Off-Script With Sohla

Sohla's Saucy Secrets to Oven-Roasted Chicken Wings

February  1, 2021

Every month, in Off-Script With Sohla, pro chef and flavor whisperer Sohla El-Waylly will introduce you to a must-know cooking technique—and then teach you how to detour it toward new adventures.


I'm the luckiest girl in the world because when we roast a chicken, my husband lets me eat both wings. With the ideal ratio of skin to meat, wings are flavorful, forgiving, and always ready to take on big flavors. And who can forget those bonus bits of crunchy cartilage?

Roasting wings takes time but, aside from a couple of flippy flips and toss-y tosses, my method is mostly hands-off. Today I'll show you all my tips and tricks for tender, juicy chicken wings with glassy, sticky skin—and how to take your next batch off-script.

What's a Chicken Wing, Anyways?

A whole chicken wing has three parts: drumette, flat (aka wingette), and wingtip. Wings aren't white or dark meat, but rather a hybrid of the two. The drumette is attached to the breast, so the meat there is leaner. The flat (my favorite) has much more skin, connective tissue, and rich flavor. The tip is mostly bone and skin, best saved in the freezer for chicken stock (or tossed in your next pot of rice for extra flavor).

Join The Conversation

Top Comment:
“Did you know that in a lot of Chinese recipes using chicken wings, they snip out the smaller bone of the flat and push that meat up to the top for a ball-o-meat, only you don't have to deal with the gristle of the drumette! A flat-lovers treat. ;) And that wine rack? I put one on my kitchen counter for the sauce bottles that are in heavy rotation, and occasionally, a few rolled clean dish towels/aprons/pot holders to keep them handy. You're lucky you don't have to sacrifice counter space for yours. ;)”
— beejay45
Comment

If you purchased your wings whole, use a sharp knife to cut through the joints and separate the three parts. This allows the wings to cook evenly and render out more fat—and it’s ultimately easier to eat and share.

Now, if you cook these different chicken parts straight from the package, it's easy for the drumettes to get overcooked and dried-out while the flats remain flabby. Luckily, all it takes is a simple brine to bring out the best of both parts of the wing.

Let The Brine Do The Time

I've brought up dry-brining before (in my one-skillet chicken and rice!) because it's the simplest way to guarantee moist, flavorful meat every time.

Here, I toss the wings in a mixture of kosher salt, granulated sugar, baking powder, and MSG. Next, I space out the wings on a wire rack, flipping them once during brining, so I end up 360 degrees of dryness (which means better browning later).

The dry brine draws moisture from the meat to create a solution on the surface that's then pulled back in, drying out the skin, seasoning the meat, denaturing the proteins, and breaking down the fat. All of this happens when you just let the dry brine do its thing.

Tangy pomegranate molasses, tons of black pepper, and don't forget the walnuts. Photo by Mark Weinberg. Prop Stylist: Amanda Widis. Food Stylist: Anna Billingskog.

It takes time—at least six hours but preferably 24—to make culinary magic happen. The sugar and MSG add flavor to the wings, so you can leave them out if you prefer. But the salt and baking powder transform them: Salt tenderizes and seasons the meat. It also breaks down the fat, so it renders faster and more evenly in the oven. Meaning you can cook the drumettes and flats at the same temperature, for the same amount of time, and still get the best out of both.

Adding baking powder is a trick I learned from J. Kenji Lopez Alt. He found that this ingredient encourages the development of microbubbles on the wing’s surface. That craggy exterior holds on to sauce tighter, just like ridged pasta, and results in skin with a delicate crisp.

Start Slow & Not-So Low

After they brine, I roast the wings at 350 degrees Fahrenheit, flipping once during cooking, until the meat pulls away from the bone. This takes about an hour, which allows all the connective tissue to break down while being basted in melting fat. The dry brine keeps the meat moist despite the long cook time, so all the fat can render out and there's no flabby skin. A moderate temperature also ensures that the fat doesn't get too hot and smoke up your kitchen.

Get Glossy & Saucy

While those bake, I stir up a simple sauce. Here are the big components:

  • Sweetness caramelizes during the second roast, yielding sticky wings. In my fish sauce wings, this is palm sugar or granulated sugar. In my pomegranate wings, it’s pomegranate molasses and granulated sugar. Other great picks: maple, honey, brown sugar.
  • Spice cuts through all the schmaltzy richness. You could try slivered Thai chiles as in my fish sauce wings. Or take a cue from the pomegranate wings with pops of cracked black pepper. Or detour toward Calabrian chiles, pickled jalapeños, or gochujang.
  • Acidity balances out all the big flavors. Lime juice levels out the funk and heat. Pomegranate molasses offers a one-two punch of sweet and tart. More acids to play with: rice wine vinegar, hot sauce, or tamarind.
Funky fish sauce? Check. Crunchy peanuts? Check. Oh-so-fresh herbs? Check! Photo by Mark Weinberg. Prop Stylist: Amanda Widis. Food Stylist: Anna Billingskog.

Turn Up The Heat

I tumble the wings in the sauce before roasting—again—this time at 375 degrees Fahrenheit. By now, the chicken is fully cooked, so the second roast is about creating texture. The sauce reduces on the wing, growing sticky, lightly charred, and caramelized.

Suppose you want to try this method with the classic hot sauce–butter combo? Dose with that mixture after the second roast. Unsweetened sauces will only make the wings soggy unless they’re added right before serving.

Add Some Crunch

An oven-roasted wing will never have the same crispy, crackly skin as one blistered in a deep fryer. But that doesn't mean we have to skip out on the crunch! That sticky glaze is ready to catch toppings, so sprinkle on a final flourish and give the wings—and the people—what they want!

I like to shower fish sauce wings with roasted peanuts and pomegranate wings with toasted walnuts, but anything crisp can up your wing game. Try broken pretzels on honey mustard wings, blitzed BBQ potato chips on brown sugar chipotle wings, or crushed corn nuts on maple miso wings.

There are countless ways to cook a wing—that's why I enjoy playing with them. Now that you've gotten to know my method, I hope you feel empowered to try your own combos and take my recipe off-script.


More Recipes From Sohla!

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Sohla El-Waylly is a Food52 Resident, sharing new riffable recipes every month that'll help you get creative in the kitchen. Watch her cook on YouTube in her new series, Off-Script With Sohla. Before she started developing fun recipes for home cooks, she worked as a chef in N.Y.C. and L.A., briefly owning a restaurant in Brooklyn with her husband and fellow chef, Ham El-Waylly. She lives in the East Village with Ham, their two dogs, and cat. Find out what else she's up to on Instagram @sohlae

17 Comments

Andrea June 1, 2021
This dry brine is fool proof for amazing chicken! I seasoned up a tray full of wings and another tray of chicken legs to sit for 24 hours in the fridge, and then smoked them on a charcoal kamado grill at about 275F for an hour. After that I added a full load of hot coals for direct grilling (450F), kept the chicken flipping every few minutes for about 15 minutes total until they were crispy and dark brown. I was pressed for time so I ended up letting guests sauce their own chicken. It all turned out absolutely delicious, I can't even imagine how much better they would be after getting sauced and putting back on the grill to finish. I've tried many different wet brines before with chicken and while they do a good job keeping the wings moist, this method does an all around better job at everything (flavor, crispy skin, moist meat) with less mess. I loved the inclusion of MSG in the mix, I feel like that made a huge difference in the overall flavor of just the plain chicken wings. This is going to be my go-to method for a while and I will be making chicken wings all summer long!
 
Gourmetcook13 February 22, 2021
As delicious as it makes food taste, MSG is a neurotoxin, affecting the health of ones brain. Love the recipe otherwise.
 
Malleable M. April 11, 2021
MSG is not a neurotoxin. That is an old racist trope. There are no studies that prove it. Please stop spreading lies, thanks.
 
Gourmetcook13 April 11, 2021
Please check the research from a reputable neurology site?
 
Gourmetcook13 April 11, 2021
Go to MDLINX.com and look for “5 FDA Approved Food Additives with Brain Damaging Effects”if interested. Still love your recipes 😊
 
derekdenson February 9, 2021
I love your blog keep up the great content.
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Mel E. February 7, 2021
Made these with the Thai glaze tonight. Super flavorful can't say that enough. I liked the method too. The skin was not as crispy as I wanted so next time I will be sure to hold back the water a bit when making the glaze (I used palm sugar) . Did not go off script this time but for sure will do so in the future. Thanks SOHLA.
 
Jaclyn G. February 6, 2021
I wonder if this could be modified slightly for chicken thighs, skin-on, and if so, how?
 
Jaclyn G. February 18, 2021
Made it with the chicken thighs and I didn't need to change a thing! Thanks, Sohla :)
 
Jan February 5, 2021
Can you use this dry brine on cut up chicken parts and whole chicken?
 
Theresa M. February 5, 2021
Do you pop the sheet tray of chicken wings back in the fridge overnight to brine or is it supposed to sit out on the counter? I watched the video too and it's really unclear to me.
 
Kimmyb February 5, 2021
Definitely in the fridge. The air in the fridge helps dry the skin and no bacteria worries 😀
 
Theresa M. February 5, 2021
thank you!
 
Kimmyb February 4, 2021
PLEASE START YOUR OWN COOKING SHOW!! I need you!!!! The sauces are amazing!!!! You are such an inspiration!!!
 
Victoria D. February 4, 2021
oils and vinegars for the "wine" space??
 
LifeCycleBlog February 2, 2021
Water is coming on the tongue. really Thanks for sharing this information,
But I had a question. What are the main food safety issues?
waited for the answer
Thank
 
beejay45 February 1, 2021
I love the way you think! And I love chicken wings, too. Did you know that in a lot of Chinese recipes using chicken wings, they snip out the smaller bone of the flat and push that meat up to the top for a ball-o-meat, only you don't have to deal with the gristle of the drumette! A flat-lovers treat. ;)

And that wine rack? I put one on my kitchen counter for the sauce bottles that are in heavy rotation, and occasionally, a few rolled clean dish towels/aprons/pot holders to keep them handy. You're lucky you don't have to sacrifice counter space for yours. ;)