Duck à l’Orange Is Fancy. This Chicken Version Is Better.
Duck à l’Orange sounds like a dinner party flex and it is. It’s also expensive, fussy, and honestly a lot of work for a Tuesday night. This Chicken à l’Orange recipe keeps everything that makes the French classic so irresistible… that sticky, citrusy, herb-fragrant glaze and trades the duck for chicken and the afternoon for 45 minutes. Same elegance. Fraction of the cost.

You know what sounds impressive at a dinner party? Duck à l’Orange. You know what isn’t impressive? Spending a fortune on duck, spending all afternoon in the kitchen, and then serving something that makes your guests smile politely while secretly wishing you’d just made pasta. Been there. Sort of.
Here’s the thing: when Julia Child introduced Americans to Duck à l’Orange in her 1961 masterpiece Mastering the Art of French Cooking, she started something. Dinner parties got fancier. Home cooks got ambitious. And a whole generation of people discovered that French food is amazing… even when it takes all day.
But it’s 2026. We’re busy. And chicken sits at an average of $2.04 per pound.
So I’m letting you in on a little secret: Chicken à l’Orange is everything Duck à l’Orange promised to be: golden, sticky, fragrant with rosemary, bright with orange and it takes 45 minutes start to finish. That’s not a compromise. That’s an upgrade.
Why This Works So Well
Marmalade is the genius move here. Instead of reducing fresh orange juice into a sauce (which takes time and fuss), you start with something that already has body, sweetness, and that gorgeous bitter orange edge. A splash of white wine vinegar sharpens it. Fresh rosemary makes it smell like a restaurant kitchen in the best possible way.
And the shallots. Don’t skip the shallots. They roast down into something almost jammy, and they make the whole pan look intentional.
What You’ll Need
Shallots
Milder and sweeter than regular onions, shallots practically melt in the oven. Don’t substitute a yellow onion here; you’ll lose that delicate, almost buttery flavor that makes this dish feel intentional. Find them near the onions and garlic at any grocery store.
Olive oil, divided
One tablespoon for the shallots, one for the glaze. Any neutral oil works in a pinch, but olive oil adds a subtle richness that plays nicely with the marmalade.
Kosher salt and black pepper
Kosher salt isn’t just a chef affectation. Its larger flakes are easier to control and dissolve more evenly. Regular table salt works. Just use about half as much.
Whole chicken, cut into 10 pieces
Ask your butcher to do the cutting. Most will, at no charge, and it saves you ten minutes and a lot of knife confidence. Bone-in thighs and drumsticks from a pre-cut pack work just as well if you’d rather skip the math entirely.
Orange marmalade
This is your sauce. No reducing, no fuss… just built-in sweetness, body, and that distinctive bitter-orange edge. Any brand works. Low-sugar marmalade is fine; just expect a slightly less sticky glaze.
White wine vinegar
The secret weapon. It cuts the sweetness of the marmalade and keeps the whole dish from tipping into dessert territory. Apple cider vinegar is a perfectly good stand-in.
Fresh rosemary, chopped
Fresh really does matter here. Dried rosemary can turn sharp and almost medicinal at high heat. If fresh isn’t available, thyme makes a lovely substitute… same rustic, herby vibe, slightly softer flavor.
Here’s How to Make It
Start With a Hot Oven
Heat to 425°F. This isn’t a low-and-slow situation. High heat is exactly what caramelizes the marmalade glaze and crisps the skin. Don’t be tempted to go lower. Patience later, heat now.
Give the Shallots a Head Start
In a large shallow roasting pan, toss the shallots with 1 tablespoon of olive oil and ¼ teaspoon each of salt and pepper. Spread them out so they have room to roast, not steam. They’ll soften and turn almost jammy by the time the chicken is done. That’s the goal.
Make the Glaze (It Takes 60 Seconds)
In a large bowl, whisk together the marmalade, vinegar, rosemary, remaining tablespoon of olive oil, and another ¼ teaspoon each of salt and pepper. That’s your sauce. No stovetop, no simmering, no extra pan. Add the chicken pieces and toss until every surface is coated and glossy. Don’t rush this part. A well-coated piece of chicken is a happy piece of chicken.
Arrange and Roast
Nestle the chicken pieces among the shallots in the roasting pan. Bone side down, skin side up always. They should fit snugly without overlapping; crowded chicken steams instead of roasts, and steamed isn’t what we’re after.
Roast for 25 to 30 minutes, until the chicken is cooked through and the skin is deep golden brown. A meat thermometer should read 165°F at the thickest part. When the glaze starts to look lacquered and the shallots are tender and caramelized around the edges, you’re there.
Serve It Right
Fresh steamed green beans and good crusty bread. That’s all you need. The bread especially… those pan juices are too good to leave behind.
Leftovers (if you have any) reheat beautifully and are absolutely sensational over rice the next day. Just saying.
You’ve Got This
This is one of those recipes that looks like you tried really hard. You didn’t have to. That’s the best kind. Put it on the table on a Tuesday night and watch people’s faces or save it for company and let them think you spent all day cooking.
Either way, Julia would approve.
Chicken À L'Orange
Ingredients
- 8 shallots
- 2 tablespoons olive oil divided
- ¼ teaspoon kosher salt plus ¼ teaspoon more for the glaze
- ¼ teaspoon black pepper plus ¼ teaspoon more for the glaze
- 1 whole chicken cut into 10 pieces (2 drumsticks, 2 thighs, 2 wings, 2 breasts each halved)
- ½ cup orange marmalade
- 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar
- 1 tablespoon fresh rosemary chopped
Instructions
- Heat oven to 425°F.
- In a large shallow roasting pan, toss the shallots with 1 tablespoon olive oil and ¼ teaspoon each salt and pepper. Spread into an even layer.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the marmalade, vinegar, rosemary, remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil, and ¼ teaspoon each salt and pepper.
- Add the chicken pieces to the bowl and toss until every piece is fully coated in the glaze.
- Nestle the chicken pieces skin side up among the shallots in the roasting pan.
- Roast for 25 to 30 minutes, until the chicken is golden brown and a meat thermometer inserted into the thickest part reads 165°F.
- Serve with fresh steamed green beans and crusty bread.
Notes
Nutrition
Question: Duck or chicken… which one actually belongs on your dinner table? Share your preference in the comments below.















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