Chick-fil-A Chicken Biscuit
I made this because one wet Tuesday morning I wanted the ridiculous comfort of a Chick-fil-A chicken biscuit but didn’t want to drive across town. It’s a crisp, pickle–brined chicken thigh (or breast if you’re feeling safe), pan-fried until golden and shoved into a flaky biscuit with a pat of butter — salty, tangy, and utterly selfish-good at 6 a.m.
My husband acts like I invented fast food when I make these. He mumbles compliments between bites and once ate two in one sitting while we planned a backyard fire pit — true story. It’s become our lazy weekend staple and the little one insists on “chicken pocket” for breakfast like it’s a birthright. I mess with the brine and breading depending on mood, and somehow the fails — a soggy biscuit here, a too-thin crust there — are part of the charm.
Why You’ll Love This Chick-fil-A Chicken Biscuit
– It’s better than takeout in the sense that you can make it exactly the way you like it: tangy brine, crunchy crust, warm biscuit, all at once.
– Uses simple pantry ingredients but tastes like the kind of thing you’d pay for from a roadside window.
– Fast to pull together for lazy mornings and forgiving if you don’t measure like a chef.
– Hands-on cooking that rewards you instantly — no long simmer, just messy, loud frying and buttery bites.
Kitchen Talk
I learned early that the pickle brine is the personality of this sandwich — skip it and you’ll still have fried chicken, but you’ll miss the zip. Also, I once tried to shortcut with pre-breaded frozen cutlets and ended up with a leathery coating that even my kid refused; never again. On a lucky day I swapped half the flour for cornstarch and the crust became aggressively crunchy (10/10, repeat). Frying in batches and letting the chicken rest on a wire rack keeps the crust proud, not soggy — don’t crowd the pan unless you enjoy a sad, steamed exterior.
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Shopping Tips
– Protein: Pick boneless chicken thighs for juiciness and forgiving frying, or breasts if you want a leaner, firmer bite. Thighs tolerate overcooking better.
– Dairy: Butter for the biscuits — don’t skimp on real butter if you can avoid it; the flavor lifts everything. If you buy biscuits, check the ingredient list for real butter vs. hydrogenated oils.
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): If you’re making biscuits, use a higher-fat biscuit recipe or buy flaky biscuits; plain dense biscuits will feel heavy with fried chicken.
– Fats & Oils: Peanut oil gives that classic flavor and high smoke point; canola or vegetable oil works if you’re avoiding peanuts — just keep the oil hot and steady.
– Specialty Item: Grab a jar of dill pickle chips and the pickle juice — the juice is your secret brine ingredient and the chips are the finishing crunch inside the biscuit.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Brine the chicken the night before in pickle juice (or a salty buttermilk brine) so it’s ready to dredge in the morning.
– Mix your seasoned flour and cornstarch in an airtight container ahead of time to speed up the breading step.
– Bake or unwrap biscuits the night before and store them in a zip-top; re-toast in the oven or skillet right before serving for fresh warmth.
– Keep cooked chicken in a shallow airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days so you can reheat gently in the oven or air fryer for a quick assembly.
Time-Saving Tricks
– Use thin-sliced thighs or pound breasts to a uniform thickness so they fry evenly and faster.
– Do the breading assembly line: wet hand for the egg/brine, dry hand for flour — it’s messy but saves time and cleanup.
– If you’re short on time, pan-sear and finish in a 400°F oven to cut active frying minutes while still getting a crisp crust.
– Make extra and freeze individual sandwiches wrapped in foil; reheat in a 350°F oven until hot and the biscuit is revived.
Common Mistakes
– Overcrowding the pan: I did this once and got sad, floppy chicken. Fix: cook in batches and keep cooked pieces on a rack in a warm oven.
– Skipping the brine: results in bland chicken — if you forgot to brine, a quick sprinkle of salt and a few minutes at room temp helps a little.
– Oil not hot enough: soak-up syndrome. If the coating absorbs too much oil, it’s because the pan was too cool; let the oil come up to temp or chicken will be greasy.
– Using dense biscuits that overpower the chicken — slice them and toast; a little butter helps revive them.
What to Serve It With
– Simple fruit salad or fresh fruit for a bright counterpoint to the fried richness.
– Crispy oven fries or waffle fries for a classic diner vibe.
– Slaw or quick pickled cucumber to cut the fat and add crunch.
– A cup of strong coffee or sweet iced tea, because breakfast deserves beverage theatrics.
Tips & Mistakes
– Let the chicken rest briefly after frying so juices redistribute and the crust stays crunchy.
– Use a thermometer if you’re unsure — chicken is safe at 165°F, but thighs taste better pulled off a bit earlier and allowed to rest.
– For the crunchiest bite, swap half the flour for cornstarch.
– If your biscuit is soggy after assembly, toast the inside lightly in a skillet and reassemble.
Storage Tips
Leftovers keep in the fridge up to 3 days; store chicken and biscuits separately if you can. Reheat chicken in a 350°F oven or air fryer to re-crisp the coating — microwave will get you speed but limp crust. Cold? Sure, I’ve eaten them cold on road trips; the chicken is fine but butter and biscuit lose their magic — still delicious, no shame.
Variations and Substitutions
– No peanut oil? Use canola or vegetable oil; you’ll miss that little flavor note but get the crisp just fine.
– No pickles or pickle juice? A buttermilk brine with a splash of pickle brine or vinegar replicates the tang.
– Want spicy? Add cayenne or hot sauce to the brine and breading for a morning kick.
– Gluten-free: use a GF flour blend plus extra cornstarch for crunch and choose GF biscuits or a toasted GF English muffin.
Frequently Asked Questions

Chick-fil-A Chicken Biscuit
Ingredients
Chicken & Brine
- 2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, halved horizontally
- 3/4 cup dill pickle juice
- 1/4 cup buttermilk
Crispy Coating
- 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup cornstarch
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 3/4 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 teaspoon paprika
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
- 1 large egg
- 3 tablespoons buttermilk
To Serve
- 4 biscuits, warmed and split
- neutral oil spray (for air fryer)
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Butterfly each chicken breast into two thinner cutlets (about 1/2 inch thick). Pat dry.
- Whisk together 3/4 cup pickle juice and 1/4 cup buttermilk. Submerge the chicken and refrigerate 30 minutes (or up to overnight for deeper flavor).
- In a shallow bowl, combine flour, cornstarch, salt, pepper, paprika, garlic powder, and cayenne. In a second bowl, beat the egg with 3 tablespoons buttermilk until smooth.
- Preheat the air fryer to 390°F for 5 minutes. Lightly mist the basket with oil spray.
- Drain chicken well and blot excess brine. Dredge each cutlet in the flour mixture, dip in the egg mixture, then return to the flour. For extra craggy bits, flick a teaspoon of leftover brine into the flour and toss to create little clumps before pressing it onto the chicken.
- Set breaded chicken on a rack for 10 minutes to hydrate the coating. While it rests, warm the split biscuits in a 300°F air fryer or 325°F oven for 2–3 minutes.
- Mist both sides of the chicken generously with oil spray and arrange in a single layer in the hot basket. Air fry for 7 minutes, flip, spray again, and cook 5–7 minutes more, until golden and the thickest part reaches 165°F.
- Rest the chicken 2 minutes. Tuck each cutlet into a warm biscuit and serve immediately.
Notes
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