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Korean Crispy Fried Chicken Sandwich

By Camille Torres May 8, 2026 7 min read
Korean Crispy Fried Chicken Sandwich

Korean fried chicken has taken over American fast-food menus and home kitchens alike. The combination of a perfectly crispy exterior, juicy chicken breast, and bold Korean flavors is nearly impossible to resist. This Korean Crispy Fried Chicken Sandwich brings everything you love about the trend straight to your dinner table in under an hour.

The secret to Korean fried chicken's signature crackle lies in a double-dip breading technique. The first dip creates a light, crispy base. The second, applied after an initial fry, creates that iconic shattering texture that makes every bite memorable. We are adding a gochujang mayo to bring authentic Korean heat to the sandwich, paired with crispy pickled daikon and cucumber for brightness and crunch.

## Why This Recipe Works

Korean fried chicken restaurants charge fifteen to twenty dollars per sandwich. This recipe, made at home, costs about three dollars in ingredients and takes thirty minutes of active cooking time. The flavor profile is nearly identical to what you will find at a trendy Korean chicken spot or a high-end fast-casual restaurant.

The double-fry method is what separates this from standard fried chicken. The first fry cooks the chicken through and creates the initial crust. The second fry, performed after the chicken cools for five minutes, shatters the exterior and creates those audible crackles that make Korean fried chicken unmistakable.

## Ingredients

### For the Chicken
- 2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts (about 1.5 pounds total)
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 2 tablespoons cornstarch
- 1 tablespoon garlic powder
- 1 tablespoon onion powder
- 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 0.5 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 cup buttermilk
- Oil for frying (vegetable or canola)

### For the Gochujang Mayo
- 0.5 cup mayonnaise
- 1.5 tablespoons gochujang (Korean red chili paste)
- 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- 1 teaspoon honey
- 2 cloves garlic, minced

### For Assembly
- 2 brioche burger buns, toasted
- 1 cup pickled daikon and cucumber (see below)
- 2 cups fresh butter lettuce
- 4 slices fresh tomato
- 2 tablespoons thinly sliced green onion
- 1 tablespoon sesame seeds

### For the Pickled Vegetables
- 1 cup julienned daikon radish
- 1 cup julienned cucumber
- 0.25 cup rice vinegar
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil

## Instructions

### Prepare the Pickled Vegetables (30 minutes ahead)
Combine the daikon and cucumber in a bowl. In a small saucepan, warm the rice vinegar, sugar, salt, and 0.25 cup water until the sugar dissolves completely. Pour the warm brine over the vegetables, stir in the sesame oil, and let sit for at least thirty minutes. This can be made several hours ahead and stored in the refrigerator.

### Prepare the Gochujang Mayo
Whisk together the mayonnaise, gochujang, rice vinegar, sesame oil, honey, and minced garlic in a small bowl. Set aside. This can be made up to two days ahead and refrigerated.

### Butterfly and Pound the Chicken
Place the chicken breasts on a cutting board. Using a sharp knife, carefully butterfly each breast by slicing horizontally through the thickest part, being careful not to cut all the way through. Open each breast like a book.

Place the butterflied breasts between two pieces of plastic wrap. Using a meat mallet, pound each breast to an even thickness of about three-quarters of an inch. Even thickness ensures the chicken cooks uniformly.

### Set Up the Breading Station
Pour the buttermilk into a shallow bowl. In another shallow bowl, combine the flour, cornstarch, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne pepper, salt, and black pepper. Whisk these dry ingredients together thoroughly.

### Bread the Chicken (First Coat)
Pat the chicken dry with paper towels. Submerge each breast in the buttermilk, coating both sides completely. Allow excess buttermilk to drip off, then coat each breast thoroughly in the flour mixture, pressing gently to ensure the coating adheres. Place the breaded chicken on a plate and let rest for five minutes.

### First Fry
Heat at least two inches of oil in a heavy-bottomed pot or Dutch oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Use a deep-fry thermometer to monitor the temperature closely. If the oil is too cool, the chicken will absorb excess oil and become greasy. If it is too hot, the exterior will burn before the interior cooks through.

Carefully place the breaded chicken into the hot oil. Do not crowd the pan. Fry for eight to ten minutes, turning halfway through, until the internal temperature reaches 165 degrees Fahrenheit at the thickest part. The exterior should be light golden brown.

Remove the chicken to a wire rack set over a baking sheet. Let rest for five minutes. This cooling period is crucial for the second fry.

### Second Fry (The Shattering Fry)
Increase the oil temperature to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Return each chicken breast to the hot oil for one and a half to two minutes per side until the exterior is deeply caramelized and crackles audibly when moved. The second fry should take no longer than three to four minutes total. If the chicken is left in too long, the exterior will burn.

Remove the chicken to a clean wire rack. You will hear the characteristic crackle as the hot oil drains away.

### Toast the Buns
While the chicken is resting after the second fry, lightly butter the cut sides of the brioche buns and toast them in a skillet or toaster oven until golden and slightly crispy.

### Assemble the Sandwiches
Spread the gochujang mayo on the bottom half of each toasted bun. Layer with a handful of butter lettuce and two tomato slices. Top with one crispy fried chicken breast.

Add a small handful of the pickled daikon and cucumber on top of the chicken. Sprinkle with sliced green onion and sesame seeds. Top with the upper bun.

Serve immediately while the chicken is still hot and crispy.

## Timing and Make-Ahead Tips

The pickled vegetables can be made up to three days ahead. The gochujang mayo can be made up to two days ahead. The chicken can be breaded and refrigerated for up to four hours before frying.

The entire sandwich comes together in under forty-five minutes if you have the components ready. Most of that time is spent frying and letting the chicken cool between frys.

## Why This Matters

Korean fried chicken is one of the most significant food trends of the 2020s. It has moved from trendy Asian restaurants into mainstream fast-casual chains and eventually into home kitchens. Understanding the double-fry technique and the flavor profiles of gochujang mayo unlocks dozens of variations beyond this single recipe.

Once you master this method, you can apply it to chicken thighs, wings, or even cauliflower. You can adjust the heat level by adding more or less gochujang. You can experiment with different pickled vegetables or swap the mayo for a spicy sour cream base.

This recipe represents what great home cooking should be: accessible, delicious, and built on a foundation of technique rather than expensive ingredients or special equipment.

## Serving Suggestions

Serve this sandwich with cold noodles tossed in a light sesame vinaigrette, or with a simple slaw dressed in rice vinegar and sesame oil.

A cold lager or crisp white wine pairs perfectly with the spicy, savory flavors. The acidity cuts through the richness of the fried chicken and mayo beautifully.

Leftover pickled vegetables can be served alongside any other meal for the next few days. Leftover gochujang mayo keeps for up to five days in the refrigerator and is excellent on grilled vegetables, roasted pork, or even as a dipping sauce for fries.

Camille Torres
Written by
Camille Torres
Recipes & Technique
Camille tests every recipe before it publishes. Her specialty is restaurant-quality results at home with minimum equipment and maximum flavor.
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