets. Cover (loosely) and steam for about 5 minutes until just fork-tender.
Remove the broccoli and transfer to a bowl. Shock with cold running water to stop cooking and set aside.
*2. Prepare Chicken:* Season the chicken chunks with salt.
Coat the chicken pieces with cornstarch until they are not wet or sticky.
Heat the pan again with a generous film of avocado oil.
Add the chicken pieces to the pan, making sure not to overcrowd. Let them form a crust before nudging to prevent sticking. Stir-fry until golden and crispy.
*3. Prepare Aromatics:* While the chicken is cooking, mince the garlic and ginger.
Zest the orange and set aside.
*4. Make the Sauce:* Once the chicken is cooked, add the minced garlic and ginger. Stir-fry for about a minute.
Deglaze the pan with soy sauce, rice vinegar, and orange juice. Add the granulated sugar and stir well.
Return the broccoli to the pan and stir to combine. The moisture from the broccoli will help prevent the sauce from burning.
Adjust seasoning with more soy sauce and vinegar if needed. Scatter a bit of cornstarch over the dish and stir aggressively to thicken the sauce.
*5. Finish and Serve:* Add red chili flakes and orange zest, then turn off the heat.
Give the dish a final stir after cleaning up to prevent the zest from becoming bitter.
Serve hot and enjoy!
You deserve a thousand upvotes
Thank you so much for this! I really needed an approximate amount for the soy sauce and rice vinegar.
@@XerrolAvengerII I'm glad I could help! I always appreciate Adam's recipes, but sometimes I really benefit from having it written down.
@@Seraitsukara You're welcome! I was the same way. I'm sure you know, but remember that "To Taste" is more important than the exact measurement in this case.
did u use AI?
Recently made orange chicken and spent over 2 hours trying to deep fry everything. Its so impractical I'm never doing it again thank god for this video.
What did you deep fry it in? I cook for a family of 6, and deep fry in a very large stock pot and it comes out great. It takes only minutes (maybe up to 15) per batch at 350 F. The children salivate like Pavlov's dog when I tell them I'm making orange chicken. It is quite difficult to get everything mixed back into a frying pan for 6 people though.
I have managed to find a happy medium that works for me cooking for myself. I love fried food but I hate the cleaning and filtering and everything else that comes with it. Then one day I took an 8" stainless steel pan, filled it slightly under halfway with oil, and did my frying that way. Technically a shallow fry, though I think I used a bit more oil than is usually called for with a shallow fry. But it worked damn well and gave me exactly what I was looking for (in this case, a homemade empanada). Slightly-more-than-shallow-frying seems to be the trick for me.
Sure I still have to filter the oil, but the much less oil used cools down much faster and filters perfectly through my Hario V60 02 with a 02-sized filter. Sometimes I have to go for a second filter, but only sometimes... most times I don't. And I keep the oil in a smaller Ball jar. Perfect for future use.
Ethan Chlebowski has a good video with tips for deep frying at home.
I usually make a massive batch of fried chicken pieces and freeze them to refry whenever I want to make this and other dishes.
Yeah food like that is better left to restaurants unless you really like making it.
You could also just use a tabletop convection oven, it won't be the same oiley flavor, but it will give you the texture contast you desire.
Made a written recipe for myself and the folks looking for one (measurements marked ~ are approximate):
***RECIPE, MAKES TWO PORTIONS***
2 crowns (1.75lbs~ / 800g~) broccoli
1lb (450g) boneless & skinless chicken thighs
1 large orange
1 small thumb of ginger
3 cloves of garlic
2.5 tablespoons~ soy sauce
2 tablespoons~ rice vinegar
1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar.
1 teaspoon~ chilli flakes
cornstarch
salt
oil
Cut the broccoli into florets. Heat a large pan on high, throw in a film of water, put in the broccoli and cover to steam for 5 minutes or until just barely fork-tender - make sure you don't run out of water in the bottom of the pan.
Dump the broccoli into a large bowl and shock it with cold running water to stop it from cooking. Pour out the water, then fill it with enough cold water to let the broccoli soak and set it aside.
Cut the chicken thighs into big chunks. Season with salt and coat with cornstarch until the pieces no longer feel wet or sticky at all. Heat a clean skillet on high, add a generous film of oil and drop in the chicken pieces. Allow the pieces to form a firm crust before loosening them from the bottom of the pan by nudging them to prevent them from sticking to the pan.
Stir fry the chicken pieces for at least 8 minutes, and until browned. It's okay if the chicken isn't 100% cooked as it will continue to cook in the sauce and thigh meat is difficult to overcook.
Meanwhile, peel and finely chop your ginger and garlic together. Wash your hands, then zest your orange separately or on a different cutting board. Once your chicken is browned, add the ginger and garlic.
Stir the chicken, ginger and garlic for about a minute to soften the pieces, then de-glaze the pan with some soy sauce and rice vinegar, be conservative as you can always add more at the end of cooking. Slice the orange and add the juice to the pan, then add the sugar and stir. When the pan starts looking dry, add the broccoli and stir to incorporate.
Taste for seasoning, add more soy sauce and rice vinegar if necessary. If the sauce needs thickening, scatter some cornstarch on top of the solids and stir, you shouldn't need to worry about the starch clumping if you stir it in promptly and aggressively until it gelatinizes and thickens.
Finally, add the chilli flakes and the orange zest without stirring. Turn off the heat and let the mixture cool for a minute before stirring to prevent the zest from going bitter. Taste and make final adjustments if necessary. Transfer to a plate and eat.
Thanks for saving me the time to write it up! Gonna grab a couple of screenshots then chuck em into Paprika.
Thank you!
God bless you ABUNDANTLY muuuuuuuuuuahhhhhhhhhh hugs!!!
I've missed this style of videos
Same! So glad to see some vintage Ragusea. His food science videos are super cool and all, but the man can COOK and I want more recipes!
I only watch the recipes, so this is great.
the pause after 12 inch is legendary and why youre one of the best channels on here.
No it’s not, he’s trying to do it i.e. thinking about it now vs back when he was first making this style of video he was entertaining and full of character within his passionate teaching and it was good and not cringe like this. Nowhere near as cringey as these comments tho
@@Alex-tx2dh ok lol
@@Alex-tx2dhadam cooked and you don't
@@Alex-tx2dhone or two cringe references to his fan base is so bad to you?
I love how every step of your recipes has a thought process / reasoning behind it. I hate “just following” a recipe it feels like playing guitar vs actually learning how top lay guitar. Understanding the thought process makes me a much better cook 😄
Had the ingredients on hand an put it together 5 minutes after watching the video . It’s as good as any other orange chicken I have ever had. Used Cara oranges, chicken breast and cider vinegar. Served with jasmine rice and it was fabulous. Great job Adam!
While I'm not opposed to deep frying myself, I always love a channel that gives realistic and easy alternatives for the majority of people who don't have fancy equipment. Too many chefs on youtube will just expect you to have an obscure ingredient or expensive cooking implement to hand.
Made this last night and it was freaking delicious. My 2YO hammered it. I appreciate how practical your recipes are.
Accidentally opened this vid with my playback speed still set to 2x. And I gotta say, the manic coke-head rambling of a man obsessed with orange chicken was very entertaining.
Sounds kinda like AI Ben Shapiro, didn’t realize Adam spoke with same diction just slower and at a lower tone lol
@@jacksongatens2419 Wow. Absolutely nailed it.
0.5x and hes stoned.
Who _doesn't_ listen to any video in 2x
@@jacksongatens2419 Holy crap, that's uncanny.
Adam can i just say that i chose food tech for school and am in the middle of my exams and your recipes got me through like 85% of those lessons so thank you
@@SimuLord thank you so much
Is that real degree
@Aurora-bv1ys No but it's going to help me get into college for hospitality and catering
I just made this and cannot thank you enough for this recipe!
The corn starch coating into the pan frying is something I never thought about and it was crispier than I initially thought it would be. This is my go to recipe now for sure!
im so glad he both acknowledges and feeds the ytp creators
2:55 "While you were partying, I studied the stainless steel. While you wasted your days at the gym in pursuit of vanity, I cultivated inner strength. And now that your chicken is dry and burned, you have the audacity to come to me for help?"
Bravo 👏👏👏
Honestly I respect the fact that Adam acknowledges the ytp community in his videos
"Mall food court level" is when I knew I needed this recipe in my life
Food court level is just fried batter coated in orange syrup and containing no chicken.
@Sonny_McMacsson Clearly you went to the wrong mall.
@@brotatochip42wrong mall and wrong food court my spot always does me right 😫
@@Sonny_McMacsson such a place should not survive long without a good signature dish or lack of competition
@@gabbonoo burger fast food and their "patties" would like a word 😂
My little brother came for this dinner and says 'this is better than any Chinese food I've ever had'. Can confirm this is good!
I just made this and eating it now- THANK YOU! it's great! I've never made Chinese before but I LOVE Chinese takeout. I'm not big on deep frying anything, so this video was so helpful. I'll definitely, definitely be making it again
“I don’t use rice because I don’t need anymore carbs in my diet.” Dumps in a quarter cup granulated sugar.😂
Yeah, so instead of sugar and rice it's just sugar. Still less carbs
I love the recipe videos, and I love the philosophical chat videos. I'm glad you're only semi-retired, this seems perfect as long as your life and health allow. I really like the slightly more relaxed Adam. I can tell you care about your subscribers, but it feels like a healthy care, and not cutting pieces of yourself off to give to the never-satisfied crowd that always demands more. This feels healthy.
Bonus tip, velvet your chicken with a mixture of water and a little baking soda, letting it sit for a few minutes before coating in cornstarch.
This is the trick your local Chinese American place uses to get such tender meat
I finally made this tonight and it was EXCELLENT. The ginger I got from the store was bad so I had to make it without that and the lack was noticeable, but the overall flavor is amazing. This is going to be a weeknight staple for me in the near future. Thanks, Adam!
One thing that you can do to adjust things with it is to swap the orange juice and zest along with the sugar is to use some orange or tangarine jelly or marmalade. It also thickens it some in the end. A lot of mall chicken places use it in their recipes.
Just made this and it's great. I was actually following other no deep fry orange chicken video recipes and when i tried to find the vid again i was surprised to see Adam recently uploaded his version. Some tips
-The broccoli part is straightforward, just follow the video. Or steam them in a steamer and cold shock after.
-You don't have to measure anything. Adam usually does his (non-baking! always measure when baking!) videos in a way that encourages cooking by feel and I always like that. Just eyeball and you'll be fine.
-I did not bother with trimming the fat except for some larger pieces and it was fine. Yay laziness!
-Cut the oranges into quarters, it's easier to juice them if you're weak like me, especially if the oranges are large. I used two oranges as my portion of thighs was 1.8 lbs. With two oranges and the added sugar it was very sweet, I like it like this but I could see it being a bit too sweet for some so use a little less sugar if you'd get put off by that.
-if you dont have a small handheld zester like Adam does and you have a large grater instead, you might want to do the zesting in advance because it's a pain in the butt to get the zest off of it and when you're cooking it can get annoying
-I added some sesame oil at the end
-It isnt going to crisp up and I it's because it's a quick one pan recipe. Other recipes tell you to take the chicken out and fry again. It's still delicious.
-It's not going to look as brightly orange because of the lack of deeo frying i think, it's a paler orange. When it's on a bunch of rice it won't look orange at all. Doesnt matter for the taste but it just wont look as orangey as takeout chicken.
I have cooked many years professionally and otherwise one thing I will say about Adam that I really appreciate is he has an eye for small details that really end up making a the dish. Probably one of the better food presenters on TH-cam I’ve made several of his dishes Typically in my own style but I appreciate fine tuning it by watching his videos. Like this and the discussion on cornstarch, and how to use it most people mess that up.
thank you adam! as someone with an egg allergy ive always fantasized about strip mall chinese takeout but they dont often have ingredient labels ready so i long from afar, but now i can cross something close to the genuine article off my list!
A couple things I could see really elevating this would be rice wine and coriander leaf, but it’s an interesting trick using starch in place of a deep fry in batter
Not really a trick it's the normal Cantonese method but they usually use potato starch. (or in Hong Kong, 50/50 with bird's custard powder!)
This is why I subscribed. You want to cook like I want to cook. I want to make great stuff, but there are so many steps and clean up that can be skipped. Thanks for finding those for me!
Wow I made this and it worked out wayy better than I expected. Overcrowded the pan with chicken, the orange juice turned into a boiling mess, but it still worked out great. The chicken didn't stick at all, and I had plenty of time to stir it around and cook every part of it crispy.
The tool goes ON TOP of the orange!
I will totally try this recipe, though, and the cornstarch coating! ❤
Thank you for this recipe and technique, Adam. I am absolutely going to try this asap. Since you mentioned sugar, it reminds me of an experiment I did a long time ago. I wanted sweet-and-sour chicken, but I was thinking, what did they do at first without a sauce? I mixed green pepper, onion, carrot, pineapple, and probably more that I can't remember, and got a delicious balance of sweet/sour, with no ingredients except the food itself. That experiment really blew me away. I just haven't had much time lately to do it again.
ngl, that sounds REALLY good!
It's just missing the generous serving of red 40 and yellow 5 dye that your local mall restaurant would add.
Tartrazine my beloved ♥️
I guess you can use a mix of powdered ginger and paprika to get that color, and adding it in the end
Simplified with a thorough explanation. Perfect.
Adam cooks like I do after a long shift. I appreciate that alot. Practical & tasty.
I'm from Sudan and ive never had real orange chicken before, I've tired to make it myself following a recipe one time and i hated how bitter it ended up being! So i might try this now and see how it goes!
I am from Norway and have never had real orange chicken either. I don't know how to get chili flakes, so I do not know if I can make this anyways...
@PlayerSlotAvailable I blended chilli and put it through a seive, then put the remaining into the oven (50C or as low as your oven goes) for like an hour, just check frequently.The chilli "juice" can be made into hot sauce but adding garlic boiling to thicken (maybe also add a corn starch slurry)
@@Mo95793 i had no idea you could do that. Thank you!
@@PlayerSlotAvailable 🤗
My father absolutely loves orange chicken. It's practically the only thing he gets if we happen to go to any asian themed restaurant. So an easy way for me to cook it at home is fantastic.
As someone from a home deep frying family, we'd still do these in the pan because they're small and for a typical supper meal. The fryer was almost entirely for mass cooking fried dough squares and chicken wings during gatherings, except for the occasional turkey (and one time a goose).
Excellent, classic video, man.
With a clear culinary technique to show, and clear intentions of making it totally feasible at home.
Did not even skip the ad. Loved your sweater too, good splash of colour.
I really enjoyed this video, and definitely will try the recipe.
Such a clean and practical cooking video! This is the first video that’s made orange chicken look simple.
Love this!!!! You need to make more Chinese/Chinese-American dishes, I love to see your takes on them! It makes it way better for me to make
Yes! I make orange chicken at home plain without deep frying and I wished it was but without the deep frying… This recipe is exactly what I was dreaming of!! Thanks Adam!
For years I’ve been making orange chicken the hard way, then I tried this method and not only is it significantly easier, but it tastes way better too. This just made orange chicken a once a year thing to an anytime I crave it thing
This is the home cook's channel. My type of guy. Recipe's that make sense and are practical.
I've just cooked and eaten it with my wife. It's really good and took me less than 15 minutes. THX for recipe, Adam!
Great simple recipe. Possibly because I don't move as fast as Adam, my faux-fried crispy chicken ended up a bit soggy. I think it spent too much time in the pan with the liquid ingredients before serving. I think next time, I will cook the chicken completely through, then remove it from the pan, build the sauce, etc., and then add the chicken back in at the very end to just rewarm it a bit and coat it with sauce.
These lil videos ALWAYS get me in the mood to eat
Just cooked this, thank you. Using corn starch rather than deep frying is a nifty trick. I'm glad I'm not the only one for whom deep frying is just an impracticality.
Getting an untreated orange was a bit of a challenge, in the end I had to buy a whole bagful.
I skipped the sugar, because ... no. Never had the Panda Express original though so I don't have a comparison, but this version is tasty.
This was great. I made this last night and my kids loved it. I was surprised how close the texture was to a deep fried version.
Adam I'm in the grocery store with no Wi-Fi and you still didn't write down the recipe!!!! No!!!!!
it seems note taking apps disappeared from the world
You posted this days before I moved back to college without a meal plan-I’m gonna be cooking for myself all summer. This looks like the perfect dish to try. Thanks, Adam!
Tried for supper and it’s excellent. Added a pinch of grounded star anise and some chili oil. I might try this with firm tofu instead of chicken.
My current orange chicken recipe is the preppy kitchen one. It's fantastic and last time I made double when we had people over, but it's certainly very involved, and includes deep frying. I'll have to give this a go and see how it compares.
Adam... I have been dreaming of this recipe for years. I have attempted deep frying chicken for orange chicken twice and it has traumatized me. I cannot thank you enough for this video
I like how fast your videos are. Thanks for respecting our time.
a lost art these days
Tried this with chicken breast (because my supermarket was out of dark meat) and leftover Chinese sweet+sour and it worked great! The cornflour isn't indistinguishable from deep fried, but when drenched in sauce it's pretty difficult to tell it's any different. Definitely a great recipe, and much easier than deep frying. Also works great with most cuts of pork, particularly fattier cuts
it brings me great peace knowing that adam is actively facilitating the YTPs now
Thank you for the in-depth tutorial as always! Miraculously broccoli was on sale at my supermarket and I always have boneless chicken thighs handy.
This is a really great one! Never imagined that some of those flavors which are really good in their own right can come together for a sum much larger than the whole. 10/10 will eat again
I made this last night and it was perfect. I used Preppry Kitchen's Orange Sauce recipe.. same ingredients as this recipe but he includes exact amounts. I had it with some cauliflower rice as a good low carb alternative to regular rice. Next time I'll probably air fry my chicken to get it crispier.
This recipe was quick and easy and it looks absolutely delicious. I must try it. I like the way you presented it. It’s Q&A quick and easy anybody can do it.‼️🤗
I like how he acknowledges the ytps, fair play to you adam
Cooked it this evening, and it turned out excellent! Took me less than an hour on the first try. Thanks for the recipe! ❤
Please don't forget to add the ingredients to the description. I use that while shopping. Granted this is very easy to remember.
You'll definitely need some powdered MSG to give it that perfect food court/takeaway flavour. There won't be nearly enough in the soy sauce.
msg causes cancer. it used to be banned. plus, many people are allergic to it. chinese cooked great for thousands of years without it
Adam is an OG and thinks of all the poopers who need cleaner audio and enunciation to do sentence mixing, what a man.
While as an executive Chef with 40 years under my belt I cant decipher whether or not you are an attentive culinary arts student or a well seasoned cook I inevitably draw the same conclusion...you know what your talking about. As a consummate and perpetual student I completely enjoyed your video. Thank you for your work and knowledge sir.
2:28 the way you pronounced that absolutely sounds like you consider your home kitchen one of those "various 3 star joints"😂
Made this and its probably the best food i have eaten this year
No way... already bought the things to make it and I'm looking up a recipe? And find this?? Thank you Adam!!
Here’s the “recipe” since Adam phoned it in:
- Steam broccoli until just fork tender - shock until water runs cool and keep in bowl of cool water
- Zest orange - keep orange zest aside
- Cut chicken (Adam uses 3 boneless, skinless thighs for 2 servings) into 2-ish in pieces
-Dust in corn starch and mix until pieces don’t “feel wet or sticky at all”
-Add avocado oil to hot pan
-Drop chicken in by hand (don’t scrape off of board)
- Mince 3 cloves garlic, 1-thumb-sized piece of ginger per 3 chicken thighs
- Cook chicken for 8-ish minutes until crusty enough
- Add garlic and ginger, cook to soften
- Add 1/4c ish of soy sauce to deglaze pan
- 2ish tbsp rice vinegar
- Juice of 2 regular-sized oranges
- 1/4c sugar
- Drop in broccoli when pan looks dry
- Stir to coat
- Taste sauce, adjust to taste
- Turn off heat, add orange zest
- Let cool for several minutes before stirring in zest
Okay, that here is something amazing. Just did it and it turned out precisely as Adam promised: some 20 minute cooking&a rich sauce full of orange aroma 🍊 Highly recommend to anyone 🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝
[he did not, in fact, write the recipe later that day]
Oh happy day! had everything on hand, including frozen garlic and ginger blocks ! Stir Stir....... i am so glad that i found your channel!!
I know you've addressed your relationship and interest with YTPs (or lack thereof), but since you cater explicitly to those creators (who also appreciate your recipes and flair, I'm sure), I would be grateful to see your top-level analysis on YTPs as an art form - if you have any.
Nothing revolutionary, but it would mean a lot coming from you.
This reminds me of how I make general tso's chicken at home. I make a batter for the chicken out of egg, cornstarch, and a splash of the General Tso's sauce. Then after cooking it to the point it has taken on decent color I then add in the sauce and reduce. Then served with broccoli and rice.
3:41 fork sounded like stardew valley
I ate a little orange chicken at a restaurant (shared dishes with family), and was seriously unimpressed. Too sweet for me. Despite that, i enjoyed this video, because I like how Adam discusses the steps and rationales for how he makes it. I may even consider trying his version, but with half the sugar.
As a former Panda Express cook, I can corroborate the "sugar sauce" comment. The recipe for the sauce, as I remember it (it's been years) basically has 1/3 parts of it being straight sugar with the rest being the various liquids (water, soy, vinegar in various differing percentages) and a dash of orange extract. Thickened in the wok with a corn starch slurry before tossing the fried chicken in.
Just made this for lunch, tho didn't have an orange so substituted it for half a lime & some bottled lemon juice.
Wow it was delicious.
That might be the first ever food video I have seen on youtube that is really affordable on a budget.
Looks great too, guess I know what I will be making this weekend.
Yes!! Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you. I have wanted to make this dish forever but I’m in a small apartment kitchen. This is actually something I feel capable of doing.
Thank you for creating content that makes cooking accessible. This for lunch today!
Thank you again for another great recipe. I didn’t do it as good as you did in the video. I used a sugar alternative too because I am diabetic. A little too much liquid, but it tasted good.
I used to LOVE those Dorot garlic cubes, but I've since switched to whole, pre-peeled cloves of garlic. About 3 bucks gets you a bag of roughly 35-40 cloves. Pop them in the freezer and take out what you need. After just a minute or two at room temp you can squeeze them through a garlic press no problem. I haven't bought the cubes or even peeled a garlic clove in years.
Adam releasing a straight up recipe video we are so back baby
Also, have you tried Oleo-Saccharum for the orange sauce? using sugar, orange peels, and orange juice you can extract a really tart delicious flavor with the sugar. Adds to the labor but its amazing for orange chicken
Rough type up of the recipe:
One Pan Orange Chicken (Gluten Free version)
Chicken thighs (1 lb for two people)
Veggie like broccoli or cabbage
Gluten free soy sauce
Rice Vinegar
Orange
Garlic
Ginger
Steam veggies, remove and shock with cold water to stop cooking.
Cut thighs into chunks
Season with salt and completely coat with corn starch. (From having made it, wait a few minutes to see if corn starch is getting absorbed. Add more starch as necessary, because youll need a lot to have a thick crusr."
Get pan very hot with oil
Drop the chicken in to avoid getting in excess starch
Nudge the chicken after a minute then stir fry. Stir fry for 8-10 minutes until they get a crust (does not have to be brown all over)
Add in garlic and ginger
After a minute, add in a hefty glug of soy sauce and rice vinegar. Juice in large orange. Add quarter cup of sugar.
Add in steamed veggies
Taste and add soy sauce and vinegar for more flavor.
Add cornstarch slurry as necessary. If sauce is too thick, add soy sauce if you need salt and water if you just need to loosen things up.
Final seasonings are chili flakes and a teeny bit of orange zest. Only stir the zest when things have cooled a bit to avoid bitterness.
Orange Marmade is great in orange chicken.
i imagine half honey half sugar would taste pretty good im gonna give it a shot when i make this
I've made this before but used frozen orange juice concentrate for the orange flavor.
I think those frozen juices are a great secret for adding a foundational taste to a dish.
If there are 3 recipes i'mma finally try soon, it's ur pan fried chicken, ur chicken stew with biscuits and this orange chicken, they look so damn good
I love Adam Ragusea recipes you see i'm actually gonna cook this instead of just purely watching it for fun