For Honey Soy drumsticks and bone in thighs, use this recipe. For boneless thigh and breast, use this recipe.
Honey Soy Wings
I’m generally a fan of any food you can eat with your hands and wings are pretty high up on my list. Add the word “sticky” and I’m all in! The key to making these really sticky in the oven without fussing with sauce reduction on the stove or cornflour slurries is to drain off the watery chicken juices partway through baking before adding the honey soy sauce. It’s the excess juices that prevents the sauce from reducing down into a syrup to glaze the wings. Worried about throwing away free flavour? You needn’t. Wings are fatty and juicy. There’s plenty still inside!
What you need for Honey Soy Wings
Here’s what you need for the Honey Soy Marinade:
Honey – I know, it’s a surprise ingredient in Honey Soy Wings… 😂 Honey plays 3 roles here: it is the sweetness, it thickens the sauce so it coats the wings better and it makes the sauce syrupy when it reduces in the oven so it can be used to glaze the wings. Light soy and dark soy sauce – Dark soy sauce adds flavour as well as making the wings a glorious bronze colour. Light soy adds saltiness without staining the wings. I like to use a combination of both to achieve my desired colour and flavour. Substitute – Dark soy sauce can be substituted with light soy sauce but the wings will be a paler colour and slightly less flavour. Light soy sauce can be substituted with all purpose soy sauce. You could also substitute the light soy sauce with more dark soy sauce but the wings do come out a very dark almost charcoal colour so it’s best to use less. See the recipe notes for adjustment quantity. Apple cider vinegar – To balance out the flavours. Doesn’t make the wings tangy. Substitute with rice wine vinegar, white wine or red wine vinegar, sherry vinegar or even plain white vinegar. Garlic – Can’t go wrong with a touch of tasty garlicky goodness here! Oil – Just 1/2 a tablespoon to help the wings brown more evenly.
The chicken wings (& other cuts)
As for the wings, I like to use wingettes and drumettes (sometimes sold as chicken “nibbles”). I buy them pre-cut, like pictured below. You can also cut whole wings up yourself (see here) or just make this recipe using whole wings. Substitute – Dark soy sauce can be substituted with light soy sauce but the wings will be a paler colour and slightly less flavour. Light soy sauce can be substituted with all purpose soy sauce. You could also substitute the light soy sauce with more dark soy sauce but the wings do come out a very dark almost charcoal colour so it’s best to use less. See the recipe notes for adjustment quantity. Other chicken cuts: For drumsticks and bone in thighs, use this recipe (larger pieces = no need to drain juices like for wings). For boneless skinless thigh and breast, use this recipe (no skin = sauce best for saucy finish).
How to make Honey Soy Wings
I feel like there’s far more step photos than justified for such a simple recipe! I promise it’s not a hard recipe. 😇 This is what the wings look like, straight out of the oven: Rearrange wings as needed if they are cooking unevenly (most ovens have hot spots!). You can even turn them upside down if the skin side is brown enough partway through cooking. And an up-close-and-personal look at the juicy insides (and very sticky fingers!). You’ll get sauce smeared around your mouth and you’ll need plenty of napkins for your hands. But one thing you won’t be able to wipe off is the grin on your face. Enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Life of Dozer
If you look up the definition of “wishful thinking”, this is what you will see: