The Fried Chicken Wings Recipe That Will Ruin Every Other Wing For You

You bite into a wing. The crunch is so loud your table goes quiet.

That’s this recipe.

Not “pretty good for homemade” wings. Not “almost as good as the restaurant” wings. Wings that make people text you the next day asking when you’re making them again.

And here’s the thing nobody tells you — the secret isn’t some mystery ingredient. It’s two simple technique shifts that most home cooks skip. Stick around, because tip #1 alone will change everything.

What You’ll Need

The Wings

IngredientAmountNotes
Chicken wings (split)2 lbs (18–20 pieces)Flats + drumettes, pat very dry
Baking powder1 tspNOT baking soda — game changer (see Pro Tips)
Garlic powder1 tsp
Onion powder1 tsp
Smoked paprika1 tspAdds color + depth
Salt1 tsp
Black pepper½ tsp
Cayenne pepper½ tspAdjust to your heat level
All-purpose flour½ cup
Cornstarch½ cupThe crispy-coating secret
Eggs2 large
Whole milk¼ cup
Vegetable or peanut oil~4 cupsFor frying

Optional Buffalo Sauce

IngredientAmount
Unsalted butter4 tbsp
Frank’s RedHot sauce⅓ cup
Honey1 tsp
Garlic powder½ tsp

Tools Required

Recommended for you : air fried chicken

  • Large Dutch oven or deep heavy-bottomed skillet
  • Cooking thermometer (non-negotiable)
  • Wire rack + sheet pan
  • Long metal tongs
  • 2 large mixing bowls
  • Small saucepan (for sauce)
  • Paper towels
  • Zip-lock bag or large shallow bowl (for dredging)
  • Measuring spoons + cups

Pro Tips

These are the things that took my wings from “fine” to “can you make these every weekend.”

“Baking powder in chicken wings sounds weird. It’s not. It’s the single biggest upgrade you can make.”

1. Baking powder = shatteringly crispy skin. It draws moisture out of the skin and creates tiny air pockets during frying. The result: skin that cracks when you bite it, not skin that bends. Use aluminum-free baking powder if possible to avoid any metallic taste.

2. The overnight fridge rest is doing more than you think. After the dry rub, set wings uncovered on a wire rack in the fridge for at least 1 hour (overnight is better). The cold, dry air pulls surface moisture out. The dryer the skin going into the oil, the crispier it comes out.

3. Double fry. Always.

FryTempTimePurpose
First fry300–325°F8 minCooks the inside through
RestRoom temp5 minSteam escapes, coating firms up
Second fry375°F4–5 minCreates the crispy, golden crust

This is the move that separates good wings from great wings.

4. Thermometer or bust. Too low = greasy, sad wings. Too high = burnt outside, raw inside. 350–375°F is your frying sweet spot. Check it between every batch, because oil drops in temp fast when you add cold chicken.

5. Small batches only. Fry 4–5 wings max at a time. More than that and your oil temperature tanks. Cold oil = soggy coating. Patience pays off here.

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How to Make Fried Chicken Wings

Step 1: Dry the Wings Like You Mean It

Pat every wing completely dry with paper towels.

Then do it again.

Moisture is the enemy of crunch. Any water on the surface creates steam in the oil, which softens the coating before it has a chance to crisp.

Step 2: Season and Rest

Mix all dry seasonings (garlic powder, onion powder, smoked paprika, salt, pepper, cayenne, and baking powder) in a large bowl.

Toss the wings until fully coated. Set them on a wire rack over a sheet pan, uncovered, in the fridge for at least 1 hour — overnight if you can swing it.

This step is free crispy skin. Don’t skip it.

Step 3: Set Up Your Dredging Station

StationWhat Goes In
Bowl 12 eggs + ¼ cup milk, whisked
Bowl 2½ cup flour + ½ cup cornstarch, mixed

The cornstarch is what gives the coating that audible crunch. Flour alone goes soft. Flour + cornstarch stays crispy.

Step 4: Dredge Each Wing

  1. Dip wing in egg wash, let excess drip off
  2. Toss in flour-cornstarch mix, press gently to adhere
  3. Set back on wire rack
  4. Repeat for all wings before starting to fry

Step 5: Heat the Oil

Pour ~4 cups of oil into your Dutch oven (you want 2–3 inches depth).

Heat to 350°F over medium-high heat. Keep your thermometer in the oil the whole time.

Step 6: First Fry — The Cook

Carefully lower 4–5 wings into the oil using tongs.

Fry at 300–325°F for 8 minutes, turning once halfway. They should be pale golden — cooked through but not deeply colored yet.

Remove and rest on the wire rack for 5 minutes.

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Step 7: Second Fry — The Crunch

Bring oil back to 375°F.

Fry the same wings again for 4–5 minutes until deeply golden and visibly crispy. 🔥

Drain briefly on paper towels.

Step 8: Sauce + Serve

For buffalo sauce: Melt butter over low heat. Add hot sauce, honey, and garlic powder. Stir until smooth.

Toss wings right before serving — not before, or the coating softens.

Serve immediately with celery sticks + blue cheese or ranch.

Substitutions & Variations

Dietary Swaps

NeedSwap
Gluten-freeRice flour instead of all-purpose flour
Dairy-freeWater instead of milk in egg wash
Lower carbSkip coating entirely — just dry rub + fry
Air fryerSee below 👇

Sauce Variations

SauceHow to Make It
Honey GarlicButter + honey + soy sauce + minced garlic
Lemon PepperMelted butter + lemon zest + cracked black pepper
BBQYour favorite BBQ sauce, warmed
Dry Rub OnlyJust the seasoning mix — no sauce needed, honestly

Air Fryer Version

Skip the egg wash and flour coating. Use only the dry seasoning mix + baking powder.

Air fry at 400°F for 22–25 minutes, flipping halfway. Not identical to deep-fried, but still really crispy and a solid weeknight option.

Make Ahead Tips

Dry rub mix: Make a big batch and store in a jar. Lasts months. You’ll use it on everything.

Overnight rest: Best thing you can do for texture. Takes 2 minutes of effort the night before and makes a noticeable difference.

Partial fry ahead: Do the first fry, cool completely, refrigerate for up to 24 hours. When ready to serve, do the second fry (375°F, 5–6 minutes) right before eating. Great for hosting.

Nutrition Breakdown

(Per serving, approx. 4–5 plain fried wings, no sauce)

NutrientAmount
Calories~420 kcal
Protein28g
Carbohydrates18g
Fat28g
Saturated Fat6g
Sodium620mg

Adding buffalo sauce? That’s roughly +60–80 calories and +400mg sodium per serving — totally worth it.

Lower calorie option: Air fry instead of deep fry and save ~100–120 calories per serving.

What to Serve With Wings

  • Classic: Celery + blue cheese or ranch
  • Comfort: Mac and cheese, cornbread
  • Light: Simple green salad or coleslaw
  • Drinks: Cold beer, lemonade, or iced tea

Leftovers & Storage

MethodDurationBest Reheating
Fridge (airtight container)Up to 3 daysAir fryer 375°F, 6–8 min
Freezer (freeze flat first)Up to 2 monthsOven 400°F on rack, 12–15 min

The microwave is not your friend here. It turns crispy wings into rubbery ones in 60 seconds flat. Air fryer or oven only for reheating.

Pro storage tip: If you’re saving leftovers, keep the sauce separate. Sauced wings are much harder to re-crisp.

FAQ

Do I need a deep fryer? Nope. A Dutch oven or a deep, heavy-bottomed skillet works perfectly. You just need 2–3 inches of oil depth so the wings can float.

Can I skip the double fry? You can. Single fry at 350–375°F for 10–12 minutes works fine. But the double fry is the difference between “really good” and “why does this taste like a restaurant.”

Why is my coating falling off? Usually one of two things: the wings weren’t dry enough before dredging, or you didn’t give the coating time to adhere on the rack before frying. Both are easy fixes.

What’s the best oil for frying wings?

OilSmoke PointNotes
Peanut oil450°FBest flavor + performance
Vegetable oil400–450°FNeutral, widely available
Canola oil400°FGood budget option
Olive oil375°FNot recommended for deep frying

Can I use frozen wings? Yes — thaw completely in the fridge first, then pat very dry. The overnight dry-rest is especially important for frozen wings since they hold more moisture.

How do I know they’re done? Internal temperature of 165°F is the safe benchmark. If you’re double frying and the outside is deeply golden, you’re almost certainly there.

Wrapping Up

These wings aren’t complicated. They just ask you to actually follow the steps — the dry rest, the double fry, the thermometer — and when you do, they deliver every single time.

Make them once and you’ll have the technique memorized. Make them twice and people will start asking if you used to work in a kitchen.

Try them first with just the dry rub so you can taste what the coating actually does. Then sauce them. Then decide your favorite version — because there will be a next time, guaranteed.

Drop a comment below when you make these. I want to know: which sauce did you go with? Did you do the overnight rest? Did anyone in your house try to eat them straight off the wire rack before you could plate them? (Asking for a friend.) 👇

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