Hawaiian Chicken with Coconut Rice

Category: Dinner Recipes

Teriyaki-glazed chicken over coconut rice lands on the plate with a mix of smoky, sweet, and savory that keeps this dish in regular dinner rotation. The chicken gets sticky at the edges, the rice turns rich and fragrant without feeling heavy, and the grilled pineapple pulls the whole plate into balance with bright, caramelized juice.

What makes this version work is the short marinade built from teriyaki sauce, pineapple juice, brown sugar, and fresh ginger. The pineapple juice brings acidity and sweetness, but it also helps the chicken brown faster on the grill, so you get good color without drying out the meat. The coconut rice uses both coconut milk and water, which gives you that creamy texture while still keeping the grains separate instead of turning them dense and paste-like.

Below, I’ve included the timing that matters most, the little cues that tell you when the chicken and rice are on track, and a few swaps that still keep the spirit of the dish intact.

The chicken got that sticky grilled edge I was hoping for, and the coconut rice stayed fluffy instead of gummy. My husband asked if I could put this on the menu again next week.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this Hawaiian Chicken with Coconut Rice for nights when you want sticky grilled chicken, creamy coconut rice, and caramelized pineapple on one plate.

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The Marinade That Gives You Color Without Drying Out the Chicken

Chicken thighs are the right cut here because they stay juicy over medium-high heat and take well to the sticky glaze. Lean breast meat can work, but it needs a shorter grill time and a close eye, or it turns dry before the sugars in the marinade finish caramelizing.

The other trap is leaving the chicken in a sweet marinade so long that the surface gets tacky before it hits the grill. One to four hours is the sweet spot. That gives the ginger time to bloom and the teriyaki mixture time to season the meat without making the exterior burn before the center cooks through.

  • Chicken thighs — These hold up to grilling and stay tender even if the heat runs a little high. Boneless thighs are the easiest choice, but bone-in thighs work too if you add a few extra minutes and check the thickest part for doneness.
  • Teriyaki sauce — This brings salt, sugar, and built-in body. A thicker bottled sauce clings better than a thin soy-based one; if yours is very loose, it still works, but the glaze won’t coat quite as heavily.
  • Pineapple juice — This adds brightness and helps the chicken brown. Fresh juice isn’t necessary here, but avoid canned juice packed with extra sugar unless you reduce the brown sugar a little.
  • Fresh ginger — Powdered ginger won’t give the same sharp, fresh lift. Grating it finely lets it disperse through the marinade instead of sitting in little fibrous bits on the surface.

Building the Grill, Rice, and Finish in the Right Order

Mixing the Marinade

Stir the teriyaki sauce, pineapple juice, brown sugar, and ginger until the sugar mostly dissolves. The marinade should taste sweet and salty with a little bite from the ginger; if it tastes flat now, it will taste flat later. Coat the chicken evenly and refrigerate it for at least an hour so the flavor has time to move beyond the surface.

Cooking the Coconut Rice

Rinse the jasmine rice if you want a cleaner, less sticky result, then combine it with the coconut milk, water, and salt in a pot. Bring it just to a boil, drop the heat to low, and cover tightly. If steam escapes, the rice can come out uneven and underdone in spots, so keep the lid on until the full 15 minutes are up.

Grilling the Chicken and Pineapple

Preheat the grill to medium-high and oil the grates lightly so the sugar in the marinade doesn’t glue the chicken in place. Grill the thighs for 6 to 7 minutes per side, looking for charred edges and juices that run mostly clear. The pineapple needs only about 2 minutes per side; pull it as soon as you see browned stripes and the fruit softens slightly, because it goes from caramelized to mushy fast.

Plating for the Best Bite

Spoon the coconut rice onto warm plates first, then slice or leave the chicken whole and set it over the top. Add the pineapple while it’s still warm so its juices run into the rice a little. Finish with green onions for freshness, since the dish needs that sharp, clean top note to balance the glaze.

How to Bend This Dish Without Losing the Island Feel

Swap in chicken breasts for a leaner dinner

Chicken breasts work, but they need less grill time and a lower tolerance for overcooking. Pound them to an even thickness so the thinner ends don’t dry out before the center cooks through, and start checking them early. You’ll lose a little richness, but the sweet-savory glaze still carries the dish.

Make it dairy-free and gluten-free without changing the texture

This recipe is naturally dairy-free, and it can be gluten-free if your teriyaki sauce is made with gluten-free soy sauce or tamari. The main thing to check is the bottle, since many teriyaki sauces hide wheat in the ingredient list. The rice and chicken need no other changes.

Use a stovetop grill pan when you don’t have an outdoor grill

A grill pan gives you the charred look and some of the smoky flavor, but it won’t dry the surface as aggressively as a live grill. Preheat it well and work in batches so the chicken sears instead of steaming. If the pan is crowded, the glaze turns pale and sticky instead of browned.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the chicken, rice, and pineapple in separate airtight containers for up to 4 days. The rice firms up as it chills, but it loosens again when warmed with a splash of water.
  • Freezer: The chicken freezes well for up to 2 months. The coconut rice can freeze, but the texture gets a little softer after thawing, so I use it only if I don’t mind a less distinct grain.
  • Reheating: Reheat the chicken gently in a covered skillet or in the oven with a spoonful of water to keep the glaze from tightening too much. Warm the rice with a splash of water or extra coconut milk and break up any clumps with a fork; microwave it in short bursts so it doesn’t dry out around the edges.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I marinate the chicken overnight?+

I wouldn’t go overnight with this marinade. The pineapple juice is acidic, and too much time can make the surface of the chicken a little mushy before it hits the grill. One to four hours gives you better texture and still plenty of flavor.

How do I keep the coconut rice from getting gummy?+

Use the measured liquid and keep the lid on while it simmers. If the heat is too high, the bottom can overcook before the top finishes, which is what makes rice turn sticky and dense. Let it rest off the heat for a few minutes before fluffing so the steam finishes the job evenly.

Can I bake the chicken instead of grilling it?+

Yes, but you’ll miss some of the char and smoke that make this dish stand out. Bake it at 425°F until the thighs are cooked through, then broil for a minute or two to pull some color onto the surface. Watch closely at the end because the sugar in the marinade can go from browned to burnt fast.

How do I know when the chicken is done?+

The safest check is an instant-read thermometer at 165°F in the thickest part. Visually, the juices should run clear and the meat should feel firm but still springy when pressed. If you cut in too early, the sugars on the outside often look ready before the center is fully cooked.

Can I use canned pineapple instead of fresh?+

Yes, as long as you use pineapple packed in juice, not syrup. Drain it well before grilling so the slices brown instead of steaming. The flavor will be a little softer than fresh pineapple, but it still works beautifully with the chicken and coconut rice.

Hawaiian Chicken with Coconut Rice

Hawaiian chicken with coconut rice features teriyaki-glazed grilled chicken plus creamy, simmered coconut jasmine rice. Pineapple rings are grilled briefly for a warm, caramelized topping that tastes island-inspired.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
marinating 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 45 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Hawaiian
Calories: 720

Ingredients
  

Chicken
  • 2 lb chicken thighs
  • 0.5 cup teriyaki sauce
  • 0.25 cup pineapple juice
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp fresh ginger, grated
Coconut rice
  • 2 cup jasmine rice
  • 1 can (14 oz) coconut milk
  • 1 cup water
  • 0.25 tsp salt
  • 1 grilled pineapple slices
  • 1 green onions for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 grill
  • 1 pot

Method
 

Marinate the chicken
  1. Mix teriyaki sauce, pineapple juice, brown sugar, and ginger in a bowl until the sugar dissolves and the mixture looks glossy.
  2. Add chicken thighs to the marinade and turn to coat; refrigerate for 1-4 hours so the glaze flavor penetrates.
Cook the coconut rice
  1. Combine jasmine rice, coconut milk, water, and salt in a pot and bring to a boil while stirring.
  2. Once boiling, reduce to a simmer, cover, and cook for 15 minutes until the rice is tender and the liquid is absorbed.
Grill pineapple, then grill chicken
  1. Grill pineapple slices for 2 minutes per side until grill marks form and the fruit looks slightly softened.
  2. Grill chicken over medium-high heat for 6-7 minutes per side until cooked through and the surface looks caramelized from the teriyaki glaze.
Serve
  1. Serve chicken over the coconut rice and top with grilled pineapple slices so the textures stay hot and creamy.
  2. Finish with green onions for garnish for a fresh color contrast right before serving.

Notes

Pro tip: For the deepest pineapple-teriyaki flavor, refrigerate the chicken uncovered for the first 30 minutes, then cover and continue marinating; this helps the glaze cling. Store cooked chicken and rice separately in the fridge up to 3 days; reheat gently. Freezing is yes for the chicken (up to 2 months) but coconut rice is best fresh. For a lower-sugar option, use reduced-sugar teriyaki sauce or cut the brown sugar to 1 tbsp while keeping the pineapple juice.

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