Real Talk, Real Food
Homemade General Tso’s Chicken (The Takeout Breakup)
Real talk: I love a good Chinese food night. The cartons, the rice, the feeling that dinner magically appeared without effort. But somewhere along the way, General Tso’s Chicken became less legend and more letdown. Too sweet. Too greasy. Too… predictable.
So I started making it myself. And I’m telling you right now, once you do, there’s no going back.
This version is crispy (twice-fried, because details matter), sticky in the best way, and full of flavor without lighting your mouth on fire. I skip peanut oil and dried red chilies and use jalapeños instead. You still get heat, but it’s controlled, balanced, and doesn’t hijack the dish. This is General Tso’s for people who want flavor, not regret.
Perfect with white rice. Even better with steamed broccoli. And yes, it reheats beautifully, which means lunch the next day is handled.
Homemade General Tso’s Chicken
Serves: 6 | Total Time: 50 minutes
Ingredients
For the Chicken
- 4 cups vegetable oil (for frying)
- 1 egg
- 1½ lbs boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into ½-inch cubes
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 tsp sugar
- Pinch of white pepper
- 1 cup cornstarch
For the Sauce
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- 3 tbsp chopped green onions
- 1 clove garlic, minced
- 1–2 jalapeños, sliced (your heat, your rules)
- 1 strip orange zest
- ½ cup sugar
- ¼ tsp ground ginger
- 3 tbsp chicken broth
- 1 tbsp rice vinegar
- ¼ cup soy sauce
- 2 tsp sesame oil
To Thicken
- 2 tsp cornstarch
- ¼ cup water
How to Make It
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Heat vegetable oil to 375°F.
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Beat the egg, add chicken, salt, sugar, and white pepper. Toss well.
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Coat chicken with cornstarch until fully covered.
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Fry in batches for about 3 minutes until lightly golden. Remove and cool.
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Fry again (don’t skip this) until deep golden and crispy. Drain.
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In a hot wok or skillet, heat 2 tbsp oil. Add green onions, garlic, jalapeños, and orange zest. Stir until fragrant.
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Add sugar, ginger, broth, vinegar, soy sauce, and sesame oil. Boil for 3 minutes.
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Stir in cornstarch slurry and cook until glossy and thick.
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Toss chicken in sauce, lower heat, and let it soak up the goodness.
Why This Works (Real Talk)
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Chicken thighs stay juicy.
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Double frying gives restaurant-level crunch.
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Jalapeños bring flavor-forward heat, not chaos.
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Homemade sauce means no mystery ingredients and no sugar shock.
This is comfort food that still respects you.



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