How to Get Crispy Chicken Skin | Cook's Illustrated (2024)

Cooking Tips

A few simple steps guarantee the ultimate golden-brown crispy skin on chicken.

How to Get Crispy Chicken Skin | Cook's Illustrated (1)By

Published Sept. 29, 2023.

How to Get Crispy Chicken Skin | Cook's Illustrated (2)

The meaty juices that flood your mouth when you bite into a succulent piece of roast chicken are one of life’s great pleasures. The only thing that can make the experience even more enjoyable? When that juicy meat is encased in skin so crisp that it crackles.

But thin brittle skin isn’t a given, even when the bird is otherwise roasted to perfection. Often the skin is only crispy in patches, with the remainder limp, fatty, and altogether underwhelming.

Happily, test kitchen alum J. Kenji Lopez-Alt discovered three simple steps that guarantee theultimate crispy skin for roast chicken.

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1. Start with an Air-Chilled Chicken

Most supermarket birds are chilled in a chlorinated 34-degree water bath after slaughtering, causing them to absorb lots of additional moisture that keeps the skin from thoroughly browning or drying out as they cook. Air-chilled chicken, on the other hand, is not exposed to water and does not absorb additional moisture, allowing the skin to more readily brown and crisp.

2. Rub with Salt and Baking Powder

Before roasting, we massage the chicken’s skin with a rub containing 1 tablespoon kosher salt, 1 teaspoon baking powder, and ½ teaspoon black pepper, then allow it to air-dry in the fridge.

Both substances pull moisture out of the skin. But baking powder has additional powers. It prods some of the skin’s proteins and fat to break down, which, combined with its alkalinity, accelerates the Maillard reaction, for skin that browns and crisps more quickly. And—with the same type of chemical reaction that makes baked goods rise—baking powder reacts during an overnight rub to generate tiny carbon dioxide bubbles that make the skin more porous and even crisper after it cooks.

3. Create Multiple Channels for Juices and Fat to Escape

The excess juices in the chicken need an escape route, since the skin can’t brown until the surface moisture evaporates. We go about this in three ways:

  • Use a metal skewer to poke holes in the fat deposits on top of the breast and thighs (these fatty pockets look opaque under the skin and are easy to spot).
  • Use a paring knife to cut a few holes near the back of the bird to provide extra-large channels for the juices to drip down and escape.
  • Separate the skin from the meat over much of the bird by running a hand between the two (making sure not to tear the skin), which allows fat and juices to run freely.

Ready to start cooking? Heres the full recipe for Crisp Roast Chicken.

How to Get Crispy Chicken Skin | Cook's Illustrated (3)

Recipe

Crisp Roast Chicken

Years ago, we developed an ideal roasting method for tender, juicy meat. Now could we figure out how to get supercrisp skin?

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Chicken isn’t the only kind of bird that can benefit from these tricks. We also apply them to our Easier Roast Turkey.

How to Get Crispy Chicken Skin | Cook's Illustrated (4)

Recipe

Easier Roast Turkey and Gravy

No flipping. No long-simmered gravy. For fuss-free turkey and a richly flavored gravy, we borrowed an unexpected tool from pizza making.

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How to Get Crispy Chicken Skin | Cook's Illustrated (2024)
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