This chicken brine recipe is made with lemons, honey, fresh herbs and spices, and produces a juicy tender chicken every time! A foolproof way for succulent and flavorful roasted, smoked or fried chicken.
If you’ve never had a brined chicken before, you’re missing out! It takes just minutes to make a chicken brine, but the end result is nothing short of fabulous. Serve your chicken with glazed carrots and rice pilaf for a complete meal.

I always get anxious about cooking large items of poultry like whole chickens and turkeys. It’s just so easy to either overcook the birds until they’re dry as a bone, or undercook them so they’re raw in the middle. This chicken brine infuses a whole bird with tons of flavor and moisture and helps protect it from drying out in the oven! Brined chicken is the best chicken you’ll ever eat!
If you are looking for other meats to brine, take a look at my turkey brine recipe, pork chop brine and dry brined turkey!
Table of Contents
Chicken Brine Ingredients
To make this chicken brine recipe you’ll need water, kosher salt, honey, lemons, bay leaves, garlic, peppercorns, rosemary, thyme and parsley. You will also want a chicken to place in the brine!

How Do You Make Chicken Brine?
When you make this chicken brine recipe start by pouring water into a large pot. Add salt, honey, bay leaves, garlic, peppercorns, rosemary, thyme, parsley and lemon slices to the water. Simmer everything for a few minutes until the salt dissolves. Cool the brine to room temperature. Add your chicken to the cooled liquid, cover it and refrigerate it. When you are ready to cook the chicken, remove the pot from the fridge, pat it dry and remove any herbs or peppercorns from the chicken. Cook and enjoy the chicken!

Tips For The Perfect Chicken Brine
- I pour additional cold water over the chicken to make sure there is enough to submerge the chicken.
- Be sure to use kosher salt, do not use table salt in this recipe. Table salt measures differently than kosher salt and your chicken will be too salty with table salt. I typically use Diamond Crystal kosher salt.
- This recipe tends to work well with smaller chickens in the 3-5 pound range.
- I soak my chickens in a pot. If your chicken is larger than the biggest pot in your house, you can use a brining bag.
- If you’re making a smoked chicken, you can use a half batch of my smoked turkey brine before you put the chicken in the smoker.
Quick Tip
Make sure the liquid is completely cooled before you add the chicken for food safety reasons. You can add ice cubes to help speed the process along.

Recipe FAQs
Chicken is a naturally lean type of meat which mean it’s prone to drying out. When a chicken is placed into brine, it absorbs some of the liquid which helps to both keep it moist and also to season it all the way through. When you’re working with a brined chicken, even if you overcook it a bit, it should still come out tender and juicy.
A whole chicken should be submerged in brine for at least 8 hours, or up to 24 hours. Do not go past the 24 hour mark, as your bird may be overly salty if it sits in the brine for too long. If you’re looking to cook bone-in chicken pieces such as chicken thighs, drumsticks or chicken breasts, you’ll want to soak them for about 4 hours. If you’re working with boneless chicken pieces, you can leave them in for about 2 hours.
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How Do You Cook Chicken?
You can cook this type of chicken in any way that you would normally cook a whole chicken. Check out some of my favorite recipes below. Sometimes I like to add a few teaspoons of chicken seasoning to the outside of the bird before I cook it.
- Roasted Chicken with Garlic and Herbs
- Slow Cooker Whole Chicken
- Peruvian Chicken
- Rotisserie Chicken
- Fried Chicken
Flavor Variations
This recipe adds amazing flavor and moisture to any chicken; however, you can change the recipe to suit your own taste.
- Citrus: You can try orange or grapefruit slices instead of lemon slices or make your own citrus combination.
- Sugar: Brown sugar works well with this brine. Just make sure to dissolve it in the water.
- Spicy: Feel free to add dried chiles for a little spice.
- Flavors: You can add fresh sage, paprika or quartered onions to your brine.
Once you try a brined chicken, you’ll be hooked! Everyone will think you’re a gourmet chef when they get a taste of your perfectly cooked chicken. While making a this brining solution is an extra step in the cooking process, it’s totally worth it in my opinion.
More Great Chicken Recipes
Baked Chicken Wings
55 mins
Chicken Madeira
55 mins
Smoked Chicken Thighs
3 hrs 10 mins
Grilled Chicken Breast
1 hr 30 mins
Chicken Brine Video
Love This Recipe?
Please leave a 5-star 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 rating in the recipe card below & a review in the comments section further down the page.
Chicken Brine Recipe

Ingredients
- 8 cups water
- 1/2 cup kosher salt do not use table salt
- 1/4 cup honey
- 3 dried bay leaves
- 5 cloves of garlic smashed and peeled
- 1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
- 3 sprigs fresh rosemary
- 3 sprigs fresh thyme
- 3 sprigs fresh parsley
- 2 lemons sliced
- 4 lb whole chicken
Instructions
- Place the water, salt, honey, bay leaves, garlic, peppercorns, rosemary, thyme, parsley and lemons in a large pot. Bring to a simmer over medium heat.
- Cook for 3-4 minutes or until salt has dissolved.
- Turn off the heat and cool completely.
- Add the chicken to the cooled brine. Make sure the chicken is completely submerged.
- Cover the pot and refrigerate for 8-24 hours.
- Remove the chicken from the brine and pat it dry with paper towels. Remove any herbs or peppercorns. Proceed with roasting, smoking or frying the chicken.
Notes
- Nutritional information includes the whole chicken.
- Make sure the liquid is completely cooled before you add the chicken for food safety reasons. You can add ice cubes to help speed the process along.
- I pour additional cool water over the chicken to make sure there is enough to submerge the chicken.
- I brine my chickens in a pot. If your chicken is larger than the biggest pot in your house, you can use a brining bag.
My chicken turned out delicious. I am brining another today. This recipe is a keeper. Thank you for posting it.
Do you season the skin as well?
Can I use minced garlic in place of cloves? Thank you
yes that's fine!
Have a chicken defrosting. Can I make the brine day before? Will roast tmr!
I also have Mortons kosher Salt . Do I have to adjust the amt used?
Thank you
Yes it's fine to make a day in advance and Morton's should be fine!
Delicious!
Is the salt measurement for coarse grind Kosher salt or regular grind?
regular grind
I am frying my chicken after brining and then rinsing. Should I season the flour with just a little salt or no salt?
I'd use a little salt!
This recipe is amazing. I’ve made it multiple times and it always turns out fabulous.
I was always told add salt to the water till an egg floats Larr from Minnesota
Looking forward to trying this for a feast. Can I put two chickens (totaling 5.7 lbs in the one pot of brine at the same time? Would table salt work and what would be the adjustment for it? Thanks!
Yes you can use two chickens but you may need to add more water to cover them! Use 1/3 cup table salt.
What would the recipe be for 100 pounds of chicken??
You can adjust the number of servings on the recipe card and the ingredient amounts will automatically recalculate!
Thinking about making this for Thanksgiving! I was just wondering how the chicken in the pictures is cooked. Is that what it looks like after brining and then just placing in the over? If so, what temperature and for how long?
You also mention a possible cooking option is Roasted Chicken with Garlic and Herbs - would you brine and then cover in garlic and herbs?
Thanks!
Ashley
I recommend brining it, then following this recipe: https://edsug.com/roasted-chicken/
The result was Amazing!!
Would you be able please to advise how to brine turkey the same way. Would it work?
What sort ratio of salt, sugar, water are we looking at?
Thank you very much
Here is my turkey brine recipe! https://edsug.com/turkey-brine-recipe/
Hi,
Just wondering if 6 hours would be enough for brining?
Thank you!
It's better if you can do it longer but 6 hours should still add flavor!
We have used this brine a few times now. I have a chicken soaking that I will smoke tonight. I agree, I will never want to just cook chicken on the grill without brining ever again. Fabulous ! Thanks for the recipe .
What’s your recommended process for smoking the chicken?
Here's my smoked chicken recipe: https://edsug.com/smoked-chicken-recipe/
HI!!! Extraordinary recipe.
can be used the same brine for a second batch of chickens?
Best regards from Chili
I would use it within 24 hours for food safety purposes!
Can i use sea salt in place of kosher salt?
Yes but use 2 tablespoons less!
I’ve used this brine recipe a couple of times and have liked it as an introduction to brining. Before I found this recipe I had zero experience brining and now I feel much more confident; it’s pretty easy to follow with simple ingredients.
The one thing that’s confused me so far is: sometimes with a bigger bird (~5 lbs) I’ve had to cover it with a lot more water than what is indicated; it says in the recipe to make sure it’s totally submerged, but in doing so had to add closer to 14 cups of water than the 8 cups indicated! Of course then one should add almost double of the other ingredients. The 1st time I used the recipe with a smaller bird (~3-4 lbs), used ~8 cups water, brined just for a few hours, and it was great. The 2nd time I used this recipe I used a bigger bird but didn’t realize I might have to add any extra ingredients to compensate (as it doesn’t indicate needing to do so in the recipe?), brined for a full 24 hrs before roasting and the meat came out super watery and flavorless. I think it should mention to double the ingredients if using more water/bigger bird? I’ll be trying a 3rd time tonight, large bird, extra water/ingredients.. brining for a few hours. I’ll report back how it turns out!
Thanks for this.
Was your second chicken 5 lbs or larger than that? If you need to double the amount of water to cover a 5 lb chicken then you could increase some of the ingredients, but I would only increase the amounts by 1/2, 1 cup of salt will be way too much.
How did it go with the larger chicken? Did you add more ingredients like she suggested? Mine is 5 lbs and I just looked at the brine and realized it isn't going to even closely cover the bird! Ugh. And I don't want to just double the water as you did with soggy results. Thanks you!
You can just add more water until your bird is covered and it will be fine!
Hello, I'm having a problem fully understanding your Chick Brine Recipe - Ingredients: For example, One can Increase and Decrease the “Servings” box but shouldn't the Ingredients increase & decrease per pound of chicken?
This recipe is for an average sized chicken, anywhere from 3-5 pounds. You shouldn't need to scale up unless you're trying to brine multiple chickens at once.
Thanks for your reply. I went to my grocery store Thursday. They didn't have fresh Rosemary or Thyme. Parsley, yes, but I decided not to get any. It's a pretty big grocery store, I don't know if they're out due to recent events or they never carried fresh.
Anyway, I substituted about 1/8 - 1/4 tablespoon of the ground parsley, rosemary & thyme. I couldn't find what a “sprig” equated. Guess I should have asked you first lol.
The herbs don't really seem to be overpowering. When it was simmered, it sure made the house smell good. I think it will be ok, I am hoping to cook it tomorrow using your ‘Roasted Chicken w/ Garlic & Herbs,' recipe.
Like I said, I think it will be fine. However, if you would care to comment about substitutions when fresh isn't available, I would love to hear it.
Can't rate this yet but I have my chicken defrosting now and will brine it later today to throw it on the smoker tomorrow! So excited to try this entire recipe from brine to rub to the smoke!
Will update once I've consumed it!
Good day (no, I'm not an Aussie).
In our area (California), there are 2 major suppliers of kosher salt: Morton's and Diamond Crystal. Unfortunately, though the formulation is similar, the coarseness is not. Seems that Morton's is a lot finer.
Which did you use for the “1/2 cup kosher salt” measure? I've had bad experiences with too-salty brines in the past, and would rather not repeat the mistake.
Many thanks,
Joe
I'm also in California and I always use Diamond Crystal!
Many thanks for the clarification.
I'm glad that I asked, as I use Morton's, since that's what our local Safeway stocks. Well, when I'm not using Maldon Sea Salt, but that just confuses things.
Made a fine rotisserie chicken (non brined) last night, using a Farberware rotisserie that is probably twice your age. Got it at a garage sale for $20. Looks like it was hardly used. I'm sure that the next (brined) chicken will be much better.
Regards,
Joe