Published July 2, 2026
Takeout teriyaki chicken is usually built on a sticky sauce mostly made of sugar, then piled on a mound of white rice. Delicious, sure, but it can carry 40 grams of carbs before you have touched the chicken. This version keeps everything that makes teriyaki chicken crave-worthy, the glossy soy-ginger glaze and the caramelized edges, and rebuilds the sauce sugar-free. You end up with about 4 grams of carbs and 40 grams of protein per serving, which means the classic dish finally fits a keto, low-carb, or diabetic-friendly plate.
Quick Stats
Prep: 8 min | Cook: 25 min | Total: 33 min | Serves: 4 | Per serving: 284 cal, 40g protein, 4g net carbs
Why This Teriyaki Chicken Works
The trick is the sauce. Classic teriyaki gets its lacquered shine from sugar or mirin cooked down until syrupy. Here, a granulated sugar-free sweetener provides sweetness, while the soy sauce, fresh ginger, and garlic form a glaze that clings to every strip of chicken. There is no cornstarch slurry, so the carbs stay low without a gummy texture.
Browning the chicken breasts first, then slicing and baking them in a single layer under repeated brushings of sauce, builds flavor in layers. Each coat reduces slightly in the oven, so the chicken finishes deeply glazed rather than watery. With 40 grams of protein and only 4 grams of net carbs per serving, it is the kind of dinner that keeps you full without the post-takeout crash.
Sugar-Free vs Classic Takeout Teriyaki Chicken
| Per serving | This sugar-free version | Typical takeout (with rice) |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 284 | ~600 |
| Net carbs | 4 g | 45 to 65 g |
| Added sugar | 0 g | 12 to 18 g |
| Protein | 40 g | 25 to 30 g |
| Diabetic-friendly | Yes | No |
Teriyaki Chicken | Baked, Sugar-Free & Diabetic-Friendly
Ingredients
- 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
- 1/2 cup soy sauce use certified tamari for gluten-free
- 2/3 cup water
- 1/4 cup granulated monk fruit or erythritol sweetener or sweetener of choice
- 1 tablespoon fresh ginger grated
- 1 tablespoon garlic minced
- 2 tablespoons avocado oil or peanut oil
- 2 green onions thinly sliced, for garnish (optional)
Equipment
- 1 Large nonstick skillet
- 1 Baking dish
- 1 Basting brush
- 1 Meat thermometer
Method
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C).
- In a small saucepan, combine the soy sauce, water, sweetener, grated ginger, and minced garlic. Simmer over low heat until the sauce reduces to about 2/3 cup and turns glossy, 8 to 10 minutes.
- Pat the chicken dry and trim any visible fat. Heat the oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat and brown the breasts 3 to 4 minutes per side. They will not be cooked through yet.
- Cut each browned breast lengthwise into 4 even strips and arrange them in a single layer in a baking dish that fits them snugly.
- Brush the chicken generously with about half the reduced sauce. Bake 5 minutes, brush again, bake 5 more minutes, then brush a third time.
- Bake 2 to 5 minutes more, until a thermometer reads 165°F (74°C) at the thickest point.
- Serve hot, garnished with sliced green onions. Warm any leftover sauce to spoon over the top.
Notes
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Chef’s Tips
- Reduce the sauce fully before you glaze. If it still looks thin in the pan, it will not stick to the chicken. Let it simmer until it coats the back of a spoon.
- Slice the browned breasts into strips. More surface area means more glaze per bite, and the strips bake through faster and more evenly than whole breasts.
- Brush in three coats. One heavy coat runs off. Three lighter coats, each with a few minutes in the oven, is what builds that lacquered teriyaki finish.
- Watch the sweetener. Erythritol and monk fruit blends can vary in sweetness, so taste the reduced sauce and adjust before it hits the chicken.
Storage & Serving
Fridge: Store the glazed chicken in a sealed container for up to 4 days. The reduced sauce keeps separately for up to 2 weeks.
Reheat: Warm gently in a covered pan with a splash of water, or microwave in short bursts so the chicken stays juicy.
Serve: Spoon over cauliflower rice to keep it low-carb, or over jasmine rice for a classic higher-carb bowl. Finish with sliced green onions and a scatter of sesame seeds.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this teriyaki chicken keto?
Yes. With a sugar-free sweetener and no cornstarch, each serving has about 4 grams of net carbs, which fits most keto plans. Serve it over cauliflower rice to keep the whole plate low-carb.
What sweetener works best for sugar-free teriyaki?
A granulated erythritol or monk fruit blend melts smoothly into the sauce and browns without crystallizing. Taste the sauce as it reduces, since blends vary in sweetness.
How do I make it gluten-free?
Swap the soy sauce for certified gluten-free tamari. Everything else in the recipe is naturally gluten-free.
Can I use chicken thighs instead of breasts?
Yes. Boneless, skinless thighs stay juicy and take the glaze well. They may need a few extra minutes in the oven to reach 165F.
Final Thoughts
This is proof that a takeout favorite does not have to blow your carb budget. Same glossy glaze, same savory-sweet chicken, just built on a sugar-free sauce and served without the rice mountain. Keep the reduced sauce in the fridge, and this teriyaki chicken becomes a 30-minute weeknight staple you can feel good about.

