Ginger honey chicken – the sweet, sticky 20-minute dinner bowl you’ll put on repeat

Servings: 4 Total Time: 20 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Sweet, sticky, and on the table in 20 minutes
Close up of a white speckled ceramic bowl filled with ginger honey chicken, fluffy basmati rice, and sauteed bok choy garnished with green onions and sesame seeds pinit

There are meals you make because you have to, and then there are meals you make because something about them just hits right every single time. This ginger honey chicken falls firmly into the second category — and it all comes down to the sauce.

Fresh ginger, honey, garlic, and soy sauce. That’s the foundation. It sounds simple because it is simple — but what happens when that sauce hits a hot pan with seared chicken is something genuinely special.

It thickens, it caramelizes, it clings to every piece of meat, and your kitchen starts smelling like the best takeout place in town. Except you made it. In 20 minutes. In your own pan.

I started making this on nights when I had nothing planned and even less energy. Now it’s one of those recipes I come back to on purpose — not out of necessity, but because it’s just that good.

Served over fluffy basmati rice with tender sauteed bok choy on the side, this bowl is the kind of meal that makes you feel like you actually have your life together. Even on a Wednesday.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • 20 minutes, start to finish. No marinating, no long prep, no waiting. This comes together faster than most people take to decide what to order for delivery.
  • The sauce is ridiculously good. Fresh ginger and honey is one of those flavor combinations that sounds straightforward until you taste it and realize it’s anything but. Bold, warming, sweet, and savory all at once.
  • It’s a complete meal in one bowl. Protein, carbs, and greens all in one place. Dinner is done and you didn’t have to think too hard about it.
  • Healthier than takeout without tasting like it. Real ingredients, no mystery sauces, and you control exactly what goes in. High protein, naturally dairy free, and genuinely satisfying.
  • Beginner friendly. If you can sear chicken and stir a sauce, you can make this. There’s no technique here that requires experience — just a hot pan and a little attention.
  • Endlessly customizable. Swap the bok choy for broccoli, use brown rice instead of basmati, add a drizzle of chili oil if you want heat. This recipe is a canvas, not a rulebook.

Ingredients with key notes

The protein

  • 1.5 pounds boneless skinless chicken breast or thighs, cut into bite-sized chunks — Both work here. Chicken thighs stay juicier and have more flavor, but breast meat keeps it leaner. Cut the pieces evenly so they cook at the same rate. Don’t skip patting the chicken dry before cooking — it makes a real difference in how well it sears.

The sauce

  • 3 tablespoons honey — The backbone of the sweetness and what gives the sauce that glossy, sticky finish. Use real honey, not the processed squeeze bottle stuff if you can help it.
  • 3 tablespoons soy sauce — Balances the sweetness with salt and that deep umami flavor. Low-sodium soy sauce works if you’re watching your salt intake.
  • 1 tablespoon fresh ginger, grated — This is the star of the whole recipe. Fresh ginger is non-negotiable here — ground ginger from a jar will not give you the same bright, warming, slightly spicy flavor. Grate it on a microplane for the best result.
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced — Fresh garlic only. Adds depth and a savory punch that rounds out the sweetness of the honey.
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar — Cuts through the sweetness and adds a brightness that keeps the sauce from feeling heavy.
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil — Adds a nutty, toasty undertone. A little goes a long way — don’t overdo it.
  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch mixed with 2 tablespoons cold water — This is your thickening agent. It turns the sauce from a liquid into that glossy, clingy coating that makes this dish look and taste like it came from a restaurant.
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon neutral oil — For searing. Vegetable oil, avocado oil, or any high-smoke-point oil works here.

The bowl

  • 2 cups basmati rice, cooked — Fluffy basmati is the move here. The long grains soak up the sauce without getting soggy. Jasmine rice works just as well.
  • 4 heads baby bok choy, halved lengthwise — Quick to cook, slightly sweet, and a perfect green element to balance the richness of the chicken. If you can’t find bok choy, broccolini or regular broccoli florets are great substitutes.
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce — For sauteing the bok choy.
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil — Also for the bok choy. Keeps it simple but flavorful.

Garnishes

  • Sliced green onions — Fresh and sharp, they cut right through the richness of the sauce.
  • White and black sesame seeds — Adds a visual contrast and a subtle nutty crunch. Both colors together make the bowl look a lot more intentional, FYI.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Cook the rice

Start the rice first since it takes the longest. Cook your basmati according to the package directions — typically a 1:1.5 ratio of rice to water, brought to a boil, then reduced to a simmer with the lid on for about 15 minutes. Fluff with a fork and keep covered until ready to serve. If you have a rice cooker, even easier.

Step 2: Make the ginger honey sauce

In a small bowl, whisk together the honey, soy sauce, grated fresh ginger, minced garlic, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and black pepper. In a separate tiny bowl, mix the cornstarch with 2 tablespoons of cold water until smooth. Set both aside — you’ll need them ready to go once the chicken hits the pan. Things move fast from this point.

Step 3: Sear the chicken

Heat 1 tablespoon of neutral oil in a large skillet or wok over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the chicken pieces in a single layer — do not crowd the pan. If your skillet is small, cook in two batches. Crowding the pan steams the chicken instead of searing it, and you’ll miss out on those golden caramelized edges that add so much flavor. Sear for 3-4 minutes without moving the chicken, then flip and cook for another 2-3 minutes until golden on both sides and cooked through.

Step 4: Add the sauce

Pour the ginger honey sauce over the cooked chicken in the pan and stir to coat. Let it come to a simmer over medium heat — you’ll notice it start to bubble and reduce. Stir in the cornstarch slurry and keep stirring for about 1-2 minutes until the sauce thickens into a glossy, sticky coating that clings to every piece of chicken. If the sauce gets too thick, add a small splash of water to loosen it up. Taste and adjust — more honey for sweetness, a splash more soy for saltiness, a little more ginger if you want more heat.

Step 5: Cook the bok choy

While the chicken is saucing up, heat a separate pan over medium-high heat. Add a small drizzle of oil and place the halved bok choy cut-side down. Let them sit for 2 minutes without moving so they get a little color on the cut side. Flip, add 1 tablespoon of soy sauce and 1 teaspoon of sesame oil, and cook for another 1-2 minutes until the leaves are wilted but the stems still have a little bite. You want tender, not mushy.

Step 6: Assemble the bowl

Scoop a generous portion of fluffy basmati rice into each bowl. Add the ginger honey chicken alongside the rice, spooning any extra sauce from the pan directly over the chicken and rice. Tuck the sauteed bok choy into the bowl on the other side. The three components together — rice, chicken, greens — is what makes this a proper meal.

Step 7: Garnish and serve

Scatter sliced green onions and a generous pinch of white and black sesame seeds over the top. Serve immediately while everything is hot. This is a bowl that deserves to be eaten right away — the sauce is at its best when it’s fresh off the stove.

Serving suggestions

  • Keep it classic — Rice, chicken, and bok choy as described. Simple, balanced, and completely satisfying on its own.
  • Add a fried egg on top — A soft fried egg on top of this bowl takes it to a completely different level. The yolk breaks into the sauce and creates something truly special. Try it once and it becomes a permanent addition.
  • Swap the rice for noodles — Cooked rice noodles or soba noodles tossed directly in the ginger honey sauce make this feel like a completely different meal. Great for when you want to mix things up.
  • Add more vegetables — Broccoli florets, snap peas, sliced mushrooms, or baby spinach all work beautifully alongside or instead of the bok choy. Add them to the pan right before the sauce goes in.
  • Drizzle with chili oil — If you like heat, a drizzle of chili crisp or chili oil over the finished bowl adds a slow, warming burn that plays really well against the sweetness of the honey ginger sauce.
  • Serve family style — Put the chicken, rice, and bok choy in separate serving dishes in the middle of the table and let everyone build their own bowl. Works great for feeding a group without any extra effort.

Storage tips

Refrigerator: Store the chicken and sauce separately from the rice in airtight containers in the fridge for up to 4 days. The sauce thickens considerably as it cools — when reheating, add a small splash of water or soy sauce and stir over medium heat to loosen it back up.

Bok choy: Store the bok choy separately if possible. It tends to get soft and watery when stored with the chicken. Reheat quickly in a hot pan rather than the microwave to keep some texture.

Freezer: The ginger honey chicken freezes well without the rice or bok choy. Let it cool completely, transfer to a freezer-safe container, and freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.

Meal prep: This recipe is a solid meal prep option. Cook a big batch of rice and chicken at the start of the week and portion into containers with whatever vegetables you have on hand. Lunches and dinners sorted.

One last thing

Twenty minutes. One pan for the chicken, one pan for the bok choy, a pot of rice. That’s genuinely all this takes — and what you get in return is a bowl that looks and tastes like you put in way more effort than you actually did.

That’s what cooking should feel like. Not stressful, not complicated, not a project. Just good food that makes you happy you stayed in tonight.

If you make this ginger honey chicken, drop a comment below and let me know how it went. And if you’re saving it for later on Pinterest, I appreciate every single share — it helps more people find their way to recipes like this one.

With gratitude, Kip

Ginger honey chicken – the sweet, sticky 20-minute dinner bowl you’ll put on repeat

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 5 mins Cook Time 15 mins Total Time 20 mins
Servings: 4 Estimated Cost: $ 13

Description

This ginger honey chicken is a quick, flavor-packed dinner bowl built around a bold sauce of fresh ginger, honey, garlic, and soy sauce that caramelizes into a glossy coating over seared chicken. Served over fluffy basmati rice with tender sauteed bok choy, it's a complete meal that tastes like restaurant-quality takeout — made entirely in your own kitchen in 20 minutes flat.

Ingredients

For the chicken:

For the ginger honey sauce:

For the bowl:

For garnish:

Instructions

  1. Cook basmati rice according to package directions. Keep covered and warm until ready to serve.
  2. Whisk together honey, soy sauce, grated ginger, minced garlic, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and black pepper in a small bowl. Mix cornstarch with cold water in a separate bowl and set aside.
  3. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add chicken in a single layer and sear for 3-4 minutes without moving. Flip and cook for another 2-3 minutes until golden and cooked through.
  4. Pour the ginger honey sauce over the chicken and stir to coat. Bring to a simmer, stir in the cornstarch slurry, and cook for 1-2 minutes until the sauce is thick and glossy.
  5. In a separate pan, cook bok choy cut-side down for 2 minutes. Flip, add soy sauce and sesame oil, and cook for 1-2 more minutes until tender.
  6. Assemble bowls with rice, ginger honey chicken, and bok choy. Spoon extra sauce over the top.
  7. Garnish with sliced green onions and sesame seeds. Serve immediately.
Keywords: ginger honey chicken, honey ginger chicken bowl, easy chicken dinner, 20 minute chicken recipe, quick weeknight dinner, ginger honey sauce, chicken rice bowl, healthy chicken bowl
Did you make this recipe?

Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

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pinit

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Can I use ground ginger instead of fresh ginger?

Technically yes, but I'd really encourage you to use fresh if at all possible. Fresh ginger has a bright, warming, slightly spicy bite that ground ginger just cannot replicate. Ground ginger is more muted and earthy — it'll work in a pinch, but you'll notice the difference. If you do substitute, use ½ teaspoon of ground ginger in place of 1 tablespoon of fresh.

What can I use instead of bok choy?

Practically any quick-cooking green vegetable works here. Broccolini, broccoli florets, baby spinach, snap peas, or thinly sliced zucchini are all great options. Just adjust the cooking time — spinach wilts in about 60 seconds, while broccoli florets need 4-5 minutes.

How do I know when the sauce is thick enough?

The sauce is ready when it coats the back of a spoon and leaves a clean line when you drag your finger through it. It should look glossy and cling to the chicken rather than pool at the bottom of the pan. If it's still too thin, let it simmer for another minute. If it gets too thick, add a small splash of water.

Can I make this recipe ahead of time?

Yes. The chicken and sauce reheat really well. Cook everything as directed, let it cool, and store in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat the chicken gently in a pan over medium heat with a splash of water to loosen the sauce. Cook the rice and bok choy fresh when you're ready to eat — both are quick enough that it's worth doing fresh.

Is this recipe gluten free?

As written, no — soy sauce contains gluten. But it's an easy swap. Replace the soy sauce with tamari or coconut aminos in equal amounts and the recipe becomes fully gluten free. Make sure to check your hoisin sauce label too if you're using it in other recipes, as it often contains gluten.

Can I double this recipe for a larger group?

Absolutely. This recipe scales up really well. Just make sure you sear the chicken in batches rather than crowding the pan — that's the one step where quantity actually changes the technique. A crowded pan will steam the chicken instead of searing it, and you'll lose those golden caramelized edges that make this dish so good.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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