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Healthy Sesame Chicken (Better-Than-Takeout Stir-Fry, 30 Min)
Healthy sesame chicken — better-than-takeout stir-fry with lean chicken, sticky honey-soy-sesame sauce, less oil and sugar. 30 min weeknight winner.
This is the takeout-style chicken I make when I want Chinese-American flavor without the fryer mess or the food coma after. Healthy sesame chicken is the better-than-takeout stir-fry with pan-seared crispy chicken in a glossy honey-soy-sesame-garlic glaze. 30 minutes, one skillet, restaurant flavor with about 60% fewer calories than the deep-fried original.
Fun fact: sesame chicken as we know it isn’t traditional Chinese — it’s a Chinese-American creation from the 1970s, invented to appeal to American palates that wanted sweeter, less fishy flavors than authentic Chinese cooking. The dish uses cornstarch coating instead of double-frying batter, which makes it possible to get crispy results in a pan instead of a deep fryer.
Why this recipe works
- Cornstarch coating, not batter. A light dusting of cornstarch creates a crispy exterior that crisps in 2 tablespoons of oil — no deep frying needed.
- Sear in single layers. Crowding the pan steams the chicken instead of crisping it. Work in batches of 8-10 pieces.
- Toss in sauce off heat. Once the sauce thickens, throw in the chicken and stir off the heat — keeps the coating crispy instead of sogging out.

Ingredients
Serves 4.
For the chicken
- 1.5 lb boneless skinless chicken thighs, cut into bite-size pieces (thighs stay juicier than breasts)
- 1/4 cup cornstarch + 1/2 tsp salt + 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 2 tbsp avocado oil (high smoke point) or vegetable oil
For the sauce
- 1/3 cup low-sodium soy sauce
- 3 tbsp honey + 2 tbsp rice vinegar + 1 tbsp sesame oil
- 1 tbsp brown sugar + 1 tbsp ketchup (for color and that takeout flavor)
- 3 cloves garlic, minced + 1 tsp fresh grated ginger
- 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (more for heat)
For the thickener
- 1 tbsp cornstarch + 2 tbsp cold water (whisked together to make a slurry)
To finish and serve
- 2 tbsp toasted sesame seeds + 2 green onions thinly sliced
- 4 cups cooked jasmine rice
- Steamed broccoli or snap peas for color
Smart substitutions
- Healthier: Chicken breast (saves 80 cal/serving), reduce honey to 2 tbsp, coconut aminos instead of soy sauce, cauliflower rice base
- Gluten-free: Use tamari or coconut aminos instead of soy sauce
- Vegetarian: Substitute crispy tofu or cauliflower florets — same cornstarch coating method
Instructions
Step 1: Coat the chicken
In a bowl, toss bite-size chicken pieces with cornstarch, salt, and pepper until evenly coated. The cornstarch creates the crispy exterior — make sure every piece is dusted.
Step 2: Pan-sear in batches
Heat avocado oil in a large skillet over medium-high until shimmering. Add chicken in a single layer — work in 2-3 batches if needed. Cook 3-4 minutes per side until golden and cooked through. Transfer to a plate.
Step 3: Mix the sauce
While chicken cooks, whisk together soy sauce, honey, rice vinegar, sesame oil, brown sugar, ketchup, garlic, ginger, and red pepper flakes in a small bowl.
Step 4: Simmer the sauce
Pour the sauce into the same hot skillet (leave any cornstarch bits — flavor). Bring to a simmer. Whisk in the cornstarch slurry. Cook 1-2 minutes, stirring constantly, until thickened to a glossy syrupy consistency.
Step 5: Toss the chicken
Return all chicken to the skillet. Toss to coat thoroughly with the sauce. Sprinkle in half the sesame seeds. Heat for 1 minute just to warm through — don’t overcook or the coating gets soggy.
Step 6: Plate and serve
Divide jasmine rice between 4 bowls. Top with sesame chicken. Garnish with remaining sesame seeds and green onions. Serve with steamed broccoli or snap peas for color and crunch.
Nutrition information
- Calories: 490 kcal per serving (with 1 cup rice)
- Protein: 42 g (84% DV)
- Carbohydrates: 56 g
- Fat: 12 g
- Sodium: 880 mg (about 60% less than restaurant version)
- Iron: 18% DV
Pro tips for restaurant-style sesame chicken
- Air fryer version: Toss cornstarch-coated chicken with 1 tbsp oil; air-fry 400°F for 12 minutes flipping once; then toss in warm sauce
- Toast your sesame seeds. Dry-toast in a pan 2-3 minutes until golden — store-bought “toasted” is usually not toasted enough
- Restaurant trick: Add 1 tbsp ketchup — that’s what gives the sauce its characteristic red-brown color and sweetness
- Make double batches: The sauce keeps a week in the fridge. Pre-cooked chicken + sauce on rice = lunch all week
Frequently asked questions
Why is restaurant sesame chicken so much heavier?
Restaurants double-fry the chicken in deep oil (200-400 calories per serving from oil alone) and use way more sugar in the sauce. This pan-fried version cuts both — same flavor, fraction of the calories.
Can I make it gluten-free?
Yes — use tamari or coconut aminos instead of soy sauce. Cornstarch is already gluten-free. Make sure your rice vinegar doesn’t have wheat additives (most don’t).
What vegetables go well with this?
Steamed or stir-fried broccoli, snap peas, bok choy, baby corn, water chestnuts, bell peppers, or a quick cucumber salad. Steamed greens balance the sweet glaze beautifully.
How do I store and reheat?
Refrigerate 4 days. Reheat in a hot skillet to revive crispness — microwave makes the coating soggy. Sauce thickens when cold; thin with 1-2 tbsp water when reheating.
Can I make this with frozen chicken?
Thaw fully overnight in the fridge first. Pat dry before coating with cornstarch — wet chicken won’t crisp properly.
Is this dish actually healthy or is “healthy” just marketing?
Genuinely healthier than takeout. The pan-sear method cuts ~250 calories per serving vs deep-fried. Lower sodium too. Plus the cornstarch coating uses 6 tablespoons total instead of 2 cups of batter. Still has honey/sugar though — not “diet food,” just “real food, made better.”