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These homemade Cane's chicken tenders are golden, ultra-crispy, and way easier than you'd think! They’re that good.

Copycat Cane’s Chicken Recipe
My kids are obsessed with Cane’s chicken, and honestly, I get it. Those tenders are perfectly crispy on the outside, juicy inside, and dipped in that addictive sauce… what’s not to love? Other than the cost!
After way too many drive-thru runs and many requests to recreate the recipe, I finally cracked the code at home. This copycat recipe has become a family favorite, and it’s surprisingly simple to make.
They’re not the first I’ve remade at home; previous kid obsessions included these Chick-fil-A-style nuggets and their grilled bites, aka these air fryer chicken bites.

Ingredients
While Cane’s won’t disclose what they put in their chicken (or if they add MSG), I’m here to share with you the simple ingredients that make these taste great:
- Chicken breasts: slice each chicken breast into 3 vertical pieces, or buy chicken breast tenderloins (the small strips).
- Buttermilk: the liquid base for the marinade used to tenderize the chicken. In the recipe card, I share how to make it.
- Cajun seasoning: the only seasoning you’ll need to add flavor to the marinade and to the breading.
- All-purpose flour: used to coat the chicken strips.
- Oil, for frying: use a neutral oil such as vegetable, canola, or peanut oil. You’ll need about 4 cups, enough to fill the frying pan with sides halfway up.

How to Make Cane’s Chicken at Home
Thanks to Paige, my intern who worked for 2 years at Cane’s, I’ve been able to nail the process of making this copycat recipe at home. If breading and frying intimidate you, I get it. Let me add a few tips to make each step easier:
- Marinate
A key step that preps the chicken strips. Marinate as little as 1 hour or up to overnight. - Coat the chicken strips
Place each chicken strip with as much of the wet marinade directly onto the flour mixture, making sure to press down into the flour mixture a lot to create those iconic crispy breading flakes. It’s messy, so I do all the strips at once, then wash my hands and cook them. - Fry them
Heat the oil to 350F and cook in smaller batches of 3-4 strips at a time. If you add too many, the oil temperature will drop drastically. Remove them onto a wire rack and repeat. - Serve
Serve these dipped in the copycat sauce below, or turn it into a full meal by baking or air-frying the iconic crinkle fries while you cook the chicken, along with some garlic Texas toast.
Watch this video to see how these strips are made step-by-step!
Can I Prep Chicken Tenders Ahead?
You can prep the chicken tenders all the way up to the cooking step and keep them in a container in the fridge for up to 24 hours. When you’re ready to cook them, remove them from the fridge and let them come to room temperature for 20 minutes before frying. Because of the thick coating, I don’t recommend freezing them.
How to Make Cane’s Sauce
The iconic Cane’s dipping sauce is made by combining mayonnaise, ketchup, Worcestershire sauce, garlic powder, and black pepper. It can last up to a week in the fridge and tastes best cold, so I recommend making it first.

Copycat Cane’s Chicken and Sauce

Watch how it’s made:
Ingredients
Chicken tenders
- 4 chicken breasts or 2lbs tenderloins
- 1 ½ cups buttermilk
- 3 tablespoons Cajun seasoning, divided
- 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
For the Cane’s Sauce
- ¾ cup mayonnaise
- ⅓ cup ketchup
- 1 ½ tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
- 1 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
Instructions
Prep:
- Mix all the Cane's sauce ingredients in a bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate.
- Cut the chicken breasts into 3 vertical strips. If using chicken breast tenderloins, remove the tendons by sliding them through a fork.
Marinate
- Combine the buttermilk and 1 ½ tablespoons of the Cajun seasoning inside a zip bag. Add the chicken strips, seal the bag, and mix to coat them with the liquid. Refrigerate for 1 hour or overnight. The longer you can marinate, the better.
Coat them
- In a shallow dish, combine the all-purpose flour with the remaining 1 ½ tablespoons of Cajun seasoning. Remove a few chicken strips from the bag and place them in the flour mixture dish. Keep as much of the buttermilk marinade on the chicken as you can; this helps form those crispy flakes. Using your hands, press the flour onto the chicken to ensure it's well coated. Repeat this process with all the chicken strips, placing them on a tray as you go. When they're all done, wash your hands and discard the marinade.
Fry them
- Fill a heavy-bottomed pot or skillet (with sides) with oil about halfway up the sides. Overfilling will lead to overflowing during frying. Heat the oil to 350F and once it's hot, use kitchen tongs to place 3 to 4 chicken strips in the hot oil. Cook the strips about 4 minutes per side. Remove the strips from the oil onto a wire rack or a baking sheet lined with several paper towels. Repeat the frying process with the remaining chicken strips.
Make it a meal
- Air fry or bake crinkle-cut fries while you fry the chicken strips. Garlic Texas toast (found in the freezer aisle) also makes a great addition. Serve the chicken strips with the Cane's sauce.
Notes
- Make buttermilk by adding 2 tablespoons of vinegar (white or apple cider) or lemon juice to a measuring cup. Then, fill it to the 1 ½ cups line with regular milk. Stir and wait 10 minutes for the milk to curdle and become buttermilk.
- Out of Cajun seasoning? Make your own with this recipe.









Cristina says
Making these today, was wondering if you can freeze these? If so do you bake first or freeze after breading? Thanks in advance.
Cristina
Laura Fuentes says
Cristina, you can do it both ways. you can cook them first and freeze leftovers. All you’d have to do is warm them up. If you want to freeze them before baking, add 3-4 minutes to the baking time when you make them next! 🙂
vanessa says
I love this method for cooking chicken. My son loves it and I love that he loves it. The only thing I do differently is I prebake the panko until its golden brown so its super crispy and I use an egg to coat the chicken instead of oil but ill definitely try it your way tonight. Also if you cook the chicken on a cooling rack on top of a cookie sheet you don’t have to flip it and its crispy all the way around.
Laura Fuentes says
GREAT tip Vanessa! Thank you!
Heather says
Just wondering about the lunches that would usually be eaten hot. Do the kids like them cold?
Laura Fuentes says
I can’t remember the last time my kids actually ate dinner “hot” so room temperature lunches is what they get. they are not as picky as we think
Kelly @ The Nourishing Home says
These sound and look SO good! I’m going to have to try this using GF breadcrumbs. Thanks for sharing on Pinterest – that’s where I saw this today! Lots of blessings, Kelly
Cristi says
I LOVE coconut, I would never have thought to use it in chicken breading! Sweet!