Better Than Takeout: Healthy Orange Chicken Recipe (2024)

By Catherine Crow, NTP on Last Updated 3 Comments | No Medical Advice | This post may contain affiliate links

Better Than Takeout: Healthy Orange Chicken Recipe (1)

I ate a lot of Chinese food growing up, and orange chicken was always one of my favorites, along with most everyone else. Traditional orange chicken takeout is fried in questionable oils and sauced up with unmentionable additives that are definitely not doing your health any favors. It's cool if you're eating takeout once in a blue moon and enjoying it thoroughly, but that's not the kind of thing I overlook enough to prepare in my own home or eat on the 'regular'.

When I'm in charge of preparing my own food, I take the ingredients to another level, one that this healthy orange chicken recipe passes with flying colors. So go ahead and give it a try. I know you'll love the sauce - any sauce that starts out by reducing 3 cups of orange juice is going to be good.

Better Than Takeout: Healthy Orange Chicken Recipe (2)

Healthy Orange Chicken Recipe

Yield: 4-6 servings

Prep Time: 30 minutes

Cook Time: 20 minutes

Total Time: 50 minutes

Ingredients

Sauce

  • 3 cups organic orange juice (reduce for 20-30 minutes prior to starting recipe)
  • zest of 1 large orange
  • 5 tablespoons oyster sauce (look for a brand without monosodium glutamate)
  • ¼ cup sugar (or honey if you prefer that instead)
  • 1 tablespoon fresh ginger, peeled and chopped
  • ¾ teaspoon red pepper flakes (increase to 1 teaspoon for extra spiciness)
  • ¼ teaspoon plum vinegar (like this)
  • 1 ½ tablespoons chicken bone brothor chicken stock

Chicken + Veggies:

  • 2 pounds boneless, skinless organic chicken breasts (thigh meat would work too)
  • 4 cups broccoli florets
  • 3 medium carrots
  • 2 tablespoons butter or refined coconut oil

Rice

  • 1 cup jasmine rice (like this)
  • 1 cup chicken bone broth or chicken stock
  • ½ cup water
  • 1 tablespoon butter

Instructions

  1. Prep the orange juice: In a large Dutch oven, bring 3 cups of orange juice to a slow boil and let simmer for about 20-30 minutes until the juice has reduced to roughly about ¾ - 1 cup and begun to thicken in consistency. You can tell when this happens because the juice will leave a little bit of a trace behind as it leaves your spoon.
  2. Start the rice: In a medium saucepan, combine 1 tablespoon of butter, 1 cup of jasmine rice, 1 cup of bone broth or chicken stock, and ½ cup water. Bring to a boil, cover, and then reduce to low heat for 15-20 minutes. Once the rice has completed cooking, remove from the heat leaving the top on to let sit on the counter until serving time.
  3. Prep the veggies: Cut the carrots into thin rounds and cut the tops of the broccoli separating or cutting the florets into bite size pieces.
  4. Prep the chicken: Cut the chicken breast into bite-sized pieces.
  5. Prep the sauce: add the orange zest, oyster sauce, sugar, ginger, red pepper flakes, plum vinegar and 1 ½ tablespoons of bone broth to the reduced orange juice mixture, and let the sauce cook over medium heat for about 3 minutes, then remove from heat and set aside. I recommend giving it a taste before cooking it longer than 3 minutes, as you don't want to reduce it too much.
  6. Cook the chicken: In a large pan over medium-high heat, add about 1-2 tablespoons of butter. Add the cubed chicken and brown the chicken for about 6-8 minutes until all sides are lightly browned. Once the chicken has browned and is about 75% cooked, add the chicken into the Dutch oven containing the sauce, while avoiding the addition of any liquids that have accumulated in the chicken pan while cooking.
  7. Cook the veggies: Using the same pan that you cooked the chicken in, add the broccoli and about ½ cup of water and cook at high heat, stirring frequently while the steam softens the veggies. After about 5 minutes, add the carrots and cook for an additional 2-3 minutes, adding additional water if needed. Do not overcook the veggies, as they will cook a few more minutes in the sauce.
  8. Then add the veggie mixture to Dutch oven containing the chicken and sauce. Let everything cook together for an additional 2-4 minutes or until the chicken is cooked through and the sauce has thickened and coated the veggies. Do not over-reduce the sauce. It will be way too strong!
  9. Serve with the bone broth flavored rice for a real nutrient dense dinner.

What's your favorite go-to healthy orange chicken recipe? Please share in the comments!

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Better Than Takeout: Healthy Orange Chicken Recipe (3)

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About Catherine Crow, NTP

Hi there! I’m Catherine Crow. Seattle-based Functional Nutritional Therapy Practitioner (FNTP), Educator, Diet Investigator, and Coconut Milk Ice Cream Enthusiast. My goal is to help guide you to improve your nutrition through strategic eating (not dieting) and without expensive supplements. Because when you know better, you can feel better! Read more...

The Nutritionally Wealthy Recipes eBook is finally yours for FREE! It includes over 40 nutrient-dense and gluten-free recipes, as well as a few recipes for your skin. As a gift to my wonderful readers, you can download it for FREE today and tomorrow only! So grab it now below :)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

    Join the Conversation

  1. Selena Jackson

    This Orange Chicken recipe is actually easy to made and healthy and my family loves it when i made them this.

    Reply

  2. Isabel

    This is an excellent, delicious recipe, Yum, Yum. Our family added this to our weekly meal plan. Thank you, Catherine

    Reply

    • Catherine

      Glad you enjoyed it as much as I do 🙂

      Abundantly,
      Catherine

      Reply

Better Than Takeout: Healthy Orange Chicken Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Can I eat orange chicken on a diet? ›

Is Orange Chicken Healthy? Traditional Chinese Orange Chicken is loaded with lots of excess fat, salt, carbs and sugar thanks to the batter, frying oil and sweet orange-flavored chili sauce, so it's not necessarily the healthiest option.

Is the original orange chicken healthy? ›

Takeout orange chicken is not very healthy because it's loaded with sugar and deep-fried as well. But this homemade version is a healthier alternative made from whole food ingredients with no added sugar and no deep frying involved. When you pair it with some veggies it is a healthy option!

What does coating chicken in cornstarch do? ›

When paired with all-purpose flour, cornstarch helps prevent gluten development, which makes the flour coating crispier, and absorb moisture (from the frying and the chicken), which also means a crispier coating. If you already have a favorite fried chicken recipe, try replacing a quarter of the flour with cornstarch.

What is orange chicken from a Chinese restaurant? ›

What Is Orange Chicken? Orange chicken is one of many iterations of Chinese takeout dishes that involve fried chicken pieces tossed with sauce. In this case, the sauce is a mix of soy sauce, water, and orange juice, plus some cornstarch thickener to make the sauce just thick enough to coat the chicken.

How unhealthy is orange chicken from Panda Express? ›

✗ Orange Chicken

In fact, it's one of the highest-calorie, highest-sugar options. (No wonder its sauce is so finger-licking sweet!) The version of this Chinese-American classic at Panda Express comes with 490 calories, 23g total fat, 5g saturated fat, 51g carbohydrate, 25g protein, and 820mg sodium.

What Chinese food is healthy? ›

Steamed Fish and Vegetables

Takeout menus tend to offer a mild-tasting variety of protein-rich white fish, such as sole, and it's paired with mixed vegetables. The veggies add fiber, a key nutrient for digestion and heart health. If you have the chance to choose or add Chinese eggplant as a veggie, go for it.

How many calories in orange chicken from a Chinese restaurant? ›

There are 1698 calories in a 1 order (648.000g) serving size of Restaurant, Chinese, orange chicken. The calorie breakdown is 44% fat, 34% carbs, and 22% protein.

Why is orange chicken so high in calories? ›

Traditional orange chicken uses large amounts of brown sugar and is deep fried in vegetable oil or canola oil – packing on the calories and making it a high fat meal.

Is cornstarch or baking powder better for crispy chicken? ›

The baking powder raises the pH of the surface, allowing it to crisp better*), and tossing in plain cornstarch to absorb some surface moisture and create a rougher texture for the batter to adhere to. *See more on the science of baking powder and chicken wings in this article on oven-fried buffalo wings.

Is it better to coat chicken with cornstarch or flour? ›

Ingredient Tips

My not-so-secret tip to the best fried chicken is a combination of FLOUR, CORNSTARCH, and BAKING POWDER. When mixed with the flour, the cornstarch makes the flour coating crispier and gives it that golden brown color! (It has to do with prevention of gluten development.)

What does cornstarch do to your body? ›

Cornstarch is high in calories and carbs but low in essential nutrients. It may also increase blood sugar levels and harm heart health.

What is the difference between TSO and orange chicken? ›

What is the difference between orange chicken and General Tso? Orange chicken is crispy fried with a fruity, sweet, and tangy sauce that's caramelized into a glaze. General Tso is stir-fried in a sweet, sour, and spicy umami sauce.

What ethnicity is orange chicken? ›

The most famous dish at Panda Express is the Orange Chicken. Inspired by flavors of the Hunan Province in China, Chef Andy Kho developed it in 1987, and it has been a consistent part of the menu ever since.

How many calories does orange chicken take out? ›

Restaurant, Chinese, orange chicken
Amount Per Serving
Calories1698
% Daily Value
Protein 94g187%
Total Fat 82g105%
10 more rows

Is orange chicken high in calories? ›

Orange chicken contains 660 calories per 252 g serving. This serving contains 32 g of fat, 36 g of protein and 57 g of carbohydrate. The latter is 34 g sugar and 2 g of dietary fiber, the rest is complex carbohydrate. Orange chicken contains 6.1 g of saturated fat and 154 mg of cholesterol per serving.

Does orange chicken have a lot of carbs? ›

Orange chicken (1 cup) contains 60.8g total carbs, 59.6g net carbs, 11.2g fat, 29.2g protein, and 465 calories.

What is a healthy Chinese food dish? ›

Steamed Fish and Vegetables

Takeout menus tend to offer a mild-tasting variety of protein-rich white fish, such as sole, and pair it with mixed vegetables. The veggies add fiber, a key nutrient for digestion and heart health. If you have the chance to choose or add Chinese eggplant as a veggie, go for it.

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