This 20-minute recipe pairs ground chicken with spices, hot chili paste, honey, and coconut milk to make a protein option that’s loaded with flavor. With 27 grams of protein and just 230 calories per serving, this chicken is perfect for meal prep.
And as an added bonus, there’s no vegetable chopping or prep required! Just throw everything in the pan, give it a stir every now and then, and get ready for a treat!
I’ll run you through the recipe below and answer a few ingredient substitution questions along the way. You can find a printable recipe card at the bottom of the post and a comment section below that. If you have any additional questions about this recipe, drop ’em there.

Step 1: Cook the ground chicken with paprika, garlic powder, ground ginger, salt, and optional ground coriander.

There’s not much to say about step 1. I opted for dry spices for convenience but if you want to use fresh garlic and ginger (you little show pony), I say go for it. You could also skip the ground coriander and add some fresh cilantro when serving.
A little bonus tip for this recipe is to be sure and brown your ground chicken. Like I mentioned in my turkey sausage breakfast skillet recipe, browning the meat creates an extra layer of flavor. And speaking of ground turkey, it will work fine for this recipe.
If you’re having trouble finding ground chicken in your grocery store, you may be able to ask the meat department to grind you some from fresh chicken breast. It’s worth a shot! You could also go with whole chicken breast or thighs by using my spicy coconut pressure cooker pulled chicken recipe.
Step 2: Add gochujang (or a hot chili paste) and honey to the cooked ground chicken.

Gochujang is a spicy and slightly sweet chili paste that’s common in Korean dishes (like my Korean-Style Ground Beef). You can find gochujang in most grocery stores these days but if you’re having trouble finding it, other hot chili pastes should work okay.
If you want to wing it without any chili paste, you’ll probably want to add some more spice via chili flakes and something like the miso paste in my curried chicken and rice bowls for the umami. While I’ve been told sriracha is not a viable replacement (and I totally agree), it’s better than nothing if you want to try this recipe without a grocery run. You could also try something like Swerve brown sugar + a hot sauce like I used for my low carb firecracker ground chicken.

As for the honey, substitutions might include brown sugar (or zero-calorie Swerve Brown like with my Nashville Hot chicken nuggets, maple syrup from my Japanese BBQ chicken, sugar free pancake syrup, or worst case—granulated sugar.
I wouldn’t recommend omitting the honey (or some type of sweetener) altogether as it will help balance out the spice level and flavor profile.
Final Step: Add coconut milk and cook until magical.

This step is entirely up to you and how you plan to serve your ground chicken. As you can see in the photos, I went with a thicker mixture to serve over rice. If you wanted to reserve some liquid, you could remove from the heat after 4-5 minutes (top right photo below).

There’s no right or wrong here. Though if you’re tracking your nutrition intake, the weight of your four servings will vary slightly with more/less liquid remaining.
If you need accuracy, I always recommend weighing your finished recipe and dividing the total weight by the number of servings you’d like. You can learn more about this in my guide on how to use a food scale for cooking.
How to Serve Your Ground Chicken
I’m curious to see how creative readers get with this recipe but until then, the easiest pairing will be some type of rice. If you wanted to reduce the carbs, I have a few ideas to spruce up boring cauliflower rice.
- Pan roast broccoli before cooking the ground chicken and add at the end like in my spicy honey ground chicken and broccoli recipe or make air fryer broccoli like in my orange chicken meal prep bowls.
- You can mask the cauliflower-ness by mixing half cauliflower rice with a “real” rice like in my high volume rice blend.
- Since lime and cilantro go great with the chili and coconut, you could use the cilantro lime cauliflower rice from my firecracker bison rice bowls.
- Use a bit more coconut milk to make a coconut cauliflower rice.
- Swap the rice for quinoa like in my sesame ground beef and quinoa bowls.

And then there’s always the option of slightly lower carb rice products like Right Rice or Banza’s chickpea rice. In fact, I used the cilantro lime Right Rice in my ground chicken and rice enchiladas.
You can also add extra volume to your rice bowls with things like the cucumber crunch salad in my sesame ginger chicken crumbles recipe.
Be sure to let me know what you come up with for pairing ideas. That’s all the notes I have for you. Bone apple tea!

Spicy Coconut Ground Chicken
Ingredients
- 1 lb Ground Chicken, 97% lean
- 1 Tbsp Paprika
- 1 tsp Ground Ginger
- 1 tsp Garlic Powder
- 1/2 tsp Kosher Salt, 1/4 tsp table salt
- 1/2 tsp Ground Coriander, optional
- 2 Tbsp 60g Gochujang or Comparable Hot Chili Paste
- 2 Tbsp 42g Honey
- 13.5 oz can Light Unsweetened Coconut Milk
Instructions
- Heat a skillet over medium heat with nonstick cooking spray. Add the ground chicken to the skillet and mix the dry spices together in a small bowl. Add the mixed spices to the chicken and use a spatula to stir everything together. Fully cook the chicken until no pink remains.
- Add the chili paste and honey to the cooked chicken, stirring until evenly incorporated.
- Add the coconut milk and stir until you can no longer see any white from the milk. Continue cooking for 8-10* minutes, stirring occasionally, until the mixture thickens. Remove from the heat and serve.
Notes
Nutrition Information Notes
- Serving size may vary depending on how much you reduce the coconut milk.
- Nutrition facts do not include any rice—ground chicken only.
- Each serving has 6 WW SmartPoints (blue plan).





This recipe was so great! I reduced the honey to 1 tbsp so it fit my macros and it was still delicious. I had mine with TJs cauliflower stir fry and my husband with Jasmine rice and we added broccoli. Very good!
I made this recipe and it was extremely flavorful! I love anything with coconut milk. I served it over Trader Joe’s cauliflower fried rice!
I didn’t have chili paste or the korean version especially because of COVID but I used tomato paste and chili powder. It was still good but idk if it turned out the way it was suppose to. Did anyone else do this? Would it have taste the same? Should iI add something else?
This one is a winner! I love anything coconut and this one gives that added kick for the perfect sweet/spicy combo! Just make sure you don’t do like me and buy the gochujang SAUCE instead of the paste. It’s still delicious but mixed w the honey, it’s pretty sweet. Although I’m not complaining one bit. lol
Tried this and it was outstanding! Used Turkey instead Chicken and also threw in about two heaping tablespoons of red curry paste. Gave it a little different flavor profile but worked with the coconut milk. Also thickened the sauce up even a little more. Thank you for your curiosity!
This satisfied my Asian food craving. I used 93% lean ground turkey instead because that is what I had on hand. The sauce did come out bit sweeter and creamier than I had expected, may have been the specific coconut milk that I used. It was still very good, but I did have to adjust the spices to taste. Just added a bit more of everything. I threw in som bok choy until it was wilted, and then served it over rice. YUM!
Made it tonight! Cut the honey in half because my gochuchang was already pretty sweet. Added water chestnuts for some extra veggies/crunch
This recipe is freaking amazing!!! Quick & easy…definitely get all the complements in the work lunch room when I heat it up. Thank you for sharing!!!
This was one of the quickest meals I have made in a long time! So easy, one pan, simple ingredients. I didn’t have Gochujang so I subbed with red pepper chili paste. Wasn’t as spicy as I would imagine the Gochujang would make it but it was still really yummy. Served with white rice and roasted broccoli.
This was so freaking good! Do you think it can be doubled?
Yep! It might take a little longer to reduce 2 cans of coconut milk, but I actually made a batch recently with 2 pounds of chicken, double the spices/honey/gochujang, and only 1 can of coconut milk. It’s spicier but surprisingly not THAT spicy.