Everybody loves a good sticky wing! These baked Honey Soy wings are a copycat of the popular pre-marinated chicken wings sold at the shops. All you need is honey, soy, vinegar and garlic. Serve with fried rice or Vermicelli Noodle Salad for a great easy midweek meal.
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.
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. 😇
Marinade – Mix the ingredients in a bowl then pour it over the wings in a ziplock bag. A ziplock bag is best because it keeps the sauce snug up around the wings. If you prefer to use a bowl, toss the wings regularly.
Marinade the wings for 30 minutes. You can do overnight but I found it didn’t really add much extra flavour into the flesh.
Handy freezer option
Once you pour the marinade over the wings, pop the bag straight into the freezer. Thaw then cook per recipe. The wings will marinade as the wings freeze, then thaw. How handy it that!!
Bake (no sauce) – Place the wings on a foil + paper lined tray (you’ll thank me later). Bake for 30 minutes at 200°C/400°F (180°C).
Reserve the marinade – we will pour it over later. If you add it at the beginning, it gets all watery from the chicken juices and never thickens into a glaze.
Remove wings from the oven.
Drain the juices and discard. Don’t worry, we’re adding flavour back in the next step – and remember how juicy chicken wings are, there’s still plenty of juiciness inside the wings!
Pour the reserved marinade over the wings. Squidge the wings around to coat in the sauce (it won’t stick because it’s runny).
Bake for another 30 minutes at a slightly lower temperature, 180°C/350°F (160°C fan), so the sweet sauce doesn’t burn.
Baste every 10 minutes (ie at the 10 minute and 20 minute mark, then when you pull it out at 30 minutes).
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.
Garnish with sesame seeds and green onion, if desired, and prepare yourself for very sticky fingers! 🙌🏻
This is what the wings look like, straight out of the oven:
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
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Honey Soy Wings
Ingredients
- 1.25 kg / 2.5 lb chicken wings (wingettes/drumettes), or cut up whole wings (Note 1 for whole wings)
- 1 tsp white sesame seeds
- 1 green onion stem , finely sliced
Honey soy marinade:
- 4 tbsp honey
- 5 tbsp light soy sauce (Note 2)
- 1 tbsp dark soy sauce (Note 2)
- 3 tbsp apple cider vinegar (or other clear vinegar)
- 1 large garlic clove , crushed using garlic press (or finely minced or grated)
- 1/2 tbsp canola oil
Instructions
- Mix marinade in a bowl until honey is dissolved. Pour over the wings in a ziplock bag. (Note 3)
- Marinade for 30 minutes. You can do overnight but it doesn't noticeably improve flavour in the flesh.
- Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F (180°C fan). Line a large tray with foil then paper.
- Bake – Spread wings out on the tray, skin side up. Reserve marinade. Bake 30 minutes.
- Drain off juices on the tray and discard. (Key step to ensure sauce thickens).
- Sauce – Pour reserved marinade over wings. Toss to coat then spread the wings out, skin side up.
- Bake & baste – Turn oven down to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan). Bake wings for 30 minutes, basting with tray juices every 10 minutes (3 times). Rearrange wings as needed if cooking unevenly, you can even turn them upside down if they brown too quickly. Sauce should be syrupy by the end so you can glaze well. (Note 4 if sauce still watery).
- Serve – Transfer wings into a serving bowl. Pour over syrup on tray, sprinkle with sesame seeds and green onion. Serve!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
If you look up the definition of “wishful thinking”, this is what you will see:
Kim Apps says
The wings were great! Skin was crispy – honey soy mix was perfect. I love the idea about freezing the raw wings in the marinade! Perfect for Christmas visitors.
Dave says
An hr at 400 then 350 seems really long
Cathy says
While this recipe looks and sounds amazing. My question is about Dozer, how old is he? He is so handsome, just wondering. tia
Redonia says
I have to ask, What cake is in the photo? I want one of those. YUM! If you could see me, you would see that I have the same wishful look as Dozer has.
Redonia says
Yum! I was thinking about making Tsing-tsing eggs with fried rice tomorrow night, and now I think I must add your Holiday Soy Wings in . These sounds delicious!
Pat Larson says
so good looking, can’t wait to try with skin on bone in thighs.
The picture of Dozer with that cake, oh my, I want to eat it.
Jenny says
It’s as if you read my mind, I was scrolling through your website for a honey soy chicken wing recipe!! Absolutely delicious (even if I accidentally missed the part where the recipe said 180 degrees for fan forced oven and tried to convince my husband that “200 degrees is what Nagi said” and burnt said wings).
Edie C. says
Such a “guud boy” Dozer! *said with love & feeling!
Nagi you are an amazing woman for sharing these delicious recipes. Thank you. The wings were gone in a flash!! so good.
Chris W. says
Just look at those eyes !!! He has to be the worlds most obedient dog to resist the gorgeous food you put in front of him. You are one lucky Dozer mom…
Lesley Wee says
Great to make to watch FIFA ⚽️
Thanks Nagi
Hi Dozer 👋🐾
Julie says
Let me double check – we are to use the marinade the chicken sat in to brush onto the wings at the end?
Lisa says
Gosh, no! You misread. The reserved marinade is cooked with the wings. *Later*, you brush the already-cooked juices back on the wings, just like any other recipe with basting.
Julie says
Oooops, thank you! I wouldn’t have put the marinade on the cooked wings, but I did think that’s what I read! Should have known Nagi wouldn’t make an error like that! 😜
CLAUDIA DAVIS says
She clearly explained to use the reserved marinade to put on wings and then bake for thirty minutes. It would kill any bacteria from the raw chicken.
See the Directions # 6-7 state “ 6. Sauce – Pour reserved marinade over wings. Toss to coat then spread the wings out, skin side up.
7. Bake & baste – Turn oven down to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan). Bake wings for 30 minutes, basting with tray juices every 10 minutes (3 times). Rearrange wings as needed if cooking unevenly, you can even turn them upside down if they brown too quickly. Sauce should be syrupy by the end so you can glaze well. (Note 4 if sauce still watery).”
Anne brousseau says
Can’t wait for the cookbook to arrive in Florida
I ordered in October thru Amazon
I’m a big fan of your recipes and can’t wait
I will make these for the Super Bowl football here in the US in February
So I have it saved it my folder
Ps your Pork belly recipe is the best I’ve ever cooked
Debby Weber says
Dozer – A Canine Connoisseurs: the dog with the refined human palate. You can always trust his gustatory review. Love him.
Monika says
Hi Nagi! First…you’re awesome! Second – my wing question…our wings in Canada must be mini because after 30 min total, they are completely cooked. How would I adjust the timing between baking and saucing since your cook time is a total of 60 min.
Louise Gardener says
Nagi I just love your food and the scientific, clear instructions and your adjustable portions slide bar. Hope that the cookbook I ordered comes with Australian measures, we also use metric in Canada. Thank you cheers Louise
Sharon says
Could I cook the wings on a rack instead of directly on the foil? I would rather not fiddle with draining the fluid off the foil….. but am wondering if they would get cooked too much?
I had a friend tell me the best way to pre cook the wings to reduce the amount of fat was to steam the wings after pricking each of them with a fork. Once the wings were cooked then continue with the oven on foil.
Comments?
Sara says
These look amazing, and wings are just about the cheapest chicken pieces i can buy. Every recipe I’ve ever tried from you has come out perfectly so I can’t wait to try this! Thank you so much, Nagi (and I’m hanging on madly here for Dinner to be available in the UK!).
Joy says
Hello. I love your recipes! I can’t wait to try these wings. Where can I find light and dark soy sauces?
Nagi says
Hi Joy! Regular grocery stores here in Australia carry light and dark soy sauce in asian section. But if you can’t find them, just use regular soy sauce for both in the recipe. 🙂 N x
Vivian Welcer says
Hi Nagi,
I see a lot of your recipes call for light and dark soy sauce. Here in the US supermarkets we have lite as lower sodium and regular soy sauce. I haven’t tried the asian market but is light soy sauce lighter in color?
Nagi says
Hi Vivian! In the bottle, light and dark soy sauce look the same. It’s only when you pour it out on, say, a white plate that you can see the difference in intensity of colour. If you can’t find light soy sauce just use regular! N x
Vivian Welcer says
Thanks for the info, Nagi. I’ll try the Asian market and see if they have it.
Preordered your book, can’t wait to get it. I’m in the US.
Jane says
So you use the Aussie 20ml Tbl, or the ‘rest of the world’ 15ml Tbl?
I’ve only recently discovered your site and am loving your recipes! Your chicken tikka masala is outstanding! Thanks for the great recipes you give us 😀
Nagi says
Hi Jane! I use 15 ml BUT I always write my recipes bearing in mind that some Aussies will be using 20 ml tbsp. So if there’s a risk it will affect the outcome I am VERY clear about it or I change the way I write a recipe ie I switch to teaspoons and I will say 3 teaspoons instead of a 1 tbsp to remove the risk. For this one, it absolutely does not matter! PS Interestingly, most stores these days sell mostly 15 ml tbsp 🙂 It’s slowly changing!
Jane says
Thanks! It’s for baking that it really does matter!
So for baking – when you say 1 Tbl you mean 15ml?
Michelle says
Hi Nagi, I got so starstruck at your Melbourne BigW book signing that I forgot to ask you- what is your go-to brand of knives please?
P/S- this recipe looks amazing!
Nagi says
No need to be star-struck around me!! I am so normal – if you could only see me now, sitting here in my daggy bonds singlet 😂 Here is my post on my favourite knives! -> https://www.recipetineats.com/my-favourite-kitchen-knives/ N x
Laura says
I knew what we were having for dinner the moment this recipe hit my inbox today. OMG absolutely AMAZING as always! Thanks Nagi x
Nagi says
I LOVE HEARING THAT!! N xx