The Chick-fil-A sandwich has two secrets that most copycat recipes miss: a pickle brine marinade and a pressure-fried cooking method. You cannot pressure-fry at home without specialized equipment, but a heavy Dutch oven with a tight lid gets close — the trapped steam raises the internal pressure enough to cook the chicken faster while keeping it juicier than open frying.
The pickle brine does more than add flavor. Its acidity gently denatures the surface proteins of the chicken breast, tenderizing the outer layer while the salt seasons the meat through its full thickness. This is why the original sandwich is tender even though it uses breast meat, which dries out in almost every other preparation.
Why This Copycat Recipe Works
- Pickle brine marinade. The vinegar and salt in dill pickle juice tenderize the chicken breast and season it through the entire thickness — not just the surface.
- Milk + egg wash. The dairy proteins in the wash create a sticky layer that the flour coating grips to, preventing the breading from sliding off during frying.
- Powdered sugar in the breading. This is the ingredient most copycats leave out. A tablespoon of powdered sugar mixed into the flour promotes faster browning and adds the subtle sweetness that distinguishes the Chick-fil-A crust from standard fried chicken.
- Buttered bun, two pickles, nothing else. The original sandwich is famously minimal. The simplicity forces every component to be perfect.
Ingredients
- 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts (6 oz each)
- 1 cup dill pickle juice (from the jar)
- 1 cup whole milk
- 1 large egg
- 1½ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tbsp powdered sugar
- 1 tsp paprika
- 1 tsp garlic powder
- ½ tsp cayenne pepper
- 1 tsp kosher salt + ½ tsp black pepper
- Peanut oil for frying (2–3 inches)
- 4 brioche buns, toasted and buttered
- 2 tbsp butter (for buns)
- 8 dill pickle chips
How to Make the Chick-fil-A Sandwich
- Pound and brine. Place each breast between plastic wrap and pound to ¾-inch even thickness. Submerge in pickle juice in a shallow dish. Refrigerate for 30 minutes (up to 2 hours for stronger flavor). The acid tenderizes; the salt brines.
- Set up the breading station. Bowl 1: whisk milk + egg. Bowl 2: flour, powdered sugar, paprika, garlic powder, cayenne, salt, pepper. Remove chicken from brine and pat dry — excess moisture prevents the coating from adhering.
- Dredge. Coat each breast in flour mix, shake off excess. Dip in milk-egg wash. Return to flour mix and press firmly. The coating should be thick and slightly shaggy — those rough edges fry into the crunchiest bits.
- Fry at 350°F. Heat peanut oil to 350°F / 175°C in a Dutch oven. Fry 2 breasts at a time, 3–4 minutes per side until deep golden brown and internal temp reaches 165°F / 74°C. Do not crowd — the oil drops 20–30°F per piece.
- Assemble. Drain on a wire rack for 2 minutes. Butter and toast the brioche buns in a skillet until golden. Place fried breast on the bottom bun, add 2 pickle chips, close with the top bun. The assembly is deliberately simple — no lettuce, no tomato, no sauce. Also try our copycat Chick-fil-A nuggets using the same brine technique.
Pro Tips
Do Not Over-Brine
More than 2 hours in pickle juice and the surface becomes mushy. The acid over-denatures the proteins, creating a mealy texture instead of a tender one. 30 minutes is the sweet spot; 1 hour is the max for full flavor without texture damage.
Toast the Buns in Butter, Not Oil
A tablespoon of butter in a skillet, bun-side down for 90 seconds. The milk solids in the butter brown and create a toasted, slightly sweet crust that no amount of toaster browning can replicate.
Storage
Nutrition
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | 490 kcal |
| Protein | 38g |
| Carbohydrates | 42g |
| Fat | 18g |
| Sodium | 1,120mg |
| Fiber | 1g |
Common Mistakes
Frequently Asked Questions
Brine in pickle juice, dredge in flour with powdered sugar, fry at 350°F in peanut oil, butter the bun — that is the full Chick-fil-A sandwich method.
Cook’s Notes on the Copycat Version
This is the copycat Chick-fil-A sandwich. The recipe above replicates the original — pickle-brined chicken breast, a milk and egg wash with powdered sugar, and a peanut oil fry. The powdered sugar in the breading is the detail most copycat recipes miss: it helps the crust brown faster and gives it that distinctive sweetness you taste at the restaurant.
Save This Chick-fil-A Copycat Recipe
Pin it for your next fried chicken craving — Sundays included.
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Emma Delacourt
Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox
Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.




