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Healthy Chicken Tenders Recipe

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » Poultry Recipes » Healthy Chicken Tenders Recipe

Chicken tenders (or fingers, take your pick) are a kid (and adult) favorite, at least at our house. As with all of our favorite foods, I’ve found healthier alternatives to the traditional versions as we’ve adopted a healthier diet.

Can Chicken Tenders Be a Health Food?

The first step to making fried chicken healthier is to use healthier chicken. I wrote extensively about the importance of choosing excellent protein sources in this post. The gist of it is, if the animals that you’re eating are healthy, your food will be healthier too. Chicken is an important source of B vitamins, minerals, and iron. Since I don’t have a great local source I usually order mine from Wellness Meats or Butcher Box.

The second step is to use healthier breading ingredients. Since our family usually avoids most grain products, I use seasoned almond flour to coat the chicken for these chicken fingers. It gives the chicken a nice nutty flavor, without sacrificing the crispiness essential to fried chicken.

The third step is to use a healthy fat source for frying. I prefer not to use peanut oil or canola oil, so I usually use tallow (rendered beef fat) or coconut oil. Both contain healthy fats and have a high smoke point, making them excellent for frying.

All the Ways to Enjoy Homemade Chicken Tenders

Most obviously, chicken fingers are meant to be dunked in a delicious sauce and eaten just like that. My family’s favorite dipping sauce is homemade honey mustard. But since I make a lot of my own condiments, we’ve tried a lot of different combinations and enjoyed them all. Try:

You really can’t go wrong!

The other excellent way to enjoy chicken tenders is chopped up and tossed on top of a salad. Using them in a salad lets me combine the veggies and protein all in one dish, so I don’t have to worry about cooking separate sides.

I specifically designed my Spring Salad with Berries to be topped with homemade chicken strips and drizzled with honey mustard dressing. It’s pretty delicious.

If your family loves traditional chicken fingers, give this healthier version a try! I promise, it’s easy and delicious and you won’t be disappointed.

Healthy Chicken Tenders Recipe

Delicious chicken fingers made with healthy almond flour for a grain-free, gluten-free, healthy meal that kids and adults both love.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Calories 386kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

4

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Turn the oven on warm and place a baking sheet inside it.
  • Cut the chicken into strips or nuggets.
  • In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs and water.
  • Add the chicken strips, mix well, and set aside.
  • In another bowl, mix together the almond flour, garlic powder, salt, and pepper.
  • Heat the tallow or coconut oil in a large skillet over medium high heat.
  • Once the oil is hot, remove the chicken from the egg mixture and dredge it in the almond flour mixture.
  • Place the chicken in a single layer in the pan of heated oil.
  • Cook 3-4 minutes per side or until golden brown and cooked through.
  • Remove from pan and place on the warm baking sheet in the oven while additional batches are cooking.
  • Continue cooking chicken until it is all done.
  • Once everything is cooked, sprinkle with additional salt and pepper and serve with honey mustard sauce.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Healthy Chicken Tenders Recipe
Amount Per Serving (3 chicken fingers)
Calories 386 Calories from Fat 180
% Daily Value*
Fat 20g31%
Saturated Fat 3g19%
Trans Fat 1g
Cholesterol 190mg63%
Sodium 519mg23%
Potassium 670mg19%
Carbohydrates 7g2%
Fiber 3g13%
Sugar 1g1%
Protein 45g90%
Vitamin A 171IU3%
Vitamin C 2mg2%
Calcium 82mg8%
Iron 2mg11%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

If you don’t like to fry foods (or just don’t want the mess), you can modify the recipe by breading the chicken as you would to fry, and just placing on a well-oiled baking sheet and drizzling with olive oil before baking. Bake at 400°F for about 25 minutes.

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Ever made a healthy version of chicken tenders? Share below!

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

56 responses to “Healthy Chicken Tenders Recipe”

  1. Jennifer Vanderveer Avatar
    Jennifer Vanderveer

    Instead of cornstarch, I use arrowroot. Cornstarch is derived from corn, which is GMO and a carb. I just mix the flour and arrowroot together. Thanks for the tip of dipping the chicken in arrowroot first. I use this for round steak too.

  2. Paige Avatar

    5 stars
    These were delicious; a big hit with my kids. Thank you for this recipe! It’s a keeper!

  3. Bernadette Avatar
    Bernadette

    This looks a recipe that would go over well at my house. However, my son is allergic to eggs, what could I possible substitute for that?

  4. Roseann Avatar

    3 stars
    Made these tonite and my teenage son liked (not loved) them (he’s a picky eater so I was glad). The almond flour did stick to the chicken to create a nice crust and chicken was juicy. But the smell of fried oil permeated the house, and I didn’t care for that. Plus making these is inherently messy: 1 dish for eggs, 1 dish fir crumb mixture, 1 dish for breaded chicken, 1 dish lined with paper towels to drain cooked chicken and of course the pan I fried it in. This is no fault of the recipe… I should’ve thought twice about it is all. The smell of fried oil in the house is the deal breaker. Cocunut oil is on the fragrant side so it’s not like it smelt ‘bad’ but it was a heavy smell. Hard to explain. I will continue to scope out this website though because I made the lettuce tacos and my son loved those.

  5. Denise Avatar

    Have you made these with coconut flakes? I’ve been thinking about trying coconut crusted chicken, and was curious if you have experience making something like that.

  6. Kristie Fogarty Avatar
    Kristie Fogarty

    For those with nut allergies, millet flour works great and is much better on chicken than coconut flour! 🙂 hope that’s helpful!

  7. Shana Avatar

    In your opinion, how much should adults and children be consuming almond flour if we are baking and cooking with it? I have read many negative effects of AF after I just purchased 5lbs of it. My husband does not eat many things and he is only used to eating carbs for breakfast and lunch.
    Thanks in advanced.

  8. Amanda Avatar

    This is amazing! I’ve used it in several different recipes, including chicken Parmesan and it was so good 🙂

  9. Connie Wilson Avatar
    Connie Wilson

    Made these tonight and they were SO good! I had to make something really good for my hubby because I did the beef and zucchini dish last night and he is NOT a vegetable lover. I figured I should go easy on him today:)

  10. Kristie Fogarty Avatar
    Kristie Fogarty

    Is there a substitution for almond flour? My son also has nut allergies, almond being one of them. The recipe looks delicious! Thanks for your hard work:-) I’m going to try your beef cabbage stir fry soon. It looks amazing;)

        1. Tiffany Avatar

          My son has peanut and tree nut allergy and eats coconut fine. In reality, coconut is not a tree nut!!!!! Investigate!!! I was thrilled for my son to be able to have coconut!

          1. Janet Avatar

            *The American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (ACAAI) states: “Coconut is not a botanical nut; it is classified as a fruit, even though the Food and Drug Administration recognizes coconut as a tree nut.

  11. Sarah Avatar

    Unfortunately my favorite food is fettuccine alfredo: grains and butter and cheese and milk. Not exactly the healthiest meal…

    1. Paul Holland Avatar
      Paul Holland

      try baking powder first then redid for flour, it’s the way it’s done in chinese cooking

  12. Mary J Avatar

    My fiance and I made fried chicken legs using coconut flour! We did it the same way and it was so good!

  13. Cierra Dawn James Page Avatar
    Cierra Dawn James Page

    Recommendations for substitution on almond flour?

  14. Cary Gardner Avatar
    Cary Gardner

    Is there any substitute for almond flour? My daughter has a tree nut allergy.

    1. Jenn Avatar

      5 stars
      I know this is an older post but I am wondering if there is an alternative also. I do not have either of these allergies or sensitivities but it seems you have to choose between nut-free and grain free. Is there anything that isn’t one or the other?

  15. Raquel Tenezaca Avatar
    Raquel Tenezaca

    How do you keep the almond flour on the chicken? It comes off in chunks and then burns.

    1. Susan Avatar

      I have this question too. Every time I try to “fry” with almond flour, I can’t get it to stick to the meat, and I end up with flour balls and naked chicken. lol

  16. Krista Avatar

    Made these tonight. They were so good! I also made the honey mustard dressing without the salt and pepper and loved it. Re: oil – I just poured enough to fill the pan up to about 1/4″ and fried the chicken that way. It did result in some of the later pieces having the burnt remains of the prior pieces on them but the flavor of the “breading” was strong enough to overtake the burnt taste. 🙂

  17. Jana Avatar

    @Natalie I think the 2 cups are so the oil comes up high enough to fry the chicken. I’m sure if you use a narrower pan you could get away with using less.

  18. natalie Avatar

    2 Cups??? That seems like a lot of very expensive oil. I’m sure it can be done with much less. Otherwise, sounds delish! I make a great honey mustard dressing for my family w/ organic olive oil, mustard, honey, red wine vinegar and s&p. I just shake it up in a container and it turns out great!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      You definitely wouldn’t need that much, but that is enough to almost submerge and I re-use the oil so it doesn’t go to waste…

          1. Kendal Avatar

            5 stars
            How do you store to reuse? Would you only reuse it for frying? How long does it keep? I’ve never heard of reusing oil, but I like it because frying seems like such a waste!

            Thank you! I made this tonight with the sweet potato fries and it was delicious 🙂

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