A honey sesame chicken breast recipe is the kind of weeknight dinner that fixes the 'what do I cook' problem fast. You get lean chicken cutlets seared until golden, then coated in a glossy sauce built from honey, toasted sesame, and soy. The result is sweet, lightly nutty, and sticky enough to cling to rice without pooling at the bottom of the bowl.
This version keeps the chicken breast from drying out by slicing it thin and cooking it quick over medium-high heat. The sauce reduces in the same pan, so you aren't washing a separate pot. If you like saucy chicken dinners, our chicken noodles are a good next read. Making this honey sesame chicken breast at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You'll Love These Honey Sesame Chicken Breast
- Thin-cut breast cooks in under 10 minutes so it stays juicy, not rubbery.
- The glaze uses six pantry items and needs no cornstarch slurry to thicken.
- Toasted sesame gives a real nutty crunch instead of a flat sweet sauce.
- One skillet means cleanup is a quick wipe, not a stack of dishes.
- It scales easily for two or six by doubling the pan quantities.
Ingredients You'll Need
- 2 boneless skinless chicken breasts (about 1 lb), sliced into 1/2-inch strips
- 2 tbsp cornstarch, for dusting the chicken before searing
- 2 tbsp neutral oil (canola or sunflower), for the pan
- 3 tbsp honey, used as the base sweetener for the glaze
- 2 tbsp soy sauce (regular or light), for salt and umami
- 1 tbsp toasted sesame oil, added at the end for nutty aroma
- 1 tbsp sesame seeds, toasted in the dry pan before saucing
- 2 cloves garlic, minced fine so it melts into the sauce
- 1 tsp fresh ginger, grated, to cut the sweetness
- 2 tbsp water, to loosen the glaze if it tightens
- 2 green onions, sliced, for finish and color
Ingredient Substitutions
Cornstarch: Replace with an equal amount of potato starch if you need a gluten-free coating that crisps the same way. Potato starch browns a shade lighter and holds up better in a wet glaze, so the strips stay defined rather than clumping. You won't need to change the cook time, but shake off the excess before the pan or the coating turns gummy. The honey sesame chicken breast works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Soy sauce: Use an equal amount of tamari for a gluten-free version with nearly identical salt and depth. Tamari is a touch sweeter and less sharp, so cut the honey by 1 tsp if you want the same balance. The color stays dark and the glaze still reduces normally. Storing leftover honey sesame chicken breast correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Honey: Swap in an equal weight of maple syrup for a vegan-friendly sweetener with a darker, woodsy note. Maple thins faster under heat, so keep the water to 1 tbsp and watch the pan closely to avoid scorching. Expect a less floral finish and a slightly softer shine on the chicken.
Sesame oil: Replace with 1 tbsp toasted peanut oil if sesame allergy is a concern, though you lose the signature nutty scent. Peanut oil carries heat well and keeps the glaze smooth, but add an extra pinch of sesame seeds for some of that visual cue. The flavor reads more neutral than aromatic.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Pat the chicken strips dry with paper towels, then toss with cornstarch until each piece is lightly filmed. Dry surface is what lets the pan sear instead of steam.
- Set a 10-inch skillet on medium-high heat with the neutral oil. Lay the strips in a single layer and sear 2 minutes per side until golden and crispy at the edges, then move to a plate.
- Lower to medium-low heat and add sesame seeds to the empty pan. Toast 45 seconds until they smell nutty and turn tan, not brown.
- Add garlic and ginger to the seeds, stir 30 seconds until fragrant but not browned, then pour in soy sauce, honey, and water.
- Raise to medium heat and simmer 2 minutes until the sauce bubbles thick and coats a spoon. If it tightens too far, add the extra water by teaspoons.
- Return chicken to the pan, turn to coat in the glaze 1 minute, then off heat and stir in sesame oil and green onions. Serve immediately.
Pro Tips
Slice the breast across the grain at a slight angle so each strip stays tender when bitten, not stringy. A sharp knife and a steady board make the 1/2-inch cut consistent, which matters for even cooking.
Toast the sesame seeds in the dry-ish pan after the chicken comes out, using the leftover oil film. This small step from minimalist baking methods builds a deeper aroma than raw seeds stirred into the sauce.
Rest the seared chicken on a plate while the sauce reduces so it doesn't overcook in the simmer. The carryover heat keeps it safe while the glaze catches up, and you avoid tough edges.
Use a wide skillet and never crowd the pan or the strips release steam and go grey. If your pan is under 10 inches, cook in two batches and combine at the end.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Skipping the cornstarch dust leaves the chicken bare so the glaze slides off and the surface stays pale. The thin layer is what grabs color and holds the sauce, so don't treat it as optional.
Pouring honey into a too-hot pan makes it scorch before the sauce balances, leaving a bitter edge. Pull the heat to medium heat before the liquids go in, then build the simmer slowly.
Adding sesame oil at the start wastes its aroma because the volatile compounds cook off. Stir it in after the heat is off so the nutty note stays on the finished honey sesame chicken breast.
Serving Suggestions
Spoon the chicken over steamed jasmine rice so the glaze pools into the grains. A side of brussels sprouts adds a sharp contrast to the sweet meat.
For a lighter plate, lay the strips on crispy chicken style salad greens with cucumber ribbons. The chill of raw veg balances the warm sticky coating.
Pack the leftovers into quesadillas the next day with a little cheese to use the glaze as a built-in spread.
Storage and Reheating
Cooled chicken goes in an airtight container and keeps up to 3 days in the fridge. Don't leave it on the counter beyond 2 hours or the glaze invites bacterial growth.
Reheat in a skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of water until the internal temperature hits 74°C / 165°F. The microwave works but softens the sesame crunch, so pan warming is better.
This dish freezes poorly because the honey glaze weeps when thawed and the chicken turns spongy. Make it fresh rather than storing frozen portions for later.
Recipe Variations
Spicy Version
Add 1 tsp red chili flakes with the garlic and replace half the honey with gochujang for a sweet-heat glaze. The chicken takes on a red sheen and a slow burn that pairs with cooling cucumber. Keep the sesame seeds for contrast against the heat.
Orange Twist
Swap 1 tbsp of the honey for fresh orange juice and add 1 tsp zest at the end. The glaze turns brighter and less heavy, with a citrus note that cuts the sesame richness. Reduce the water by 1 tbsp since the juice adds liquid.
Low-Carb Option
Drop the cornstarch and sear the naked strips, then brush the glaze on after they brown. You lose some crust but cut the carbs to near zero per serving. The chicken katsu method shows a similar crust-free sear if you want a visual.
Noodle Bowl
After coating the chicken, toss it with 6 oz cooked soba and the remaining pan glaze for a full bowl. The noodles grab the sauce and turn the dinner into a noodle meal without extra steps. Top with the green onions and extra seeds.