Ayam Goreng Malaysian Fried Chicken is one of those recipes that stops people mid-bite and makes them ask, “What is that flavor?” The first time I made it for a Sunday gathering, my grandchildren cleared the platter before I even had a chance to sit down. It is that kind of recipe: deeply fragrant, beautifully crispy, and flavored all the way down to the bone.
I first discovered this dish when my neighbor Rosie, who had lived in Kuala Lumpur for several years, brought a platter to our neighborhood potluck. I remembered the smell of lemongrass and turmeric hitting the table from across the room, warm and golden and impossibly aromatic. I went home that night and started experimenting in my own kitchen. After a few weekends of testing, I landed on a version that has become one of my most-requested recipes. It is Malaysia’s answer to Southern Fried Chicken, and once you taste it, you will understand why it belongs right alongside any fried chicken I have ever made in this Midwest kitchen. Your kitchen is about to smell incredible.
Why Ayam Goreng Belongs in Your Recipe Box
I love this recipe because it delivers the kind of depth of flavor that usually takes hours of slow cooking, except here the marinade does all the heavy lifting while the chicken rests overnight in your refrigerator.
- The cornstarch coating creates a craggy, shatteringly crispy crust that is far crispier than an all-flour coating.
- The curry paste penetrates the meat during a 24-hour marinade, so every single bite is seasoned all the way through to the bone with no dipping sauce needed.
- The spice level is mild and family-friendly without sacrificing any of the aromatic depth from lemongrass, galangal, and toasted whole spices.
- You can marinate up to 48 hours ahead, making this a smart choice for meal prep or stress-free entertaining.
- It works beautifully as full bone-in pieces or cut into crispy chicken bites for a party appetizer.
Key Players in This Recipe
Lemongrass is the heart of this dish’s fragrance, bringing a bright citrusy floral note you simply cannot replicate. Use the white part only and chop it roughly before blending.
Fresh galangal looks similar to ginger but has a sharper, piney warmth. I always choose fresh galangal when I can find it at an Asian grocery store, but a substitute of extra ginger plus lime zest works well in a pinch.
Toasted whole spices (coriander, cumin, and fennel seeds) form the backbone of the marinade. In my kitchen, I always toast them in a dry skillet until just fragrant, about 2 minutes, because that brief heat unlocks their essential oils in a way ground spices cannot match.
Turmeric powder gives Ayam Goreng its iconic golden-orange color and contributes subtle earthiness. Your hands and cutting board will turn yellow, and it is completely worth it.
Full-fat coconut milk brings the curry paste together into a luscious, clingy marinade. The fat content helps the paste adhere to the chicken and carries the fat-soluble spice flavors deep into the meat during marinating.
Cornstarch is the non-negotiable secret to the crust. I have tested this with flour, and the difference is dramatic. Cornstarch fries up lighter and crunchier every single time. Do not substitute it.
Bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs and drumsticks are the ideal cut here. The bones add flavor during frying, and the skin crisps up gloriously. I always choose thighs under 7 oz each for even cooking without needing to finish them in the oven.
How to Make Ayam Goreng Step by Step
Step 1. Toast the coriander seeds, cumin seeds, and fennel seeds in a dry skillet over medium heat for about 2 minutes until fragrant. Transfer them immediately to your blender. I have learned that leaving them in the hot pan even a moment too long can make them bitter.
Step 2. Add all the remaining curry paste ingredients to the blender: garlic, ginger, galangal, lemongrass, shallots, curry powder, turmeric, chili powder, brown sugar, salt, and coconut milk. Blend until mostly smooth. A little texture is fine and actually adds character to the finished crust.
Step 3. Pour the curry paste over your chicken pieces in a large ziplock bag, seal it, and massage everything together until every piece is well coated. Refrigerate for 24 hours. This is the sweet spot I have found through testing this Ayam Goreng Malaysian Fried Chicken repeatedly. Forty-eight hours is the maximum.
Step 4. About 30 minutes before frying, pull the chicken from the refrigerator. Cold chicken dropped into hot oil causes the temperature to drop too fast and leads to uneven cooking. Preheat your oven to 175 degrees F (80 degrees C) and set a wire rack over a baking sheet to hold cooked pieces warm and crispy between batches.
Step 5. Add the cornstarch directly to the bowl of marinated chicken and toss well. You will watch it thicken the paste into a rough, craggy coating. That is exactly what you want.
Step 6. Pour oil into a heavy-based pot to about 2.5 inches deep. Heat over medium-high heat to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C). A cast iron Dutch oven is my strong preference here because the even heat retention produces consistent results.
Step 7. Carefully lower 3 pieces of chicken into the oil. Do not move them for the first 2 minutes. This is critical for the crust to set without tearing. The oil temperature will drop to around 300 degrees F. Raise your heat as needed. Fry thighs and drumsticks for 8 minutes until deep golden brown and the internal temperature at the thickest part reads 167 degrees F (75 degrees C).
Step 8. Transfer each batch to the rack in the warm oven while you fry the remaining pieces. This keeps everything crispy and ready to serve together.
Step 9. For the optional garnish, heat 3 tablespoons of oil in a small skillet over medium heat. Fry minced garlic and chili until the garlic turns light golden. Add the green onion and cook until the garlic is fully golden. Drain on paper towels and sprinkle with a pinch of salt. The crispy garlic scattered over the top takes this dish somewhere genuinely special.
Step 10. Plate the chicken immediately, garnished with fresh cilantro and the optional garlic-chili topping.
Important Notes Before You Fry
Chicken size matters more than most people expect. Thighs under 7 oz (200g) each will cook through perfectly in the fryer without any oven finish needed. Thighs over 8.8 oz (250g) should be fried to a very deep golden brown and then finished in a 375 degree F oven for 5 to 8 minutes to ensure the meat reaches a safe internal temperature.
Do not substitute flour for the cornstarch. The crispiness difference is real and significant.
An air fryer is not recommended here. The wet paste-style coating does not crisp properly without full submersion in oil.
If you are using table salt instead of kosher salt, reduce the amount to 1 teaspoon to avoid over-salting the paste.
Due to the strong seasoning and long fry time, the used oil is best reserved for similarly spiced dishes rather than neutral cooking.
Keeping Your Ayam Goreng Fresh
Leftover Ayam Goreng Malaysian Fried Chicken stores well in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 to 4 days. I always let the chicken cool completely before covering it because trapping steam softens the crust quickly.
For freezing, wrap individual pieces in plastic wrap before placing them in a sealed freezer bag. They keep well for up to 3 months, and individual wrapping means you can pull out exactly as many pieces as you need without them freezing together.
For reheating, skip the microwave. Place pieces on a wire rack over a baking sheet in a 375 degree F (190 degree C) oven for 12 to 15 minutes. The dry oven heat drives out the moisture that collects during refrigeration and brings the crust back close to its original crunch.
What to Serve With Ayam Goreng
This dish is bold and fragrant, so it pairs best with sides that complement its richness or provide a fresh contrast. Here are my favorite pairings from the Nonna Food kitchen.
Coconut Chicken Brothy Rice is a natural match. The coconut base echoes the coconut milk in the marinade, and the gentle broth balances the richness of the fried chicken beautifully.
Caramelised Soy Chicken in Garlic Ginger Broth with Rice works wonderfully as a lighter companion dish for a Southeast Asian spread when you want variety on the table.
Anti-Inflammatory Turmeric Chicken and Rice shares the golden turmeric palette of this recipe and makes a satisfying complete meal alongside it.
Easy Street Corn Chicken Rice Bowl adds a creamy, slightly sweet contrast that my family loves alongside the savory depth of Ayam Goreng.
For a fresh salad on the side, my Asian Mango Glazed Chicken inspired mango-forward salad components pair naturally with the lemongrass fragrance of this dish.
Other great options from the table include coconut rice, green papaya salad, sesame noodles served at room temperature, or a simple iceberg lettuce salad with sesame dressing.
FAQs
Substitute an equal amount of fresh ginger plus the zest of one lime. It is not identical, but the result is still fragrant and delicious.
Do not move the chicken at all for the first 2 minutes in the oil. That initial undisturbed contact is what allows the crust to bond to the skin before it sets.
Thighs and drumsticks are strongly recommended because their higher fat content keeps the meat moist through the long fry time. If you use breast, monitor the internal temperature closely and reduce frying time accordingly.
Ayam Goreng (Malaysian Fried Chicken)
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
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Toast the coriander seeds, cumin seeds, and fennel seeds in a dry skillet over medium heat for about 2 minutes until fragrant. Transfer immediately to your blender. Do not leave them in the hot pan.
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Add all remaining curry paste ingredients to the blender with the toasted spices: garlic, ginger, galangal, lemongrass, shallots, curry powder, turmeric, chili powder, brown sugar, salt, and coconut milk. Blend until mostly smooth. A little texture is fine.
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Pour the curry paste over the chicken pieces in a large ziplock bag. Seal and massage to coat every piece thoroughly. Refrigerate for 24 hours, up to 48 hours maximum.
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Remove the chicken from the refrigerator 30 minutes before frying. Preheat oven to 175 degrees F (80 degrees C) and set a wire rack on a baking sheet to hold cooked pieces warm and crispy between batches.
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Add cornstarch directly to the bowl of marinated chicken and toss well to form the craggy crust coating.
-
Pour oil into a heavy-based pot to a depth of 2.5 inches (6 cm). Heat over medium-high heat to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C).
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Carefully lower 3 chicken pieces into the oil. Do not move them for the first 2 minutes. Maintain oil temperature around 300 to 350 degrees F, adjusting heat as needed. Fry thighs and drumsticks for 8 minutes until deep golden brown and the internal temperature reaches 167 degrees F (75 degrees C).
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Transfer cooked chicken to the rack in the warm oven. Repeat with remaining pieces.
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For the optional garnish: heat 3 tablespoons of oil in a small skillet over medium heat. Fry minced garlic and chili until the garlic is light golden. Add green onion and cook until garlic is fully golden. Drain on paper towels and sprinkle with a pinch of salt.
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Plate the chicken immediately, garnished with fresh cilantro and the optional garlic-chili topping.

