Red Braised Chicken Leg
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Savory-sweet with deep soy richness. Rock sugar adds a glossy caramel note, while star anise and ginger provide warm aromatics.
- Texture
- Fall-off-the-bone tender drumstick with silky, lacquered skin
- Spice Level
- Not spicy
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
Red braising (红烧, hóng shāo) is the backbone technique of eastern Chinese home cooking. Almost every family has their own version of red-braised chicken legs — it’s the dish kids grow up begging for, the one that fills apartment stairwells with its unmistakable caramel-soy aroma. In Shanghai and Jiangsu, the style leans sweeter than northern versions, with generous rock sugar creating a glossy, almost lacquered finish.
What to Expect
A whole chicken drumstick braised until the meat practically slides off the bone. The sauce is deep mahogany, thick enough to coat a spoon, balancing soy saltiness with a distinct sweetness. The skin goes silky and slightly gelatinous from the long braise — this is considered the best part. Served with steamed rice to soak up the sauce.
Tips
This is one of the safest orders for newcomers — no bones to navigate (just the one big drumstick bone), no tricky spice, and universally appealing flavors. Ask for extra rice — the sauce is the real star and you’ll want to mop up every drop.