Old-Fashioned Southern Sticky Chicken
This Southern Sticky Chicken is a classic, bone-in dinner that delivers tender, juicy meat coated in a thick, caramelized glaze. With just ketchup, honey, and soy sauce, this family-favorite recipe transforms 3 to 5 pounds of chicken into a sweet and savory masterpiece in about 90 minutes!

A Quick Look At The Recipe
- Recipe Name: Old-Fashioned Southern Sticky Chicken
- Ready In: 100 minutes
- Serves: 4
- Main Ingredients: 3 -5 pounds bone-in chicken with skin, 1 cup ketchup, 1 cup honey, 1 cup brown sugar, 1/2 cup soy sauce, 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- Why You'll Love It: This Southern Sticky Chicken is an oven classic! Simmering a simple honey-soy glaze and baking the chicken low and slow gives you tender meat and a thick, caramelized coating that no one can resist!
The Sunday Dinner Staple You Can Make on a Tuesday
This sweet and sticky chicken is an old-fashioned Southern recipe that has been around for about as long as folks have been cookin’! The recipe has evolved and been tweaked over the years, but the flavorful sticky marinade that clings to the chicken is still every bit as good as folks remember from the days when Granny used to make it for Sunday dinner.
All you have to do is mix up the sticky chicken marinade, which has equal parts sweet and savory ingredients, to make a sauce that’s irresistible. Then you bring the sauce ingredients to a boil, pour them over the chicken pieces, and bake. The result is tender and juicy chicken soaked in a deliciously caramelized and sweet Asian-style sauce!
I love this sticky chicken recipe because it’s easy to make, which means it makes a great weeknight dinner, plus, it’s even easier to double for leftovers and lunches. You can serve your meal with rice, vegetables, or a slew of other Southern sides.
Other Asian-inspired meals I recommend include crockpot cashew chicken, Asian-inspired pot roast, chicken fried rice, and Chinese chicken salad.
Recipe Ingredients
- Bone-in chicken with skin
- Ketchup
- Honey
- Brown sugar
- Soy sauce
- Garlic powder
Recipe Notes
- If you want your marinade to have a bit of a spicy kick, add in a couple of tablespoons of chili garlic sauce, a tablespoon of sriracha hot sauce, or a sprinkle of paprika, , or cayenne pepper. Basically, whatever heat you have on hand!
- If you have a soy allergy, use tamari instead.
- Substitute brown sugar for granulated sugar, maple syrup, or an extra two tablespoons of honey.
How to Make Sticky Chicken
1. Simmer the Sauce
In a medium saucepot, whisk together your ketchup, honey, brown sugar, soy sauce, and garlic powder. Place it over medium-high heat. You aren’t looking to cook it down for long, just bring it to a rolling boil so all those sugars melt together into one smooth, glossy marinade!

2. Prep the Chicken
Preheat your oven to 350°F. Arrange your chicken pieces in a 9×13 baking dish. I find it easiest to use tongs here so I can tuck everything in neatly. Pour that hot, sticky sauce right over the top, making sure every piece gets a good coating!

3. The First Bake
Slide the dish into the oven, uncovered. Let it bake for 45 minutes. At this point, the sauce will be starting to thin out and bubble. Use your tongs to flip every piece of chicken over so the underside can take a turn soaking in that liquid gold.
4. Flip and Baste
Bake for another 30 minutes. Flip the chicken one last time so the skin side is back on top. Use a spoon to scoop up the sauce from the bottom of the pan and pour it over the top of each piece.

NOTE: Cooking time is the same if you use legs and thighs.
5. The Grand Finale
Bake for the final 15 minutes. This is when the magic happens: the sauce will thicken up significantly and “stick” to the chicken. Once it’s out, let it rest for a few minutes so the glaze sets.
Booyah! Easy sticky chicken!

What To Serve With Southern Sticky Chicken
Whatever you like! You can go for an Asian takeout-style meal and serve it with rice, sliced green onion, broccoli, and a sprinkle of sesame seeds. More traditional Southern pairings include Fresh Green Beans, Broccoli with Homemade Cheese Sauce, Broccoli Salad with Bacon, or Tomato, Onion, and Cucumber Salad.
Storage
This recipe will last up to 5 days in an airtight container in the fridge. It will also keep in the freezer for up to four months. When it’s time to reheat your leftovers, simply warm them up in the microwave!
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Ingredients
- 3 -5 pounds bone-in chicken with skin folks usually use legs and/or thighs
- 1 cup ketchup
- 1 cup honey
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1/2 cup soy sauce
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350.
- In a saucepot, combine ketchup, honey, brown sugar, soy sauce, and garlic powder over medium to medium-high heat.
- Bring it just to a boil while stirring. Remove from heat.
- Arrange chicken pieces in a 9×13 baking dish. Pour the entire amount of sauce over the chicken, turning pieces with tongs to coat.
- Place in oven, uncovered, for 90 minutes, turning after 45 minutes.
- 15 minutes before cooking time is up, flip pieces once more and baste with sauce.
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Hi Christy, The chicken looks ready to eat. My store also had chicken breats on sale, now I have my weekend menu. And I have the same complete set of the green Corelle dishes. They were my grandmother’s dishes and now they are mine. We use them everyday. The dishes are about 30/35 years old. I love them.
I’m giving this a go tonight. It sounds wonderful and with the cool Pac. NW weather, I think will taste heavenly.
As for music, it was mostly country & western in our household,though I wasn’t a particular fan. I lloved going to my aunts to listen to her play classical on the piano. Music from the 50’s always makes me happy though, so it’s a plus!
Hey Christy and the rest of y’all!
I read with excitement the Sticky Chicken recipe to see if it sounded remotely like my Granny’s-Well let me tell y’all, Christy and I have the same Granny!! This recipe is amazing and my Granny used to make it with mashed potatoes and some kind of greens-Thanks for a little memory of my childhood in the 50’s and 60’s!!
I am 42 and listened to a variety of music. Including Elvis, Buddy Holly, lots of disco, Eagles, Jazz, classic country, blue grass, Anything on the radio. We didn’t get alot of cassette tapes until we were teenagers. Mostly records. Some Beatles and Bay City Rollers. 🙂 List is too long to write here. LOL! Lots of good stuff. Usually listened to while making dinners with our mother.
Growing up my mom played Johnny Mathis and Roberta Flack; dad listened to jazz; Horace Silver, Art Blakey, Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie… and my aunt listened to opera, Bach, Beethoven…! What an eclectic mix!! But you my dear, have just solved my Sunday dinner dilema. Thank you ever so much!!!!!!!!!!!!
Definitely sounds yummy, but I, too, LOVE the plate. Had them growing up. 🙂 Brings back memoires.
Hi Christy,
Thanks for sharing this great looking recipe. I listened to Three Dog Night, The Carpenters, Bread (My Favorite!), Loretta Lynn and the other country stars of the 70’s. I graduate from High School in 1976, so I loved the late 60’s and 70’s music, with the exception of Disco, although I loved the Bee Gees-Rest in Peace Robin Gibb, Maurice and Andy Gibb.