The Best Oven-Fried Chicken Wings

These baked buffalo wings are less messy than their iconic fried counterpart, and taste almost indistinguishable.

Why It Works

  • Air-drying the wings overnight helps them crisp up faster when you bake them, which corresponds to juicier meat in the end.
  • Baking powder adds surface area to the chicken wings, intensifying their crunch.

Anybody who thinks that a baked Buffalo wing is any healthier than the deep-fried real deal is about as delusional as Luigi thinking he's got a shot with the Princess while Mario is still around.

Oven-fried buffalo wings on a white rectangular plate with celery sticks and a glass cup of bleu cheese dressing.

Serious Eats / Mariel De La Cruz

A Buffalo wing is a piece of skin-coated, bone-in chicken fat that's deep-fried and doused in butter before being dipped in mayo, blue cheese, and sour cream. It's fat on fat on fat on fat on fat on fat on fat. Is taking one of those fats out of the equation really going to make a difference? Unlikely. Want to allay your unfounded guilt? Load up on negative calories by eating an extra celery stick or two and call it a day.

That said, there is a large percentage of the home cook population that's hesitant to heat up a few quarts of oil in their kitchens. (I'd be willing to wager my negligible income that the Venn diagram of people scared of frying and people who own well-seasoned cast iron woks looks like two non-overlapping circles.) It's a group of people who have had to be content with one of two categories of "oven-fried" chicken wings:

  • The flour-coated kind that stays crisp and absorbs sauce, but is more akin to KFC in texture than the thin-skinned original.
  • The naked kind that is juicy and tender, but lacks the blistered, crispy crust that crackles under your teeth and retains sauce so nicely.

Neither method is bad per se. Indeed, if Serious Eats contributor Blake Royer taught us anything with his baked-versus-fried wing taste test, it's that, depending on how you like your wings, these kinds can actually be better than their deep-fried counterparts.

Is it possible, though, to make Buffalo wings in the oven that are not "different but just as good," but actually indistinguishable from the deep-fried version? (Hint: If it wasn't, I wouldn't be writing this right now.)

Now, I'm well aware of the fact that, by definition, anything other than deep-fried wings tossed in a mixture of hot sauce and butter can never be called "Buffalo wings." So if you're the type of person who needs to point out authenticity rules like that, you might as well stop reading right now and find something more interesting to do.

I hear that the no-beans-in-chili folk and the no-cottage-cheese-in-lasagna crew are having an infidels'-recipe-burning party. Maybe you can crash.

For the rest of you, read on.

Characteristics of The Best Deep-Fried Wings

My first step: set a benchmark by deep-frying and analyzing a batch of wings.

Fried buffalo wing showing crisp skin.
Fried wings: crispy, blistered, and ideal for saucing.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

As you can see, the key characteristics are the well-rendered, blistered, bubbly, crackly skin and the moist, fatty meat underneath. Without this ultra-crisp skin, the wings would quickly become saturated in sauce and soggy. At the same time, blistered skin boasts much more surface area than smooth skin, leading to better sauce adhesion and packing more flavor into each bite.

A baked wing, on the other hand, has a problem:

Comparison of baked and deep fried chicken wing skin
Baked versus fried chicken skin.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

Despite near hour-long cooking times for some recipes, the skin never blisters in quite the same way—it stays smooth and tight. What little sauce can adhere to it rapidly causes it to turn soft and soggy.

So what does it take to get skin crisp? There are a few factors involved:

  • Dehydration and rendering: The crisp skin of a fried wing is made up of a hardened matrix of proteins, with some amount of liquid fat trapped in the interstitial spaces. Before this matrix can crisp, two things must happen: The water must be fully driven from it, and the subcutaneous fat from the chicken must liquefy, some of it draining out, some of it soaking into the meat, and some of it taking the place of the liquid. Frying, which takes place in an environment well above the boiling point of water, accomplishes this rapidly. Hot oil also transfers heat much more rapidly than hot air in an oven, causing this dehydration to proceed at an accelerated rate.
  • Browning: The Maillard reaction—the complex series of chemical reactions that create "brown" flavors and colors—occurs at a heightened rate at higher temperatures. In a pot of oil, this takes about 12 minutes. In an oven, it can take over an hour.
  • Blistering: As the chicken cooks, small bubbles of air or water trapped in the skin rapidly expand due to the heat. As this happens, it causes small, protein-reinforced bubbles to form. Some of these bubbles are lucky enough to simultaneously finish cooking and hardening as they form, increasing the skin's surface area and creating the familiar nooks and crannies on a well-fried wing.

So clearly, in order to achieve baked-chicken-wing perfection, my goal should be to find ways to increase the rate at which all three of these reactions occur.

My first thought was simple: Why not fry them in the oven? To this end, I preheated a rimmed baking sheet, with a half cup of oil coating the bottom, in a 450°F (230°C) oven.

"What's the point of oven-frying if it ends up even messier than stovetop frying?"

Once it was hot, I placed the chicken wings directly into the oil, where they immediately started sizzling, then placed them back in the oven. One flip and 25 minutes later, I had a batch of perfectly fried wings—along with an oven interior coated in grease, and an array of microscopic burns all along my arms from hot oil spitting out of the pan. What's the point of oven-frying if it ends up even messier than stovetop frying? I'd need to find a better method.

Using Chemistry to Improve Browning in Baked Wings

So what factors can affect browning? Well, temperature and time are the most obvious answers. But I knew that pH also had something to do with it.

For instance, adding a bit of extra baking soda to pancake batter—thereby making the batter more alkaline—improves its browning capabilities. Would the same trick work on my chicken wings? I baked five batches of wings on a rack set in a rimmed baking sheet: the first straight out of the package, the second tossed in salt before baking (in the hope that the salt would help draw out some of their moisture), one tossed in baking soda, one tossed in baking powder, and one soaked for two hours in a baking soda and water solution.

Comparison of baked buffalo wings tossed in salt, baking soda, baking powder, and soda-water solution
Wings baked after various treatments.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

As you can see, there is something to the notion that adding baking soda to raise the pH (thus making the wings more alkaline) indeed does help with browning—the baking soda–treated wing in the center is significantly browner than the plain wing on the left. The baking powder–treated wing is also browner, though to a lesser degree. (Baking powder is made of baking soda mixed with a powdered acid, and its overall makeup is only slightly alkaline.)

Unfortunately, the baking soda wings had a very distinct metallic bitterness that immediately eliminated them as an option. Baking powder was promising for its effect on browning, but did nothing to aid rendering or blistering.

What about a different cooking method? Would broiling work? Perhaps coating the wings in oil or butter in order to more efficiently transfer heat to them? What if I simply extended the cooking time until the damn things were crisp?

Fifteen different treatments of baked buffalo wings
Fifteen different treatments of wings, none of them any good.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

Well, extending cooking time doesn't work. Turns out that it is possible to overcook chicken wings—even after I'd brined them in salt water, they dried out to a state beyond edible by the time the skin crisped significantly. Broiling on its own led to wings that were burnt on the outside and raw in the center.

I tried slow-cooking the wings in a low oven, followed by broiling, but it proved nearly impossible to get the wings to crisp evenly—all I got was wings that were crisp on the top and bottom, but soft around the edges. Desirable for an Oreo, maybe, but not for chicken wings. Similarly, brushing the wings in oil or butter proved to ultimately have a negligible impact on the result.

The real problem? Moisture and fat loss. Well into their baking, the wings steadily release steam and drip rendered fat, showing absolutely no signs of browning until around 40 minutes in, when all the moisture and fat is finally expelled. I decided to shift gears: My goal would be to eliminate as much moisture and fat as possible before baking them.

Does Pre-Steaming Help Wings Crisp?

Fans of Alton Brown (including me!) may have seen his Buffalo wing episode, in which he suggests steaming the wings over a pot of water before drying, chilling, and baking them.

The goal? The steaming process supposedly helps some of the excess fat render out of the skin, decreasing the time they need to crisp in the oven. Also, when the hot wings are placed on a rimmed baking sheet fresh out of the steamer, their retained heat helps their moisture evaporate, leaving you with wings that are in fact drier than un-steamed wings fresh from the package. Very clever, Alton. I compared these wings to plain baked wings, and, for good measure, I also included a batch of wings that I'd given the Peking duck treatment: pouring a hot pot of boiling water over them prior to drying, supposedly to achieve similar goals.

I was very hopeful about this method—after all, hordes of internet followers blogging about their success can't all be wrong, can they?

Comparison of steamed versus baked buffalo wings
Alton's steaming method sounds promising, but fails to deliver when tested side by side.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

While Alton's methods are always interesting, and often spot-on, my guess is that none of the supporters of the steam-and-bake technique actually performed a side-by-side test. When push came to shove, the three batches were virtually indistinguishable from each other.

Give The Wings a Rest

Air drying chicken wing pieces in the refrigerator overnight
Pre-baked Buffalo wings air-drying overnight.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

It was time to call in the big guns. Sure, it'd be nice if I could pick up a package of wings on game day and have them ready for dipping in blue cheese a few hours later. But wishing it ain't gonna make it happen. As I discovered yet again, good results require careful thought, a bit of work, and plenty of time.

I decided to use a method that works wonders on whole birds and red-meat roasts alike: air-drying. Hopefully allowing the wings to dry on a rack overnight would dehydrate them enough that rapid browning could happen in the oven.

I set three new batches of wings on a rack set in a baking sheet and placed them, uncovered, in the refrigerator overnight. One was tossed with baking soda (a smaller amount than what had previously given me a bitter aftertaste), one was tossed with baking powder, and one was plain.

The next day, I removed the desiccated wings and baked them in a 425°F (218°C) oven, on the same rack that I'd dried them on. The results were even better than I'd expected:

Comparing baking soda and baking powder on baked buffalo wings
Both baking soda and baking powder help improve skin texture once the wings have dried overnight.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

Check out the hole structure on that, baby!

"the baking powder– and baking soda-treated wings showed markedly more bubbling and blistering"

Although the baking soda–laden wings still had an off flavor, both the baking powder– and baking soda-treated wings showed markedly more bubbling and blistering than their untreated counterpart—just as much as a regular fried wing, in fact!

Could such a dramatic difference be attributed merely to improved browning because of the Maillard reaction? That's part of the answer, but some research revealed that, most likely, it's a combination of factors.

Raising the pH does indeed improve browning, and it also creates an environment that weakens the peptide bonds naturally present in proteins. In theory, this means the proteins can break down more easily into shorter pieces, creating a texture that is less leathery or papery and more crispy. Is it true in reality? Well, my teeth tell me "yes," but my lack of an electron microscope tells me "maybe."

One final advantage from the baking powder: During its overnight rest on the chicken, it soaks up some of the protein-laden chicken juices from within. As it heats, it forms carbon dioxide gas in the same way that it would in a cookie dough or cake batter, inflating these juices into bubbles, which are then naturally hardened by the heat of the oven. And, as we all know, extra bubbles mean extra surface area, which means extra crunch!

Baked buffalo wings with dipping sauce
Baked Buffalo wings that are just as crisp and delicious as their fried counterparts.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

February 2010

Recipe Details

The Best Oven-Fried Chicken Wings

Prep 10 mins
Cook 40 mins
Active 15 mins
Resting Time 8 hrs
Total 8 hrs 50 mins
Serves 2 people

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds (900g) chicken wings, cut into drumettes and flats

  • 2 teaspoons (10g) baking powder

  • 2 teaspoons (10g) kosher salt; for table salt use half as much by volume or the same weight

  • 4 tablespoons (50g) unsalted butter

  • 4 tablespoons (60ml) Frank's RedHot Sauce

  • Blue cheese dressing, for serving

  • Celery sticks, for serving

Directions

  1. Line a rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil and set a wire rack inside. Carefully dry chicken wings with paper towels. In a large bowl, combine wings with baking powder and salt and toss until thoroughly and evenly coated. Place on rack, leaving a slight space between each wing. Repeat with remaining 2 batches of wings.

    Raw chicken wings tossed with salt and baking soda on a wire rack set inside of a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet.

    Serious Eats / Mariel De La Cruz

  2. Place baking sheet with wings in refrigerator and allow to rest, uncovered, at least 8 hours and up to 24 hours.

    A close up of the skin of chicken wings after they've been dried in the fridge overnight.

    Serious Eats / Mariel De La Cruz

  3. Adjust oven rack to upper-middle position and preheat oven to 450°F (230°C). Add chicken wings and cook for 20 minutes. Flip wings and continue to cook until crisp and golden brown, 15 to 30 minutes longer, flipping a few more times towards the end.

    The roasted (oven-fried) chicken wings on a wire rack set inside of a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet.

    Serious Eats / Mariel De La Cruz

  4. Meanwhile, combine butter and hot sauce in a small saucepan and cook over medium heat, whisking until combined. Transfer wings to a large bowl, add sauce, and toss to thoroughly coat. Serve wings immediately with blue cheese dressing and celery sticks, conspicuously shunning anyone who says that real Buffalo wings must be fried.

    A two image collage showing the buffalo sauce being whisked together in a saucepan, and then the cooked wings being tossed with the sauce in a metal mixing bowl.

    Serious Eats / Mariel De La Cruz

Special Equipment

Rimmed baking sheet, wire cooling rack

Notes

This recipe easily scales up and down. For every pound of chicken wings, use the following amounts of the other ingredients:

1 teaspoon (5g) baking powder
1 teaspoon (5g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt
2 tablespoons (25g) unsalted butter
2 tablespoons (30ml) Frank’s RedHot Sauce

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
458 Calories
47g Fat
6g Carbs
4g Protein
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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 2
Amount per serving
Calories 458
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 47g 61%
Saturated Fat 19g 95%
Cholesterol 85mg 28%
Sodium 3529mg 153%
Total Carbohydrate 6g 2%
Dietary Fiber 1g 3%
Total Sugars 2g
Protein 4g
Vitamin C 23mg 116%
Calcium 314mg 24%
Iron 1mg 5%
Potassium 214mg 5%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)