Costco Orange Chicken

Servings: 2 Total Time: 35 mins Difficulty: Easy
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Costco Orange Chicken is one of those freezer shortcuts I like to handle with a little care. The chicken is already breaded and the orange sauce is ready, but the way I heat it makes the difference between sticky and satisfying or soft and uneven.

I bake the sauced chicken at 350°F for 18-20 minutes until the sauce bubbles and the chicken is hot all the way through. While that happens, I cook 1 cup of long-grain rice in 2 cups of water so the meal has something plain to balance the sweet sauce.

The source also mentions vegetables of choice, and I like that direction. I keep the ingredient list to the package items and rice, then add whatever vegetables I have in a separate pan so the breading does not get watery.

Before I start Costco Orange Chicken, I take a minute to think about what the recipe is really asking for. Some of these Costco-style recipes are more about careful heating, chilling, or assembly than complicated cooking.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • The oven keeps the breaded chicken from turning soggy too quickly.
  • The 18-20 minute bake is hands-off once the tray is in.
  • Rice stretches the sauce and makes the meal feel complete.
  • Vegetables can cook separately without changing the chicken texture.
  • It is easy to make half a package for 2 servings.
  • The sauce bubbles in the oven and clings better than when it is only microwaved.

What I use and why it matters

  • 2 cups water.Water cooks the rice so the saucy chicken has a plain base.
  • 1 cup long-grain rice.Long-grain rice stays fluffy and soaks up the orange sauce.
  • 1/2 package Crazy Cuisine Breaded Chicken.The breaded chicken is the shortcut that makes this a fast dinner.
  • 1/2 package Crazy Cuisine Orange Sauce.Orange sauce gives the sweet, tangy glaze.

I do not treat the ingredient list as a place to casually rewrite the recipe. The quantities are here for a reason, even when the original source was a little awkwardly parsed. When I want a different result, I change the handling first: I cut pieces smaller, drain something better, warm a sauce more gently, or give the food a few extra minutes to settle before I change the amount of an ingredient.

How I make it

Step 1 — Start the rice

I combine 2 cups water and 1 cup long-grain rice and cook it according to the rice package directions. I want the rice ready when the chicken comes out because orange chicken tastes best hot.

Step 2 — Prepare the tray

I preheat the oven to 350°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Then I spread the fully cooked Costco chicken pieces in a single layer and coat them generously with the orange sauce.

Step 3 — Bake until bubbly

I bake the chicken for 18-20 minutes, until the sauce is bubbling and the chicken is hot through the center. I check a larger piece because small pieces heat faster and can fool me.

Step 4 — Cook vegetables if using

While the chicken bakes, I cook vegetables of choice in a separate pan for 8-10 minutes, until tender and lightly browned. Keeping them separate prevents extra moisture from softening the breaded chicken.

Step 5 — Assemble the bowls

I spoon rice into bowls, add vegetables if I made them, and top with the hot orange chicken. Any extra sauce from the tray gets drizzled over the rice.

Timing and texture cues I watch

The times in this Costco Orange Chicken method are the frame, but I still pay attention while I cook. I look for the cue that matches the food: fruit should look glossy but not bruised, sauce should thicken enough to coat a spoon, chicken should reach its safe temperature, pasta should stay al dente, and baked desserts should set before I slice them. That habit keeps me from overcorrecting a simple recipe.

I also set up the serving pieces before the final step whenever I can. A hot skillet dish loses its best texture if it waits around, while a chilled salad or pie needs enough cold time to taste settled. Having the plates, bowl, knife, sauce, or side dish ready makes the last few minutes calmer, and the food gets to the table the way I intended.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Use parchment.Orange sauce gets sticky fast on bare metal.
  • Spread the chicken out.A single layer heats more evenly.
  • Cook vegetables separately.They release water, and I do not want that soaking the breading.
  • Serve right away.The coating is best before it sits in sauce too long.

Mistakes I avoid

  • Changing the quantities too soon.I make the recipe once close to the listed amounts before deciding what needs adjusting.
  • Crowding the pan or bowl.When food needs browning, folding, or chilling, extra space usually gives me a better texture.
  • Skipping the final check.I taste sauces, check the center of hot dishes, and look for set edges on desserts before I call anything done.
  • Serving without a pause.A short rest, chill, or gentle toss often fixes texture in a way more seasoning cannot.

The other mistake I try to avoid is making the dish harder than it needs to be. If the recipe is a shortcut, I let it be a shortcut and focus on the details that matter most: even pieces, clean heat, enough salt, a dry surface when browning is the goal, and a serving plan that keeps the texture from fading before anyone eats. I would rather do a simple thing carefully than add noise that does not improve the plate.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Broccoli bowl:I add steamed or skillet-browned broccoli on the side.
  • Fried rice base:I use leftover rice and stir-fry it before topping with chicken.
  • Spicy finish:I add chili crisp or red pepper flakes at the table.
  • Sesame garnish:I sprinkle sesame seeds over the hot sauce.
  • Lettuce cups:I serve small pieces in lettuce leaves for a lighter plate.

When I make a variation, I keep the main method steady. I swap one flavor at a time, then pay attention to whether the texture changes. That keeps the recipe dependable, and it also tells me which change actually helped instead of turning dinner into a guessing game.

Storing and make-ahead notes

I store leftover chicken and rice separately when I can. The chicken softens after sitting in sauce, but it still reheats well enough for lunch. I use the oven or air fryer for the chicken and the microwave for the rice.

What I serve with it

I serve this with rice, broccoli, snap peas, carrots, or a quick cucumber salad. Because the sauce is sweet, I like something green or crisp on the plate.

Frequently asked questions

Can I make this without an oven?

Yes. I heat the chicken and sauce in a skillet over medium-high heat for 5-7 minutes, stirring gently until everything is hot and bubbly.

Can I use frozen chicken breasts instead?

You can, but the timing changes. I thaw and cook chicken safely first, then add sauce. The breaded Costco chicken is what makes this method quick.

Is it gluten-free?

I do not assume it is gluten-free because breaded chicken and sauce vary by package. I check the exact Costco product label before serving it to anyone avoiding gluten.

How do I keep the chicken crispy?

I bake it in a single layer and serve it right away. Sauce will soften breading eventually, so I do not hold it for long.

Can I add extra vegetables?

Yes. I cook them separately for 8-10 minutes, then add them to the bowl instead of baking them under the sauce.

If you add a vegetable that works especially well with the orange sauce, I would like to hear it.

Costco Orange Chicken

Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 20 mins Total Time 35 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 2 Calories: 0 kcal Dietary:
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Description

A simple Costco orange chicken dinner with Crazy Cuisine breaded chicken, orange sauce, and long-grain rice. I bake the sauced chicken at 350°F for 18-20 minutes while the rice cooks.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Cook 1 cup long-grain rice with 2 cups water according to the rice package directions.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  3. Place the fully cooked Costco chicken pieces on the parchment and coat with Costco orange sauce.
  4. Bake for 18-20 minutes, until the sauce is bubbly and the chicken is hot all the way through.
  5. While the chicken bakes, cook vegetables of choice in a separate pan for 8-10 minutes if desired.
  6. Serve the hot orange chicken with rice and any cooked vegetables.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 2

Iron 0.0 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Use parchment because the orange sauce is sticky.

Cook vegetables separately to avoid soggy chicken.

Serve as soon as the sauce bubbles.

Check product labels if gluten is a concern.

Keywords: costco orange chicken, crazy cuisine orange chicken, orange sauce chicken, baked orange chicken, rice dinner

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I make this without an oven?

Yes. I heat the chicken and sauce in a skillet over medium-high heat for 5-7 minutes, stirring gently until everything is hot and bubbly.

Can I use frozen chicken breasts instead?

You can, but the timing changes. I thaw and cook chicken safely first, then add sauce. The breaded Costco chicken is what makes this method quick.

Is it gluten-free?

I do not assume it is gluten-free because breaded chicken and sauce vary by package. I check the exact Costco product label before serving it to anyone avoiding gluten.

How do I keep the chicken crispy?

I bake it in a single layer and serve it right away. Sauce will soften breading eventually, so I do not hold it for long.

Can I add extra vegetables?

Yes. I cook them separately for 8-10 minutes, then add them to the bowl instead of baking them under the sauce.

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