Ingredients
Method
Marinate the Chicken
- Cut chicken thighs into 3/4-inch cubes or dice.
- In a large bowl, combine olive oil, minced chipotle peppers (with some adobo sauce), garlic powder, onion powder, cumin, salt, black pepper, and lime juice. Mix well.
- Add diced chicken and toss to coat completely.
- Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour, or up to 4 hours.
Make the Escabeche
- In a medium bowl, whisk together lime juice, honey, and salt until the salt and honey dissolve.
- Add sliced radishes, onion, mint, tarragon, and 1 Fresno chile. Toss to coat.
- Let sit at room temperature while you cook the chicken, stirring occasionally. Taste and add more chiles if you want more heat.
Cook the Chicken
- Heat a large rondeau or wide skillet over medium-high heat. Don't add extra oil—the marinade has plenty.
- Add the marinated chicken in a single layer (work in batches if needed—don't crowd the pan).
- Let the chicken sear undisturbed for 3-4 minutes until nicely charred on the bottom.
- Stir and continue cooking until chicken is cooked through and edges are crispy, another 4-5 minutes. Internal temperature should reach 165°F.
- Remove from heat and let rest for 5 minutes.
Assemble the Tacos
- Warm corn tortillas in a dry skillet or directly over a gas flame until lightly charred and pliable.
- Fill each tortilla with chipotle chicken (about 1/4 cup per taco).
- Top with escabeche, diced or sliced avocado, fresh cilantro, and a squeeze of lime.
- Serve immediately with extra lime wedges on the side.
Notes
Heat Level: Two cans of chipotle peppers is moderately spicy—you get smoke and heat, but it's not overwhelming. If you're sensitive to spice, use just one can. The escabeche helps balance the heat either way.
What is Escabeche? Escabeche is a Latin American quick pickle, usually featuring thinly sliced vegetables (radishes, onions, chiles) dressed in citrus juice, salt, and sometimes honey. It's bright, acidic, and crunchy—a perfect counterpoint to rich or spicy meats. Think of it as a fresh, lively salad that doubles as a condiment.
Chicken Thighs vs. Breast: Thighs stay juicier and have more flavor. Don't substitute breasts here—they'll dry out.
Marinating Time: One hour is the minimum. Four hours is ideal. Overnight works too, but the lime juice will start to "cook" the chicken if you go much longer.
Corn Tortillas: Warm them. Seriously. Cold tortillas tear and taste like cardboard. A quick char in a dry pan or over an open flame makes all the difference.
Escabeche Variations: Traditional escabeche sometimes includes jalapeños, serranos, or carrots. Use what you like. The key is the lime-salt-honey dressing.
Avocado: Use ripe avocados—they should yield slightly when pressed. Dice or slice them just before serving to prevent browning. The creamy richness balances the smoke and acid perfectly.
Make Ahead: The chicken can be marinated the night before. The escabeche is best made fresh, but holds for a few hours at room temperature.
