Roasted Chicken Thighs With Peanut Butter BBQ Sauce
Updated June 23, 2023

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2tablespoons canola oil
- ¼cup minced onion (about ¼ medium onion)
- 2tablespoons tomato paste
- ½cup natural smooth peanut butter
- ¼cup low-sodium soy sauce
- ¼cup distilled white vinegar
- 2tablespoons turbinado or light brown sugar
- 2tablespoons unsulphured molasses
- 2teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
- 1½teaspoons kosher salt
- 1teaspoon black pepper
- ½teaspoon smoked paprika
- ½teaspoon cayenne
- 2pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs
- 2tablespoons canola oil
- ¾cup barbecue sauce
- Kosher salt
For the Barbecue Sauce
For the Chicken
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the barbecue sauce: In a medium saucepan, heat oil. Add onion and cook over moderate medium heat, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 2 minutes. Add tomato paste and cook, stirring, until lightly caramelized and deepened in color, about 2 minutes. Whisk in the remaining ingredients and 6 tablespoons water. Simmer until flavors are combined, and the sauce is slightly thickened, about 5 minutes.
- Step 2
Make the chicken: Heat oven to 425 degrees. Set a rack over a rimmed baking sheet.
- Step 3
In a large bowl, combine chicken, oil and ¼ cup of the barbecue sauce and season with salt. Toss to evenly coat and arrange on the rack. Roast, using a brush to baste with the remaining ½ cup sauce every 10 minutes, until the chicken is cooked through and deep golden in color, about 30 minutes. Serve with the leftover sauce on the side, or store sauce in the refrigerator for later use.
- Don’t worry if the sauce separates a little during cooking. (It’s just the natural oils in the peanut butter.) Once cooled, whisk the mixture to emulsify back together.
Private Notes
Comments
I freeze tomato paste in 1TB dollops then put the frozen globs in a freezer bag. Need tomato paste? Gotcha covered - and without opening up one of those little cans!
You could slather this sauce on a 2x4 and I would enthusiastically eat it.
With so many peanut butters now labeled "natural" can NYTimes clarify if the product intended should be peanuts only, versus the various peanut butters that include sugar and salt (also labeled "natural")? Thanks!
I can’t speak to the sauce itself but I used this cooking method for chicken with store bought barbecue sauce and it was not good. No sear on the chicken, sort of a wet and greasy taste in the chicken, and not flavorful. I would not recommend this cooking method for the chicken thighs themselves.
Delicious! Maybe I am just a “slow cooker,” haha, but this recipe took me an hour and a half, not 40 minutes.
I used this recipe more for the technique and used store bought bbq sauce. It came out great and my kid loved it
