Paleo Fried Chicken is the gluten-free answer to crispy oven fried chicken! Made with an almond flour and almond meal base for the perfect texture!
There is nothing like some crispy fried chicken. AM I RIGHT?
If you love fried chicken but are looking for a grain-free, gluten-free, Whole30, Keto, Low-Carb, or Paleo option, I have got you covered! Yup, you heard that right, this recipe is Paleo and Whole30 compliant, and it couldn’t be more delicious.
This oven fried chicken is coated in a crispy grain-free mixture (almond flour and almond meal mixed with spices!) and baked in the oven until it reaches that peak crispy perfection. It is not anything like the boring oven-fried chicken you may have had in the past!
What Is The Difference Between Fried Chicken and Oven-Fried Chicken?
There is one big difference between regular fried chicken and oven-fried chicken. Regular fried chicken is usually deep-fried in a vat of oil. You typically need to use a deep fryer or get a large pot of oil and a heat resistant strainer.
That’s where the difference of oven-fried chicken comes in handy. Oven-fried chicken opts out of the deep fry method, and instead, you cook the chicken in the oven, using a LOT less oil, making it way less messy and wasteful (no thanks to dumping cups of oil after deep-frying).
When done right, oven-fried chicken can taste just as good as regular fried chicken, especially when you have a recipe as good as this one!
How To Make Paleo Fried Chicken
After playing around with different ratios of almond meal, almond flour, and spices, I finally nailed this paleo fried chicken recipe, and man, it is GOOD.
- Place an oven rack in the upper third position. Preheat oven to 350F and prepare a baking sheet by lining it with tin foil and placing the cooking rack on top. Use the olive oil sprayer to generously coat the cooking rack. Mix the almond meal and almond flour in a bowl. Use a fork to sift through and break up any clumps.
- Add spices to flour mixture and use a fork to mix thoroughly.
- In a separate bowl (flat enough to dip each piece of chicken in) beat the eggs with the almond milk.
- Grab a small baking sheet or plate, use a spoon to spread some of the almond flour on the bottom of the tray. You are going to use this to coat the chicken instead of dipping in the almond flour. You are doing this for two main reasons – almond flour tends to absorb moisture and get crumbly which you desperately want to avoid so you can get a good crumb and because you only need about 3/4 of the almond mixture and we don’t want to contaminate it all with raw chicken. You should have your small tray or plate, skinless, bone-in chicken, almond flour mixture with spices, beaten eggs, and olive oil mister set to the side.
5. Dip a piece of chicken in the egg until well coated.
6. Place on the tray and use the spoon to dump some more of the flour mixture on top of the chicken. Pat the flour mixture onto the chicken until all sides are coated and place on the cooking rack.
7. Repeat until all of the chicken is evenly coated and on the cooking rack. Make sure to leave space around each piece of chicken. Finally, use the olive oil sprayer to give each piece of chicken a nice coating (it should shine or appear misted).
8. Discard the beaten egg and any of the flour mixture that raw chicken came into contact with. Save any of the flour mixture that is reserved (and did NOT come into contact with raw chicken).
Recipe Tips:
- I very rarely tell you to buy stuff just to make a dish but if you are serious about oven-fried chicken, you need an elevated baking tray (they are called cooling racks) so the bottom can get crispy instead of soggy.
- If you want to avoid non-stick cooking sprays, get an olive oil mister. The spray of olive oil before going into the oven is crucial for crispy-success!
- I used a combination of almond meal (ground raw almonds with their skins on) and blanched almond flour (finely ground blanched and skinless almonds). You can make your own almond meal if you have raw almonds and a food processor. Trader Joe’s also sells it pretty cheap ($3.99 / lb). As for the blanched almond flour, I just buy that! I have tried this recipe with just almond meal and with just almond flour as well as other combinations and it didn’t have the crunch.
- You can make this with all legs, thighs, breasts or any combo of the above. But if you go with a whole chicken, make sure to ask the butcher to remove the skin and cut it into 8 pieces (2 breasts, 2 thighs, 2 legs, and 2 wings). This is a major time saver!
More Gluten-Free Chicken Recipes:
Did you make this recipe? Please give it a star rating below!
Paleo Fried Chicken is the gluten-free answer to crispy oven fried chicken! Made with an almond flour and almond meal base for the perfect texture!
- 4 to 5 pound whole chicken cut up into 8 pieces, skin removed
- 1.5 cups almond meal
- 3/4 cup blanched almond flour
- 1.5 Tablespoons kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
- 1.5 teaspoons paprika
- 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- 2 large eggs beaten
- 1/8 cup plain unsweetened non-dairy milk
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Place an oven rack in the upper third position (second one from the top). Preheat oven to 350F. Prepare a baking sheet by lining it with tin foil and placing the cooking rack on top. Use the olive oil sprayer to generously coat the cooking rack.
-
Mix the almond meal and almond flour in a bowl. Use a fork to sift through and break up any clumps.
Add salt, pepper, cayenne, paprika, oregano and garlic powder to flour and use fork to mix thoroughly.
-
In a separate bowl (flat enough to dip each piece of chicken in) beat the eggs with the almond milk.
-
Grab a small baking sheet or plate. You are going to use this to coat the chicken instead of dipping in the almond flour.
You are doing this for two main reasons - almond flour tends to absorb moisture and get crumbly which you desperately want to avoid so you can get a good crumb and because you only need about 3/4 of the almond mixture and we don't want to contaminate it all with raw chicken. You should have your small tray or plate, skinless, bone-in chicken, almond flour mixture with spices, beaten eggs and olive oil mister set to the side.
-
Use a spoon to spread some of the almond flour on the bottom of the tray.
-
Dip a piece of chicken in the egg until well coated.
-
Place on tray and use the spoon to dump some of the flour mixture on top of the chicken. Pat the flour mixture onto the chicken until all sides are coated and place on the cooking rack.
-
Repeat until all of the chicken is evenly coated and on the cooking rack. Make sure to leave space around each piece of chicken. Finally, use the olive oil sprayer to give each piece of chicken a nice coating (it should shine or appear misted).
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Bake for 1 hour, 10 min. Remove from oven and allow to cool for at least 10 minutes. Enjoy!
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NOTE that I had about 1/4 cup flour mixture leftover on the tray that was contaminated by the raw chicken so I threw it away. Same thing for the egg - trash it.
If you were careful and used a spoon to scoop the flour mixture from the mixing bowl and have any leftover (I had 1 cup), store in an airtight glass jar and save for the next batch!
- I very rarely tell you to buy stuff just to make a dish but if you are serious about oven-fried chicken, you need an elevated baking tray (they are called cooling racks) so the bottom can get crispy instead of soggy.
- If you want to avoid non-stick cooking sprays, get an olive oil mister. The spray of olive oil before going into the oven is crucial for crispy-success!
- I used a combination of almond meal (ground raw almonds with their skins on) and blanched almond flour (finely ground blanched and skinless almonds). You can make your own almond meal if you have raw almonds and a food processor. Trader Joe's also sells it pretty cheap ($3.99 / lb). As for the blanched almond flour, I just buy that! I have tried this recipe with just almond meal and with just almond flour as well as other combinations and it didn't have the crunch.
- You can make this with all legs, thighs, breasts or any combo of the above. But if you go with a whole chicken, make sure to ask the butcher to remove the skin and cut it into 8 pieces (2 breasts, 2 thighs, 2 legs, and 2 wings). This is a major time saver!
- Please NOTE that the nutrition info contains EVERY single ingredient in full - meaning that it accounts for all of the breading and oil even though not all of it is used in the recipe as well as the chicken skin.
Did you make this recipe? Tag @EverydayMaven on Instagram with the hashtag #EveryDayMaven and please give a star rating below.
UPDATE NOTES: This Paleo Fried Chicken recipe was originally published in May 2013 and was updated in September 2020 with step-by-step instruction photos and more helpful recipe information.
Jennifer Paulson says
Made this for dinner tonight. Loved by my kids and husband. Excellent! Thank you so much.
EverydayMaven says
Nice Jennifer! So glad to hear it and thanks for taking the time to let me know 🙂
julie says
It is a peeve of mine when people comment on recipes they haven’t tried and say it sounds delicious. I want to know if it IS delicious. I made this tonight. Super easy and one of the best fried chickens I’ve had. Just went into my rotation. Thank you!
EverydayMaven says
Hi Julie – so glad you liked it!! This chicken is one of my go-to comfort foods – I love it! 🙂
Heather Schraeder says
Yes, couldn’t agree more, big peeve of mine, as well. 😉
Dan Thompson says
I e-mailed everdaymaven 3 weeks ago asking her permission to feature one of her recipes on a best of series I’m planning on launching when my own blog goes live. She suggested this recipe – wow she didn’t disappoint. This is honestly one of the best pieces of chicken I’ve ever eaten. As I type this out I’m literally fighting back the urge to go back into the kitchen and eat the rest.
Thanks so much,
Dan
EverydayMaven says
Hi Dan!
So glad to hear you loved the chicken!!! Thank you so much 🙂
Iris Morrell says
I just finished making these and boy oh boy are these amazing! I must say I am not someone who cooks on a regular basis and I usually stick to the easiest things when I do cook. Lately I’ve been itching to try new things and this was a great choice. I definitely recommend to anyone who is living the Paleo lifestyle and misses fried chicken. I also feel like your directions are perfect on how to cook this. It made it that much easier. This will definitely be my go-to meal when I want to impress someone.
EverydayMaven says
Hi Iris! So glad to hear it was easy for you to make 🙂 Thanks for stopping by and letting me know!
Jenn says
This recipe looks so tasty. I can’t wait to try it.
Mary Schannen says
OMG – Just tasted – IT’s GOOD!!! Thank you so much!!!
Mary Schannen says
Thank you so much for this recipe – I just started eating ‘Paleo’ and after 2 weeks, I’m already feeling so much better. I just ‘almond breaded’ up my chicken breasts with your recipe and it’s in the oven right now.
I have a suggestion for the almond flour and eggs that have touched raw chicken – If you have dogs (not sure about cats) you can take the extra eggs and almond flour – sauteed it really quickly to get it cooked and give it to your dogs. Dogs have a much shorter digestive track than humans and usually can handle much more than we can. I have two retired racing greyhounds – they used to feed the greyhounds raw meat on the racetracks. My vet recommends cooking it – so that’s what I do. I just know that the extra eggs and almond flour will be dog food for breakfast tomorrow. 🙂
thanks again for the recipe!
Mary
EverydayMaven says
Hi Mary! You are so welcome – so glad to hear you loved it!!! Great idea for the leftover breading. We don’t have a dog right now (or cat) but when we did, we fed her raw and she would have loved this for sure 🙂