Honey-Mustard Baked Chicken Legs
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These honey-mustard baked chicken legs take no time to throw together and are incredibly delicious, a hit with adults and children alike! This has been a family favorite for decades!

During my recent trip home to CT, my mother taught me how to make her homemade hamburger helper, a favorite of mine and my siblings growing up, a meal we thought the toddlers in the house would enjoy as well.
While the children ate it without complaint, each favoring a different component — macaroni, hamburger, melted cheese — it was the adults who really went to town on it, in particular my brother and brother-in-law who polished off the leftovers after a late-night game of darts (and a few too many whiskeys).
I don’t know if it’s the need to feed the toddlers I suddenly find at my feet or the trip home or the winter weather, but recently I can’t get enough of these old family recipes. My mother learned this chicken recipe from her aunt Rene, who has been serving it at dinner parties since the 1960’s. It is truly a crowd pleaser.
Now, a note, likely an obvious one: For those of you who like savoring the flavor of chicken in its most unadulterated form, perhaps roasted with a few herbs and maybe a lemon wedge or two, this one is not for you. It’s all about the sauce, a mixture of honey and mustard, curry powder and mango chutney, that thickens and concentrates during the hour or so spent in the oven. It’s the kind of thing that is nearly impossible not to pick up off the plate with your hands, gnaw at the bone, lick your fingers when you’re finished. Sorry for the image.
All of that said, the chicken cooks perfectly — the tender, moist meat, which retains its heat so nicely, falls off the bone with every prod of the fork, making a more civilized approach to its ingestion certainly an option.
My Great Aunt Rene would be so proud — my children gobbled it up, and for the first time in a long time, not a word about ketchup was uttered.
Honey-Mustard Baked Chicken, Step by Step
First gather your ingredients: honey, mustard, butter, curry powder, and mango chutney.

Whisk them all together to combine.

Place your chicken in a baking dish and season on both sides with salt.

Pour the sauce over the chicken and toss to coat.

Roast at 375ºF for 1.25 hours or until the meat fall of the bone when gently prodded.

Honey-Mustard Baked Chicken Legs
- Total Time: 1 hours 20 minutes
- Yield: 6 to 8 1x
- Diet: Gluten Free
Description
These honey-mustard baked chicken legs take no time to throw together and are incredibly delicious, a hit with adults and children alike! This has been a family favorite for decades.
Source: My Great Aunt Rene
Notes:
Chicken: You can use all thighs, all drumsticks or whole legs intact. Recently I’ve been making it with all thighs (8 to 10), and my family can’t get enough of it. My favorite brand is Bell & Evans. I love the size of their chicken legs and the flavor is great, too.
Rice: I serve this with rice because the sauce is so, so tasty. I use this Cuckoo Rice Cooker and typically cook 2 cups of basmati rice for my family.
Ingredients
- 3 pounds bone-in skin-on chicken legs, see notes above
- kosher salt, preferably Diamond Crystal
- 1/2 cup butter, melted (salted or unsalted is fine)
- 1/2 cup honey
- 1/4 cup Dijon mustard
- 2 tablespoons mango chutney
- 2 teaspoons curry powder
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 375ºF.
- Place the chicken in a 9×13-inch baking dish. Season the chicken generously on both sides with salt.
- Whisk together the remaining ingredients in a medium bowl. Pour the sauce over the chicken, then toss with a spatula (or your hands) until the pieces are evenly coated. Arrange the chicken skin-side up.
- Transfer the pan to the oven and bake for 1.25 to 1.5 hours. I find 1.25 hours to be perfect. Keep an eye on it — the sauce chars quickly, especially at the end.
- Let cool briefly before serving.
- Prep Time: 5 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hours 15 minutes
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
183 Comments on “Honey-Mustard Baked Chicken Legs”
Alton Brown’s Baked Brown Rice: The Ultimate Foolproof Oven Method
This is how I’ve been cookng brown rice n then freezing to use as needed for YEARS! It never fails me! So easy peasy too! Plz try this method at least once!
I have a rice cooker, but I always default to the IP (which I rarely use for anything other than rice). My IP is one of the original ones from at least 10 years ago and it’s still going strong. I like how speedy it is. The rice cooker (mine is a zojirushi) make amazing rice, but it takes a long time and the difference is just not enough for the speed of the IP.
Hi Ali,
I use a Tatung rice cooker. It is incredibly easy and has a stainless-steel interior. It’s also super easy to steam & cook veggies and rice with some of the “attachments” (smaller bowls that fit inside the pot) that come with it. I got one used off of eBay. Plus, it’s very cute! Let me know if you try it 🙂
This is the rice cooker my Taiwanese friend and her family have used for eternity. It is steamed and there is the stainless steel inner pot, so you don’t get any chemical non stick in your food. Tatung rice cooker https://www.amazon.com/Tatung-TAC-6G-Multi-Functional-Cooker-White/dp/B003O7OW2I/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.D3Y0x5nwRZ1PbUuW6EJGDZtheyL_I6GwAToH6XYJ9RnGjHj071QN20LucGBJIEps.f-tfck50i3lod4mw5JbKQ63OR9uXVSiep-aP8-RGSF8&dib_tag=se&qid=1769906993&refinements=p_89%3ATatung&sr=8-3&srs=20698015011
Chiming in to recommend the Zojirushi rice cooker. I had never used a rice cooker before moving in with my partner, who is Chinese. I’ll never go back to cooking rice on the stovetop. We have one of the larger Zojirushi models and bought a different, smaller one for a family member as a gift; both continue to make perfect rice after many years of use. We use ours to cook brown, white and sushi rice, as well as to make congee.
I’m sooo tempted by these chicken legs – but I’ve had such a horrendous fail oven toasting a duck with a honey sauce that burnt onto my oven dish and smoked my oven out so badly I had to get it professionally cleaned.
Is there a way I can stop this from happening?
Also my failsafe stove top rice is so easy and I’m in the kitchen anyway so not hard to check for doneness. Here it is from my dad who served with the British army in India, literally 100 years ago.
Boil water with salt add rice once water is boiling and stir (no need to rinse first) check for doneness it should have a slightly al dente feel.
Drain and rinse under cold water in a metal colander then put some water back into the pot and place the colander with the rice in it on top cover with a tight fitting lid. Let the rice steam for 10 – 12 minutes and turn off the heat- fluff with a fork and replace the lid to stay hot until you serve. It will continue to dry out and be wonderfully fluffy. So easy
Re: your rice cooker question, I highly recommend Zojirushi’s fuzzy logic rice cookers. They’re easy to use and clean and make excellcent rice–white or brown, long or short grain. They’re not all that pretty to look at, but functionally they’re fantastic. This is the one my family has and it’s significantly smaller than our 6qt IP. Our rice cooker lives in a kitchen cabinet, our IP lives in the basement. That reality reflects both their difference in size and how often we use each appliance. If I need a pressure cooker, I’m far more likely to use our stovetop version which also fits in an easily in a kitchen cabinet.
https://store.zojirushi.com/products/nszcc
I also enthusiastically recommend Zojirushi rice cookers! Mine gets used at least a couple times a week. Perfect rice, every single time.
I had to laugh when I read the email you sent about the rice cooker, because for all of my 85 years cooking rice has not been a big deal, without a rice cooker. Learned from my Oma and then my mom rice is cooked stovetop and then, as we laughing say, “put to bed”. And yes, we literally put it to bed covered by blankets/pillows as insulation. I usually make my rice in the morning, put it to bed and by dinner time it is still warm. No rice cooker needed or wanted!!
Rice cooker: my friend bought an inexpensive one at Amazon and she loves it. I had it and I did not like the way the rice turned out. I have a recipe that I find works for me, made in a saucepan – and it comes out great.
Dear Ali,
If you look into Tiger brand or Zojirushi brand rice cooker, you will see options that solve all the challenges you have. They are very sophisticated rice cooker that can cook all kinds of rice; brown, pre-washed, white, sushi, rice soup etc also has coating options. W rice soup option, people also use it to slow cook some soups as well.
Hope this helps.
K
If you buy a “basic” rice cooker you can cook as many cups as u want : there markings on the side of the cooker pot tells you how much water to add. You press the on button n leave it alone. Normally there is a keep warm function. Normally for jasmine rice.
If you buy a “fuzzy” cooker there r indications for all types of rice – mixed, brown, porridge, steam or reheat functions. Same as for ordinary rice cooker. No one uses a rice cooker for short grained rice – too much starch.
Some brands take longer than others to cook but the result is usually perfect ie if u like the Chinese style rice.
Do not use American long rice – the Uncle Ben’s type. If you use the usual Asian rice it has to be washed/rinsed 2-3 times until th e water runs clear. Then u measure according to the lines in the pot. The only time you may need to adjust is when u use newly harvested rice. Hope this helps
I usually don’t comment any recipes … but I have to make an exemption. I made drumsticks for a potluck this weekend with this recipe and it was just delicious and the legs were gone faster than any other dish and everyone asked for the recipe. My hubby wishes that i make them again very soon but just for us, so he doesn’t have to fight for a second … or third … or ….. you know where I’m going 😉.
Thank you aunt Rene for this easy and soooo tasty recipe and thank you Ali for sharing. ❤️
I love the mini instant pot , 3quarts. Perfect size , stainless liner. Plus I also use it for making potatoes . It’s just the right size when you aren’t making large amounts.
Oh my gosh— this is SO good! This will be a new family favorite. When I started to make it, I realized I didn’t have any curry powder at home, so I googled how to make one using coriander and other spices that I did have. The only other substitute I did was to use my home-made canned plum chutney rather than mango chutney. This chicken is now one of my favorite meals! We served it with rice, spooning the leftover sauce on top. Fantastic!!
https://www.bedbathandbeyond.com/Home-Garden/Zojirushi-White-Rice-Cooker-Steamer-3-6-and-10-Cups/13866900/product.html
I have a Zojirushi rice maker, on the recommendation of my Thai daughter-in-law. I usually cook Thai jasmine rice, and also on her recommendation, rinse it once. It turns out great every time. I’m making Aunt Rene’s chicken for super bowl!
Can I prepare the sauce and let the chicken marinate in it the night before I want to cook it?
That should be fine! Apologies for the delay here. Just cover the pan with plastic wrap or other to ensure the sauce doesn’t dry out.
I made this recipe last night and can confirm the bake time is perfect and the chicken comes out tender and moist. Everyone loved it. I was cooking for a crowd and had 6 lbs of bone-in thighs, so I doubled the other ingredients. I ended up with way too much sauce, especially the melted butter. Do you have any suggestions for cutting back on the other ingredients?
Hi Denise! Great to hear re flavor/cooking time etc. I think for that amount of meat, 1.5 x the sauce ingredients would be fine. You might even be able to get away with not doubling the sauce. The only thing I warn against is crowding too much meat into one pan — I’ve done that, and I’ve found the chicken doens’t cook as evenly and it takes longer to brown.
Can you post the hamburger helper recipe?!
Hi! And yes… this post probably could use some updating, just a forwarning: https://vector-hatch.live/2013/01/24/homemade-hamburger-helper/%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
This was incredible! I wasn’t sure what to expect with the mixture of ingredients, but everyone loved it. Will be in my regular rotation. Thanks so much!
Great to hear, Lisa! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
Perhaps you can help me figure out why the sauce separated into oil and solids. The flavor is great, and I followed the recipe to the letter – it even looked exactly like the pictures on line in every step.
The separation is a normal … you can’t really do anything to prevent it from happening.
This chicken is absolutely wonderful!! Have made it three times in 10 days. Had 4+lbs of thighs last night and randomly added more of each ingredient to the sauce. Not quite as good. My apologies to Aunt Renee. She had it right!
Awww, I love this 🙂 Aunt Rene was very forgiving. No worries at all! Just glad you liked it.
This has become a new favorite at our house!
I’m so happy to read this, Jennifer 🙂
You had asked about rice cooking and if I use Basmati rice (which seems to be my go-to type), I soak it for 30 minutes, drain it, and then put in boiling water as if it were pasta. When the rice rises to the top and smells that wonderful smell, it’s done! I drain it and that’s it. So simple.
Got it! Thanks for circling back and sharing your notes. I love Basmati rice.
I was a little apprehensive to try this recipe as we are not a fan of curry but so glad I did. We loved it and it is on regular rotation in our house as well. I was wondering your thoughts on cutting down on some of the fat and adding chicken broth? Going to try that tonight.
Great to hear, Sandy! I think your idea sounds lovely — chicken broth will add nice flavor without the additional fat. Would love to hear how it turns out if you give it a go.
I made the original recipe and added about 3/4 cup chicken broth. It turned our great and next time I’m going to try to add 1/2 the amount of butter to 1 cup of chicken broth and see how that goes. The flavor is just so amazing that I don’t think the extra fat is needed. Made it for my son and his wife and they loved it as much as we do. It is such a great recipe. Thank you so much for sharing it with us.