Panda Express took Black Pepper Chicken off the menu in 2021. This copycat brings it back.
Unlike sweeter dishes like their orange chicken, this one was all about black pepper, crisp celery and onions, and a light savory sauce. When I first tested it, I learned why so many copycats miss the mark. I used regular ground black pepper, and the dish named after pepper barely tasted like it. The fix wasn’t adding more. It was using a coarser grind, and I’ll show you exactly which one to buy.

There’s no wok, no marinade, and nothing you can’t find at a regular grocery store. Just the Pepper Chicken you can’t order anymore.
Buy This Pepper Before You Start
The pepper you use decides whether this tastes like Panda Express or like plain chicken stir fry with a sneeze of heat.
Standard spice-aisle pepper is ground fine, and fine pepper is sharp. A full measure of it turns the dish harsh. Coarse pepper releases its flavor slowly, so you get bold pepper taste and visible dark flecks in the sauce without the burn.
Look for a jar labeled butcher style or culinary grind, sometimes listed as 10-12 mesh, which just means the pieces are ground large. Skip the pepper mill for this one. A mill gives you a mix of dust and chunks, and the dust is what makes people swear a recipe used too much pepper.
Two adjustments before you measure:
- If shaker pepper is all you have tonight, cut back to 1 teaspoon and add more at the table.
- If you’re cautious about pepper, start with half the coarse pepper and stir more into the finished sauce. It’s much easier to add than to undo.
Ingredient Notes

Seasoned rice wine vinegar: The word to check on your bottle is seasoned. It’s rice vinegar with a little sugar and salt already in it, and that sweetness rounds out the sauce. If yours just says rice vinegar, stir 1 tablespoon of granulated sugar into the sauce mixture.
Oyster sauce: The backbone of the sauce and the reason there’s no marinade. It brings the deep, salty, takeout flavor on its own, and it’s shelved with the soy sauce at any regular grocery store.
Chicken thighs: Thighs are what Panda Express used, and they stay juicy through a hard sear. Breast works too, but it dries out faster, so start checking a couple of minutes early and pull the pieces as soon as they’re cooked through and lightly golden.
Sweet onion: I use a sweet onion like Vidalia on purpose. Regular yellow works, but the sweeter onion softens the edge of all that pepper so the dish tastes like the original instead of a pepper bomb.
Don’t Skip Cooking the Chicken All the Way Through
A lot of stir fry recipes have you pull the chicken while it’s still underdone, then finish it in the sauce. That makes people nervous for good reason. The sauce here only simmers for a minute or two, which isn’t much time to rescue pink chicken.
This recipe doesn’t work that way. The chicken cooks completely before the vegetables ever touch the pan, so the sauce only coats and glazes.

Take your time in that first stage and get the pieces lightly golden and cooked through.
You don’t need a screaming hot wok. A 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat sears the chicken without spitting oil across your stovetop.
Recipe Testing Notes
Karen tested the first version in June 2025. That version called for 1 teaspoon of regular ground black pepper, and her notes told me exactly what was wrong. The sauce was right, the method was right, and the pepper was almost invisible. In her words: “There’s just a little heat, but the rice definitely calmed the heat.” A little heat is a problem when the dish is named Black Pepper Chicken.
So I redeveloped it in August 2025. The pepper went from 1 teaspoon of fine grind to more than double that amount of coarse butcher style, and the yellow onion became a sweet onion to balance it. That’s the version on the recipe card below. The pepper now shows up in the flavor and in the dark flecks coating every piece of chicken, without the harshness that much fine pepper would bring.
What to Serve With It
White rice, the same as it was at Panda Express. Plain rice lets the pepper shine without wearing you out. If you want something with more going on, my better than takeout fried rice holds up next to the pepper without competing with it.
Like Extra Sauce?

If you spoon sauce over the rice, double every sauce ingredient. As written, it coats the chicken and vegetables with a little left over, not a puddle.
If your table splits between people who want more heat and people who want less, firecracker chicken covers the spicy end while this one stays in the middle.
And if this dish is your kind of Panda order, savory instead of sweet, mushroom chicken is the next one to make.
Leftovers hold up too. The sauce clings to the chicken instead of drying out, so the next-day bowl is nearly as good as the first.

Panda Express Pepper Chicken
Ingredients
Sauce
- ½ cup chicken broth
- 3 tablespoons oyster sauce
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce, low-sodium
- 2 tablespoons seasoned rice wine vinegar
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch
- 2 ¼ teaspoons coarse ground black pepper (10 to 12 mesh – see tips)
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- ¼ teaspoon chili powder
Chicken and Vegetables
- 3 tablespoons canola oil, divided (2 tablespoons to cook the chicken and 1 tablespoon to cook the vegetables)
- 1 ½ pounds boneless skinless chicken thighs, excess fat trimmed and cut into 1 inch pieces
- 1 cup sweet yellow onion, cut into 1 inch pieces (such as Vidalia)
- 1 cup celery stalks, cut into ½ inch slices on the bias (angled)
Instructions
- To make the sauce, add to a small mixing bowl the chicken broth, oyster sauce, low-sodium soy sauce, seasoned rice wine vinegar, cornstarch, black pepper, ground ginger, garlic powder, and chili powder. Whisk until smooth and set aside.
- Heat 2 tablespoons of canola oil in a large (12-inch) skillet over medium-high heat. Once the oil is hot, add the chicken pieces in a single layer. Cook for 8-10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the chicken is cooked through and lightly golden. Transfer to a clean plate and set aside.
- Add the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil to the skillet. Add the onion and celery, cooking for 3-4 minutes until tender but still slightly crisp, stirring occasionally.
- Return the chicken to the skillet with the vegetables. Stir to combine. Reduce the heat to medium, give the sauce a quick stir to recombine the cornstarch, then add it to the skillet. Cook for 1-2 minutes, stirring continuously, until the sauce thickens and coats the chicken and vegetables. Remove from the heat and serve.
Notes
- Coarse ground black pepper with a mesh of 10-12 is often labeled as “culinary” or “butcher style” when searching online, or in-stores, to purchase. It is a more uniform grind than what you will get when grinding from a pepper mill at home.
- It is best to reduce the amount of standard ground black pepper, if using, to 1 teaspoon. Using 2 ¼ teaspoons of finer ground black pepper will be too overpowering in this recipe.
- The original Panda Express black pepper chicken was made using chicken thigh meat however, you can substitute the boneless skinless chicken breast as a substitute if you prefer white meat over dark meat. You can also use a combination of both white and dark chicken.
- Seasoned rice vinegar is a lightly sweetened Asian vinegar. You can substitute standard rice vinegar and add 1 tablespoon of granulated sugar.












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