This huli huli chicken recipe is one of those dishes that stops people mid-bite and asks “what is in this?” The answer is a sweet, savory, deeply caramelized marinade built on pineapple juice, soy sauce, brown sugar, ginger, and garlic — all grilled over medium heat until the outside is lacquered, slightly charred, and completely irresistible.
I have made this for summer cookouts, weeknight dinners, and everything in between. It always disappears fast. The marinade does almost all of the work, and the glaze that goes on at the end is what takes it from great to genuinely restaurant-quality.
If you have never made huli huli chicken at home before, this is the recipe to start with.

WHAT IS HULI HULI CHICKEN?
Huli huli chicken is a Hawaiian grilled chicken dish that dates back to 1955, when Honolulu businessman Ernest Morgado used a family marinade recipe to grill chicken at a fundraiser. The dish was an immediate hit and became a Hawaiian institution practically overnight.
The word “huli” is Hawaiian for “turn” — a reference to the way the chicken is flipped repeatedly over the grill while being basted with sauce each time. That constant turning and basting is what builds the sticky, lacquered glaze that makes this recipe so iconic.
Today you will find huli huli chicken at roadside stands across the Hawaiian islands, cooked over kiawe wood in large wire-frame grilling baskets. This recipe brings all of that flavor home using a standard backyard grill and ingredients you can find at any grocery store.
WHY THIS HULI HULI CHICKEN RECIPE WORKS
I have tested this recipe enough times to know exactly why each part of it matters. Here is what makes it work:
- Chicken thighs over breasts: Thighs have more fat which keeps them juicy over the high heat of a grill. Chicken breasts will dry out. I always use thighs for this recipe and I strongly recommend you do the same.
- Overnight marinating: Four hours is the minimum but overnight is where the magic happens. The pineapple juice gently tenderizes the meat while the soy sauce and sugar penetrate deep into the chicken. You can taste the difference.
- The cornstarch glaze: Reducing the reserved marinade and thickening it with a cornstarch slurry gives you a sticky, lacquered finish instead of a thin, watery sauce. This is the step most recipes skip, and it is the one that matters most for that authentic huli huli look and flavor.
- Slight char is not a mistake: A little caramelized color on the outside is the signature of this dish. Do not pull the chicken the moment you see the edges darkening. That char is flavor.
- Grated onion in the marinade: This is the restaurant trick most home recipes leave out. One tablespoon of grated onion added to the marinade gives the finished chicken a deeper, more complex Hawaiian BBQ flavor that is hard to put your finger on but impossible to miss.

INGREDIENTS
For the Marinade and Glaze:
- 2 lbs chicken thighs or drumsticks
- 3/4 cup pineapple juice
- 1/2 cup low-sodium soy sauce
- 1/3 cup brown sugar
- 1/4 cup ketchup
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 tbsp fresh ginger, grated
- 1 tbsp rice vinegar or apple cider vinegar
- 1 tsp sesame oil
- 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tbsp grated onion (the restaurant trick — do not skip this)
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 1 to 2 tsp sriracha or chili garlic sauce (optional)
For the Glaze:
- 1 tbsp cornstarch
- 2 tbsp cold water
Garnish:
- Green onions, sliced
- Sesame seeds
Ingredient Notes:
Use canned or bottled pineapple juice, not fresh. Fresh pineapple juice contains an enzyme called bromelain that will over-tenderize the chicken and make it mushy. Canned is the right call here every time.
Low-sodium soy sauce keeps this from being too salty once the marinade reduces down into a glaze. Regular soy sauce works but I always go low-sodium for this recipe.
Fresh ginger makes a noticeable difference over ground. I keep a knob of ginger in my freezer and grate it straight from frozen — it is easier to grate and the flavor is just as good.

HOW TO MAKE HULI HULI CHICKEN — STEP BY STEP
Time needed: 45 minutes
- Make the Marinade:
Whisk together the pineapple juice, soy sauce, brown sugar, ketchup, garlic, ginger, vinegar, sesame oil, Worcestershire sauce, grated onion, black pepper, and sriracha if using. Whisk until the brown sugar is fully dissolved.
Before adding any chicken, pour off and reserve 1/2 cup of the marinade into a separate container and refrigerate it. This reserved portion will become your glaze and must never touch raw chicken.
- Marinate the Chicken:
Place the chicken thighs in a large zip-lock bag or shallow dish. Pour the remaining marinade over the chicken and turn to coat. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours, or overnight for the best results.
When you are ready to cook, remove the chicken from the refrigerator and let it sit at room temperature for about 20 minutes. This helps it cook more evenly on the grill.
- Grill the Chicken:
Preheat your grill to medium heat and oil the grates well. Huli huli marinade contains a lot of sugar which makes it prone to sticking — a well-oiled grate is important.
Remove the chicken from the marinade and discard the used marinade. Grill over medium heat for 25 to 30 minutes, turning every 8 to 10 minutes. You want consistent turning — this is the “huli huli” method and it is what builds even color and caramelization on all sides.
Do not rush the heat. Medium is the right temperature. High heat will burn the outside before the inside is cooked through.
- Make the Glaze:
While the chicken is grilling, bring the reserved marinade to a boil in a small saucepan. Mix the cornstarch and cold water together in a small bowl until smooth, then stir the slurry into the boiling marinade. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, stirring, until the glaze is thick and glossy. Remove from heat.
- Glaze and Finish:
In the last 5 minutes of grilling, brush the thickened glaze generously onto the chicken on all sides. Let it cook into the surface and caramelize slightly. This is the step that gives you that sticky, lacquered finish. A little char at the edges during this step is normal and desirable.
Pull the chicken when it reaches an internal temperature of 165°F. Let it rest for 5 minutes before serving.
- Oven Method:
No grill? Preheat the oven to 400°F. Place the marinated chicken on a wire rack set over a foil-lined baking sheet. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, brushing with the thickened glaze in the last 5 minutes. Broil for 2 to 3 minutes at the end if you want more color on top.
THREE TRICKS THAT MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE
- Grill pineapple slices alongside the chicken. Brush them with a little of the marinade and grill until caramelized. Serve them right next to the chicken — the combination is classic Hawaiian and genuinely incredible.
- Baste repeatedly near the end. Do not apply the glaze once and call it done. Brush, let it set for a minute, brush again. Each layer builds on the last, and that is how you get that deep, sticky lacquer.
- Do not fear the char. The slightly smoky, caramelized edges are the signature of authentic huli huli chicken. That is not burning — that is flavor.
WHAT TO SERVE WITH HULI HULI CHICKEN
The classic Hawaiian plate is simple and perfect — steamed white rice, a scoop of Hawaiian macaroni salad, and grilled pineapple on the side. That is what you would get at a roadside stand on Oahu and it is exactly right.
At home I usually do steamed jasmine rice and grilled pineapple at minimum. When I am feeding a crowd I add coleslaw and dinner rolls. This chicken also works beautifully sliced over a salad or stuffed into a sandwich with grilled pineapple and a little extra glaze.

FAQ — HULI HULI CHICKEN RECIPE
Huli is the Hawaiian word for “turn.” Huli huli chicken gets its name from the traditional cooking method where the chicken is turned repeatedly over an open flame while being basted each time.
You can, but I strongly recommend thighs. They have more fat which keeps them juicy over the high heat of a grill. Chicken breasts dry out easily with this cooking method. If you do use breasts, pound them to an even thickness and reduce the cooking time.
No. Fresh pineapple contains bromelain, an enzyme that will break down the proteins in the chicken and make it mushy. Always use canned or bottled pineapple juice for this recipe.
At least 4 hours, but overnight is best. Do not marinate longer than 24 hours — the acid in the pineapple juice will start to break down the texture of the meat if left too long.
The sugar in the marinade caramelizes quickly over high heat. Make sure your grill is on medium, not high, and keep turning the chicken every 8 to 10 minutes. If it is charring too fast, move it to indirect heat to finish cooking through.
Yes. The marinade can be made up to 3 days ahead and refrigerated. The chicken can marinate overnight. The glaze can be made while the chicken grills. This is a great prep-ahead recipe.
STORAGE AND REHEATING
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The glaze makes the chicken slightly sticky so a container works better than foil wrap.
- Freezer: Freeze cooked chicken in a freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
- To reheat: Warm in a 350°F oven for 10 to 15 minutes, or microwave in 60-second intervals. Add a light brush of extra glaze when reheating to bring the sticky finish back.

LOOKING FOR MORE GRILLING RECIPES? TRY THESE
The Best Grilled Teriyaki Chicken Thighs
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Juicy and Tender Carne Asada Grilled to Perfection
Easy Serbian Cevapi Sausages – Balkan Grilled Meat Recipe
FINAL THOUGHTS
This huli huli chicken recipe has become one of my most requested dishes every summer. Once you make it the first time you will understand why — the combination of sweet pineapple, savory soy, and that sticky caramelized glaze is genuinely hard to beat. The overnight marinade does most of the work and the glaze takes maybe five minutes. For the payoff you get, the effort is minimal.
Remember to use chicken thighs, marinate overnight, and do not skip the glaze step. Those three things make all the difference.
If you made this recipe I would love to hear how it turned out! Drop a comment below — did you grill pineapple alongside it? Did you add the sriracha? Did your family ask for it again the next week like mine did? Leave a star rating too if you loved it — it helps other home cooks find this recipe and it genuinely means a lot. Happy grilling! 🍍🔥

Huli Huli Chicken Recipe – Sticky, Smoky Hawaiian Grilled Chicken Thighs
Equipment
- Gas or Charcoal Grill
Ingredients
For the Marinade and Glaze:
- 2 lbs chicken thighs (or drumsticks)
- ¾ cup pineapple juice
- ½ cup low-sodium soy sauce
- ⅓ cup brown sugar
- ¼ cup ketchup
- 3 cloves garlic (minced)
- 1 tbsp fresh ginger (grated)
- 1 tbsp rice vinegar (or apple cider vinegar)
- 1 tsp sesame oil
- 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tbsp onion (grated)(the restaurant trick — do not skip this)
- ½ tsp black pepper
- 2 tsp sriracha (apple cider vinegar)
For the Glaze:
- 1 tbsp cornstarch
- 2 tbsp cold water
Garnish:
- Green onions sliced
- Sesame seeds
Instructions
- Make the Marinade: Whisk together the pineapple juice, soy sauce, brown sugar, ketchup, garlic, ginger, vinegar, sesame oil, Worcestershire sauce, grated onion, black pepper, and sriracha if using. Whisk until the brown sugar is fully dissolved.Before adding any chicken, pour off and reserve 1/2 cup of the marinade into a separate container and refrigerate it. This reserved portion will become your glaze and must never touch raw chicken.
- Marinate the Chicken: Place the chicken thighs in a large zip-lock bag or shallow dish. Pour the remaining marinade over the chicken and turn to coat. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours, or overnight for the best results.When you are ready to cook, remove the chicken from the refrigerator and let it sit at room temperature for about 20 minutes. This helps it cook more evenly on the grill.
- Grill the Chicken: Preheat your grill to medium heat and oil the grates well. Huli huli marinade contains a lot of sugar which makes it prone to sticking — a well-oiled grate is important.Remove the chicken from the marinade and discard the used marinade. Grill over medium heat for 25 to 30 minutes, turning every 8 to 10 minutes. You want consistent turning — this is the "huli huli" method and it is what builds even color and caramelization on all sides.Do not rush the heat. Medium is the right temperature. High heat will burn the outside before the inside is cooked through.
- Make the Glaze: While the chicken is grilling, bring the reserved marinade to a boil in a small saucepan. Mix the cornstarch and cold water together in a small bowl until smooth, then stir the slurry into the boiling marinade. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, stirring, until the glaze is thick and glossy. Remove from heat.
- Glaze and Finish: In the last 5 minutes of grilling, brush the thickened glaze generously onto the chicken on all sides. Let it cook into the surface and caramelize slightly. This is the step that gives you that sticky, lacquered finish. A little char at the edges during this step is normal and desirable.Pull the chicken when it reaches an internal temperature of 165°F. Let it rest for 5 minutes before serving.
- Oven Method: No grill? Preheat the oven to 400°F. Place the marinated chicken on a wire rack set over a foil-lined baking sheet. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, brushing with the thickened glaze in the last 5 minutes. Broil for 2 to 3 minutes at the end if you want more color on top.













