Advice for making/keeping shredded chicken moist?How do you poach chicken?How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?Any tips for ways to cook chicken breast for recipes that call for shredded chicken?Baking chicken in oven, but keeping it moistFilling for Stuffed Chicken BreastWhy is my brining giving varied and usually poor results?Max Temp for Fried ChickenIs it necessary to only boil vegetables (or chicken) or can they be pressure cooked and later be boiled for the flavour to seep in?Making Southern style chicken in the ovenMaking KFC-like chickenDry chicken breast in slow cooker

Why are all my yellow 2V/20mA LEDs burning out with 330k Ohm resistor?

Is there any word for "disobedience to God"?

Cops: The Hidden OEIS Substring

C program to parse source code of another language

Why are Hobbits so fond of mushrooms?

Credit score and financing new car

What is this triple-transistor arrangement called?

How to loop for 3 times in bash script when docker push fails?

How is angular momentum conserved for the orbiting body if the centripetal force disappears?

As the Dungeon Master, how do I handle a player that insists on a specific class when I already know that choice will cause issues?

How did the hit man miss?

Is there a way to know which symbolic expression mathematica used

Has anyone in space seen or photographed a simple laser pointer from Earth?

Using Newton's shell theorem to accelerate a spaceship

Can a Beast Master ranger have its beast chase down and attack enemies?

Modulus Operandi

Constructive proof of existence of free algebras for infinitary equational theories

How do you glue a text to a point?

Machine learning and operations research projects

Did the Vulgar Latin verb "toccare" exist?

Why didn't Thanos kill all the Dwarves on Nidavellir?

Why did Harry Potter get a bedroom?

How can I calculate the sum of 2 random dice out of a 3d6 pool in AnyDice?

How would vampires avoid contracting diseases?



Advice for making/keeping shredded chicken moist?


How do you poach chicken?How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?Any tips for ways to cook chicken breast for recipes that call for shredded chicken?Baking chicken in oven, but keeping it moistFilling for Stuffed Chicken BreastWhy is my brining giving varied and usually poor results?Max Temp for Fried ChickenIs it necessary to only boil vegetables (or chicken) or can they be pressure cooked and later be boiled for the flavour to seep in?Making Southern style chicken in the ovenMaking KFC-like chickenDry chicken breast in slow cooker






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








15















My dietician ordered that I eat chicken. I found that to eat the portion I'm supposed to eat (10oz), it's easier to shred the chicken and take 10oz of shredded chicken, rather than try to find 10oz breasts. I am trying to meal prep this chicken over the week.



The way I currently cook my shredded chicken is I take raw chicken breasts, throw them in a steamer basket, put the steamer basket in the instant pot (pressure cooker), throw in about a cup of chicken broth and 1/2 cup of pineapple juice, and then pressure cook for 15 minutes with a 5 minute natural pressure release. I then pull out the breasts and shred the chicken breasts. I then store the shredded chicken in the fridge.



The problem is that the shredded chicken is terribly dry. Whenever I reheat the chicken it tastes like I am eating chalk (in terms of texture). This makes it impossible to stick to my diet.



Can someone give me advice on how to cook shredded chicken and maintain moisture for several days (at least 3)? I am not a good cook and I don't know if the problem lies in the cooking, the storage, or the reheating.



Thanks










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    How are you reheating the chicken? I tend to start my week by roasting a whole chicken and then cutting it up and shredding and using my chicken in recipes throughout the week. The breasts I usually have cold and the shredded dark meat I always heat in a sause of some kind which stops it drying out.

    – Bee
    Jul 2 at 16:45











  • I'm using a microwave. I drop a few drops of water in the tupperware then pop it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:52






  • 5





    Pineapple juice breaks down proteins in meat aggressively, could this be adding to your woes? Have you tried cooking it without?

    – ElectronicToothpick
    Jul 3 at 5:29






  • 2





    Can you share the details or other restrictions on your diet? Are you really restricted to boneless, skinless chicken breast? What about sauces or condiments? Do you really just want shredded chicken, or other preparations? Many of the answers give good advice, but much of that advice is about changing the premise of what you're doing versus helping you do that exact thing, better. I'm wondering if some of that advice may not align well with your diet.

    – dwizum
    Jul 3 at 17:37






  • 2





    @dwizum You're right, although the info on dark meat is interesting I still have to eat specifically white meat chicken breast. The diet restriction is in terms of macros and calories and chicken breast fits really well in it. I definitely would like to learn that given a plain raw chicken breast, what is the best way to cook it, cut it, and store it to retain the most moisture.

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:40

















15















My dietician ordered that I eat chicken. I found that to eat the portion I'm supposed to eat (10oz), it's easier to shred the chicken and take 10oz of shredded chicken, rather than try to find 10oz breasts. I am trying to meal prep this chicken over the week.



The way I currently cook my shredded chicken is I take raw chicken breasts, throw them in a steamer basket, put the steamer basket in the instant pot (pressure cooker), throw in about a cup of chicken broth and 1/2 cup of pineapple juice, and then pressure cook for 15 minutes with a 5 minute natural pressure release. I then pull out the breasts and shred the chicken breasts. I then store the shredded chicken in the fridge.



The problem is that the shredded chicken is terribly dry. Whenever I reheat the chicken it tastes like I am eating chalk (in terms of texture). This makes it impossible to stick to my diet.



Can someone give me advice on how to cook shredded chicken and maintain moisture for several days (at least 3)? I am not a good cook and I don't know if the problem lies in the cooking, the storage, or the reheating.



Thanks










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    How are you reheating the chicken? I tend to start my week by roasting a whole chicken and then cutting it up and shredding and using my chicken in recipes throughout the week. The breasts I usually have cold and the shredded dark meat I always heat in a sause of some kind which stops it drying out.

    – Bee
    Jul 2 at 16:45











  • I'm using a microwave. I drop a few drops of water in the tupperware then pop it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:52






  • 5





    Pineapple juice breaks down proteins in meat aggressively, could this be adding to your woes? Have you tried cooking it without?

    – ElectronicToothpick
    Jul 3 at 5:29






  • 2





    Can you share the details or other restrictions on your diet? Are you really restricted to boneless, skinless chicken breast? What about sauces or condiments? Do you really just want shredded chicken, or other preparations? Many of the answers give good advice, but much of that advice is about changing the premise of what you're doing versus helping you do that exact thing, better. I'm wondering if some of that advice may not align well with your diet.

    – dwizum
    Jul 3 at 17:37






  • 2





    @dwizum You're right, although the info on dark meat is interesting I still have to eat specifically white meat chicken breast. The diet restriction is in terms of macros and calories and chicken breast fits really well in it. I definitely would like to learn that given a plain raw chicken breast, what is the best way to cook it, cut it, and store it to retain the most moisture.

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:40













15












15








15


2






My dietician ordered that I eat chicken. I found that to eat the portion I'm supposed to eat (10oz), it's easier to shred the chicken and take 10oz of shredded chicken, rather than try to find 10oz breasts. I am trying to meal prep this chicken over the week.



The way I currently cook my shredded chicken is I take raw chicken breasts, throw them in a steamer basket, put the steamer basket in the instant pot (pressure cooker), throw in about a cup of chicken broth and 1/2 cup of pineapple juice, and then pressure cook for 15 minutes with a 5 minute natural pressure release. I then pull out the breasts and shred the chicken breasts. I then store the shredded chicken in the fridge.



The problem is that the shredded chicken is terribly dry. Whenever I reheat the chicken it tastes like I am eating chalk (in terms of texture). This makes it impossible to stick to my diet.



Can someone give me advice on how to cook shredded chicken and maintain moisture for several days (at least 3)? I am not a good cook and I don't know if the problem lies in the cooking, the storage, or the reheating.



Thanks










share|improve this question














My dietician ordered that I eat chicken. I found that to eat the portion I'm supposed to eat (10oz), it's easier to shred the chicken and take 10oz of shredded chicken, rather than try to find 10oz breasts. I am trying to meal prep this chicken over the week.



The way I currently cook my shredded chicken is I take raw chicken breasts, throw them in a steamer basket, put the steamer basket in the instant pot (pressure cooker), throw in about a cup of chicken broth and 1/2 cup of pineapple juice, and then pressure cook for 15 minutes with a 5 minute natural pressure release. I then pull out the breasts and shred the chicken breasts. I then store the shredded chicken in the fridge.



The problem is that the shredded chicken is terribly dry. Whenever I reheat the chicken it tastes like I am eating chalk (in terms of texture). This makes it impossible to stick to my diet.



Can someone give me advice on how to cook shredded chicken and maintain moisture for several days (at least 3)? I am not a good cook and I don't know if the problem lies in the cooking, the storage, or the reheating.



Thanks







chicken reheating chicken-breast






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jul 2 at 16:35









user76333user76333

885 bronze badges




885 bronze badges







  • 2





    How are you reheating the chicken? I tend to start my week by roasting a whole chicken and then cutting it up and shredding and using my chicken in recipes throughout the week. The breasts I usually have cold and the shredded dark meat I always heat in a sause of some kind which stops it drying out.

    – Bee
    Jul 2 at 16:45











  • I'm using a microwave. I drop a few drops of water in the tupperware then pop it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:52






  • 5





    Pineapple juice breaks down proteins in meat aggressively, could this be adding to your woes? Have you tried cooking it without?

    – ElectronicToothpick
    Jul 3 at 5:29






  • 2





    Can you share the details or other restrictions on your diet? Are you really restricted to boneless, skinless chicken breast? What about sauces or condiments? Do you really just want shredded chicken, or other preparations? Many of the answers give good advice, but much of that advice is about changing the premise of what you're doing versus helping you do that exact thing, better. I'm wondering if some of that advice may not align well with your diet.

    – dwizum
    Jul 3 at 17:37






  • 2





    @dwizum You're right, although the info on dark meat is interesting I still have to eat specifically white meat chicken breast. The diet restriction is in terms of macros and calories and chicken breast fits really well in it. I definitely would like to learn that given a plain raw chicken breast, what is the best way to cook it, cut it, and store it to retain the most moisture.

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:40












  • 2





    How are you reheating the chicken? I tend to start my week by roasting a whole chicken and then cutting it up and shredding and using my chicken in recipes throughout the week. The breasts I usually have cold and the shredded dark meat I always heat in a sause of some kind which stops it drying out.

    – Bee
    Jul 2 at 16:45











  • I'm using a microwave. I drop a few drops of water in the tupperware then pop it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:52






  • 5





    Pineapple juice breaks down proteins in meat aggressively, could this be adding to your woes? Have you tried cooking it without?

    – ElectronicToothpick
    Jul 3 at 5:29






  • 2





    Can you share the details or other restrictions on your diet? Are you really restricted to boneless, skinless chicken breast? What about sauces or condiments? Do you really just want shredded chicken, or other preparations? Many of the answers give good advice, but much of that advice is about changing the premise of what you're doing versus helping you do that exact thing, better. I'm wondering if some of that advice may not align well with your diet.

    – dwizum
    Jul 3 at 17:37






  • 2





    @dwizum You're right, although the info on dark meat is interesting I still have to eat specifically white meat chicken breast. The diet restriction is in terms of macros and calories and chicken breast fits really well in it. I definitely would like to learn that given a plain raw chicken breast, what is the best way to cook it, cut it, and store it to retain the most moisture.

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:40







2




2





How are you reheating the chicken? I tend to start my week by roasting a whole chicken and then cutting it up and shredding and using my chicken in recipes throughout the week. The breasts I usually have cold and the shredded dark meat I always heat in a sause of some kind which stops it drying out.

– Bee
Jul 2 at 16:45





How are you reheating the chicken? I tend to start my week by roasting a whole chicken and then cutting it up and shredding and using my chicken in recipes throughout the week. The breasts I usually have cold and the shredded dark meat I always heat in a sause of some kind which stops it drying out.

– Bee
Jul 2 at 16:45













I'm using a microwave. I drop a few drops of water in the tupperware then pop it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

– user76333
Jul 2 at 18:52





I'm using a microwave. I drop a few drops of water in the tupperware then pop it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

– user76333
Jul 2 at 18:52




5




5





Pineapple juice breaks down proteins in meat aggressively, could this be adding to your woes? Have you tried cooking it without?

– ElectronicToothpick
Jul 3 at 5:29





Pineapple juice breaks down proteins in meat aggressively, could this be adding to your woes? Have you tried cooking it without?

– ElectronicToothpick
Jul 3 at 5:29




2




2





Can you share the details or other restrictions on your diet? Are you really restricted to boneless, skinless chicken breast? What about sauces or condiments? Do you really just want shredded chicken, or other preparations? Many of the answers give good advice, but much of that advice is about changing the premise of what you're doing versus helping you do that exact thing, better. I'm wondering if some of that advice may not align well with your diet.

– dwizum
Jul 3 at 17:37





Can you share the details or other restrictions on your diet? Are you really restricted to boneless, skinless chicken breast? What about sauces or condiments? Do you really just want shredded chicken, or other preparations? Many of the answers give good advice, but much of that advice is about changing the premise of what you're doing versus helping you do that exact thing, better. I'm wondering if some of that advice may not align well with your diet.

– dwizum
Jul 3 at 17:37




2




2





@dwizum You're right, although the info on dark meat is interesting I still have to eat specifically white meat chicken breast. The diet restriction is in terms of macros and calories and chicken breast fits really well in it. I definitely would like to learn that given a plain raw chicken breast, what is the best way to cook it, cut it, and store it to retain the most moisture.

– user76333
Jul 3 at 18:40





@dwizum You're right, although the info on dark meat is interesting I still have to eat specifically white meat chicken breast. The diet restriction is in terms of macros and calories and chicken breast fits really well in it. I definitely would like to learn that given a plain raw chicken breast, what is the best way to cook it, cut it, and store it to retain the most moisture.

– user76333
Jul 3 at 18:40










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















22














The first issue I see is that you are over cooking your chicken breast. 20 minutes in a pressure cooker is really over doing it. Even a little over cooking dries chicken breast. Chicken breast needs to be cooked more precisely. A pressure cooker is not the correct tool for the job. So you first need to correct your initial cooking. You should get a good thermometer, ensure it is calibrated, and cook your chicken breast to an internal temperature of 160F (71C). You can remove the chicken breast from the cooking surface when it is a couple of degrees below that. Let it rest 10 to 15 minutes, and the heat will carry over and you will reach the final target temperature. This will allow you to begin with moist chicken.






share|improve this answer























  • What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49












  • I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

    – moscafj
    Jul 3 at 0:49







  • 4





    You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

    – Luciano
    Jul 3 at 8:08






  • 2





    I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

    – Scott Seidman
    Jul 3 at 12:54







  • 1





    And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

    – mskfisher
    Jul 3 at 13:01



















8














Chicken breast is not suitable for making shredded meat. For that, you need collagen-rich dark meat, for example chicken thighs.



If you cook your chicken breast less, as moscafj suggested, you can certainly get tasty chicken breast. For easy portioning, you can precut it into strips and keep a supply of pan-fried strips, for example. But you will never get it to the point where it shreds properly.






share|improve this answer


















  • 5





    There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

    – Makyen
    Jul 3 at 16:03


















6














First, I would recommend changing how you cook the breasts -- I usually poach breasts, starting it in boiling liquid then putting on a lid, turning the heat down to low and letting it sit for an hour.



Second, I'd put the breasts back into the liquid after you shred it. Usually, when you introduce so much surface area to hot meat, it lets off steam, which is the moisture escaping. By immediately putting it back into the cooking liquid, you prevent this from happening. You then let the shreded chicken cool down in the liquid.



(although in your case, you might need to separate it at this point ... it can be more difficult to portion out if sufficiuent gelatin leached into the water to make it a giant blob until you reheat it)






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15











  • @user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:21






  • 1





    This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

    – William Mariager
    Jul 3 at 7:17











  • Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:41












  • @user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

    – Joe
    Jul 3 at 18:49


















3














buy the whole breast with bone, bake them 350° for 50 min keep the skin while baking remove it later if you want, i will say make it cubes not shreds and add some chicken stock to the storage container, that should keep them moist.






share|improve this answer























  • That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49







  • 3





    I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:07











  • That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15













Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "49"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fcooking.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f99926%2fadvice-for-making-keeping-shredded-chicken-moist%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









22














The first issue I see is that you are over cooking your chicken breast. 20 minutes in a pressure cooker is really over doing it. Even a little over cooking dries chicken breast. Chicken breast needs to be cooked more precisely. A pressure cooker is not the correct tool for the job. So you first need to correct your initial cooking. You should get a good thermometer, ensure it is calibrated, and cook your chicken breast to an internal temperature of 160F (71C). You can remove the chicken breast from the cooking surface when it is a couple of degrees below that. Let it rest 10 to 15 minutes, and the heat will carry over and you will reach the final target temperature. This will allow you to begin with moist chicken.






share|improve this answer























  • What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49












  • I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

    – moscafj
    Jul 3 at 0:49







  • 4





    You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

    – Luciano
    Jul 3 at 8:08






  • 2





    I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

    – Scott Seidman
    Jul 3 at 12:54







  • 1





    And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

    – mskfisher
    Jul 3 at 13:01
















22














The first issue I see is that you are over cooking your chicken breast. 20 minutes in a pressure cooker is really over doing it. Even a little over cooking dries chicken breast. Chicken breast needs to be cooked more precisely. A pressure cooker is not the correct tool for the job. So you first need to correct your initial cooking. You should get a good thermometer, ensure it is calibrated, and cook your chicken breast to an internal temperature of 160F (71C). You can remove the chicken breast from the cooking surface when it is a couple of degrees below that. Let it rest 10 to 15 minutes, and the heat will carry over and you will reach the final target temperature. This will allow you to begin with moist chicken.






share|improve this answer























  • What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49












  • I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

    – moscafj
    Jul 3 at 0:49







  • 4





    You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

    – Luciano
    Jul 3 at 8:08






  • 2





    I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

    – Scott Seidman
    Jul 3 at 12:54







  • 1





    And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

    – mskfisher
    Jul 3 at 13:01














22












22








22







The first issue I see is that you are over cooking your chicken breast. 20 minutes in a pressure cooker is really over doing it. Even a little over cooking dries chicken breast. Chicken breast needs to be cooked more precisely. A pressure cooker is not the correct tool for the job. So you first need to correct your initial cooking. You should get a good thermometer, ensure it is calibrated, and cook your chicken breast to an internal temperature of 160F (71C). You can remove the chicken breast from the cooking surface when it is a couple of degrees below that. Let it rest 10 to 15 minutes, and the heat will carry over and you will reach the final target temperature. This will allow you to begin with moist chicken.






share|improve this answer













The first issue I see is that you are over cooking your chicken breast. 20 minutes in a pressure cooker is really over doing it. Even a little over cooking dries chicken breast. Chicken breast needs to be cooked more precisely. A pressure cooker is not the correct tool for the job. So you first need to correct your initial cooking. You should get a good thermometer, ensure it is calibrated, and cook your chicken breast to an internal temperature of 160F (71C). You can remove the chicken breast from the cooking surface when it is a couple of degrees below that. Let it rest 10 to 15 minutes, and the heat will carry over and you will reach the final target temperature. This will allow you to begin with moist chicken.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 2 at 17:03









moscafjmoscafj

30.4k1 gold badge43 silver badges87 bronze badges




30.4k1 gold badge43 silver badges87 bronze badges












  • What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49












  • I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

    – moscafj
    Jul 3 at 0:49







  • 4





    You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

    – Luciano
    Jul 3 at 8:08






  • 2





    I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

    – Scott Seidman
    Jul 3 at 12:54







  • 1





    And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

    – mskfisher
    Jul 3 at 13:01


















  • What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49












  • I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

    – moscafj
    Jul 3 at 0:49







  • 4





    You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

    – Luciano
    Jul 3 at 8:08






  • 2





    I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

    – Scott Seidman
    Jul 3 at 12:54







  • 1





    And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

    – mskfisher
    Jul 3 at 13:01

















What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

– user76333
Jul 2 at 18:49






What tools would you suggest best achieve that internal temperature? Oven? Or should I cook it on the stovetop. Also let's say I successfully achieve that internal temperature. Once I store it in the fridge and reheat it the following days will the moisture be retained?

– user76333
Jul 2 at 18:49














I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

– moscafj
Jul 3 at 0:49






I would brown/sear in pan on stove top, 2 min per side. Insert temp probe. Move to 400F (204 C) oven in pan. Remove from oven when temp reaches 156 F (69C). Rest 10 minutes. Shred.

– moscafj
Jul 3 at 0:49





4




4





You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

– Luciano
Jul 3 at 8:08





You can always sous-vide if you want the moistest chicken, you can get a more precise temperature control with one such device.

– Luciano
Jul 3 at 8:08




2




2





I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

– Scott Seidman
Jul 3 at 12:54






I think a pressure cooker can be a pretty good tool for the job, but using the right cooking time! You can also sear the chicken in an instant pot before pressure cooking.

– Scott Seidman
Jul 3 at 12:54





1




1





And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

– mskfisher
Jul 3 at 13:01






And with sous-vide, you can get different textures by cooking the chicken breast at lower temperatures for longer times, just as safely: seriouseats.com/2015/07/…

– mskfisher
Jul 3 at 13:01














8














Chicken breast is not suitable for making shredded meat. For that, you need collagen-rich dark meat, for example chicken thighs.



If you cook your chicken breast less, as moscafj suggested, you can certainly get tasty chicken breast. For easy portioning, you can precut it into strips and keep a supply of pan-fried strips, for example. But you will never get it to the point where it shreds properly.






share|improve this answer


















  • 5





    There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

    – Makyen
    Jul 3 at 16:03















8














Chicken breast is not suitable for making shredded meat. For that, you need collagen-rich dark meat, for example chicken thighs.



If you cook your chicken breast less, as moscafj suggested, you can certainly get tasty chicken breast. For easy portioning, you can precut it into strips and keep a supply of pan-fried strips, for example. But you will never get it to the point where it shreds properly.






share|improve this answer


















  • 5





    There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

    – Makyen
    Jul 3 at 16:03













8












8








8







Chicken breast is not suitable for making shredded meat. For that, you need collagen-rich dark meat, for example chicken thighs.



If you cook your chicken breast less, as moscafj suggested, you can certainly get tasty chicken breast. For easy portioning, you can precut it into strips and keep a supply of pan-fried strips, for example. But you will never get it to the point where it shreds properly.






share|improve this answer













Chicken breast is not suitable for making shredded meat. For that, you need collagen-rich dark meat, for example chicken thighs.



If you cook your chicken breast less, as moscafj suggested, you can certainly get tasty chicken breast. For easy portioning, you can precut it into strips and keep a supply of pan-fried strips, for example. But you will never get it to the point where it shreds properly.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 2 at 17:13









rumtschorumtscho

84.4k29 gold badges196 silver badges364 bronze badges




84.4k29 gold badges196 silver badges364 bronze badges







  • 5





    There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

    – Makyen
    Jul 3 at 16:03












  • 5





    There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

    – Makyen
    Jul 3 at 16:03







5




5





There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

– Makyen
Jul 3 at 16:03





There are various commercial products that are just shredded chicken breast (i.e. shredded chicken breast in a package), so just a flat statement that chicken breast is not suitable to make shredded meat is veritably false. It may be harder, require specific processing, or require storing it with some liquid, but it's definitely doable.

– Makyen
Jul 3 at 16:03











6














First, I would recommend changing how you cook the breasts -- I usually poach breasts, starting it in boiling liquid then putting on a lid, turning the heat down to low and letting it sit for an hour.



Second, I'd put the breasts back into the liquid after you shred it. Usually, when you introduce so much surface area to hot meat, it lets off steam, which is the moisture escaping. By immediately putting it back into the cooking liquid, you prevent this from happening. You then let the shreded chicken cool down in the liquid.



(although in your case, you might need to separate it at this point ... it can be more difficult to portion out if sufficiuent gelatin leached into the water to make it a giant blob until you reheat it)






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15











  • @user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:21






  • 1





    This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

    – William Mariager
    Jul 3 at 7:17











  • Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:41












  • @user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

    – Joe
    Jul 3 at 18:49















6














First, I would recommend changing how you cook the breasts -- I usually poach breasts, starting it in boiling liquid then putting on a lid, turning the heat down to low and letting it sit for an hour.



Second, I'd put the breasts back into the liquid after you shred it. Usually, when you introduce so much surface area to hot meat, it lets off steam, which is the moisture escaping. By immediately putting it back into the cooking liquid, you prevent this from happening. You then let the shreded chicken cool down in the liquid.



(although in your case, you might need to separate it at this point ... it can be more difficult to portion out if sufficiuent gelatin leached into the water to make it a giant blob until you reheat it)






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15











  • @user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:21






  • 1





    This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

    – William Mariager
    Jul 3 at 7:17











  • Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:41












  • @user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

    – Joe
    Jul 3 at 18:49













6












6








6







First, I would recommend changing how you cook the breasts -- I usually poach breasts, starting it in boiling liquid then putting on a lid, turning the heat down to low and letting it sit for an hour.



Second, I'd put the breasts back into the liquid after you shred it. Usually, when you introduce so much surface area to hot meat, it lets off steam, which is the moisture escaping. By immediately putting it back into the cooking liquid, you prevent this from happening. You then let the shreded chicken cool down in the liquid.



(although in your case, you might need to separate it at this point ... it can be more difficult to portion out if sufficiuent gelatin leached into the water to make it a giant blob until you reheat it)






share|improve this answer













First, I would recommend changing how you cook the breasts -- I usually poach breasts, starting it in boiling liquid then putting on a lid, turning the heat down to low and letting it sit for an hour.



Second, I'd put the breasts back into the liquid after you shred it. Usually, when you introduce so much surface area to hot meat, it lets off steam, which is the moisture escaping. By immediately putting it back into the cooking liquid, you prevent this from happening. You then let the shreded chicken cool down in the liquid.



(although in your case, you might need to separate it at this point ... it can be more difficult to portion out if sufficiuent gelatin leached into the water to make it a giant blob until you reheat it)







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 2 at 19:06









JoeJoe

62.5k11 gold badges111 silver badges321 bronze badges




62.5k11 gold badges111 silver badges321 bronze badges







  • 1





    what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15











  • @user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:21






  • 1





    This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

    – William Mariager
    Jul 3 at 7:17











  • Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:41












  • @user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

    – Joe
    Jul 3 at 18:49












  • 1





    what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15











  • @user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:21






  • 1





    This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

    – William Mariager
    Jul 3 at 7:17











  • Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

    – user76333
    Jul 3 at 18:41












  • @user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

    – Joe
    Jul 3 at 18:49







1




1





what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

– user76333
Jul 2 at 19:15





what do you think of this recipe? thekitchn.com/… . Seems like they are doing something similar without extra liquid for poaching.

– user76333
Jul 2 at 19:15













@user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

– Joe
Jul 2 at 19:21





@user76333 : that sounds good, but I'd chill it before cutting it up. Maybe slices (across the grain) or cubes. You don't have any liquid, so if you shred it you don't have liquid to put it in.

– Joe
Jul 2 at 19:21




1




1





This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

– William Mariager
Jul 3 at 7:17





This is a great suggestion, and exactly how I've always done it. Poach the breasts in a pot with just enough liquid to cover them, shred them, then add some of the broth from the pot back to the shredded chicken for both flavor and moisture.

– William Mariager
Jul 3 at 7:17













Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

– user76333
Jul 3 at 18:41






Will give this a shot tonight then, with liquid. Could I use chicken broth instead of water?

– user76333
Jul 3 at 18:41














@user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

– Joe
Jul 3 at 18:49





@user76333 : yes, but I realized I was ambiguous on one point -- you want the liquid boiling when the breasts go in (to kill anything on the surface), not bring it up from cold to boiling with the chicken in it. See cooking.stackexchange.com/a/4723/67

– Joe
Jul 3 at 18:49











3














buy the whole breast with bone, bake them 350° for 50 min keep the skin while baking remove it later if you want, i will say make it cubes not shreds and add some chicken stock to the storage container, that should keep them moist.






share|improve this answer























  • That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49







  • 3





    I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:07











  • That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15















3














buy the whole breast with bone, bake them 350° for 50 min keep the skin while baking remove it later if you want, i will say make it cubes not shreds and add some chicken stock to the storage container, that should keep them moist.






share|improve this answer























  • That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49







  • 3





    I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:07











  • That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15













3












3








3







buy the whole breast with bone, bake them 350° for 50 min keep the skin while baking remove it later if you want, i will say make it cubes not shreds and add some chicken stock to the storage container, that should keep them moist.






share|improve this answer













buy the whole breast with bone, bake them 350° for 50 min keep the skin while baking remove it later if you want, i will say make it cubes not shreds and add some chicken stock to the storage container, that should keep them moist.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 2 at 17:17









Juan Carlos Gama floresJuan Carlos Gama flores

451 bronze badge




451 bronze badge












  • That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49







  • 3





    I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:07











  • That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15

















  • That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 18:49







  • 3





    I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

    – Joe
    Jul 2 at 19:07











  • That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

    – user76333
    Jul 2 at 19:15
















That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

– user76333
Jul 2 at 18:49






That's interesting. Does cooking them as cubes change how much moisture is retained?

– user76333
Jul 2 at 18:49





3




3





I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

– Joe
Jul 2 at 19:07





I think he means to cut it into cubes after cooking, not cooking it as cubes. And yes, there's less surface area, so less moisture loss vs. shreded chicken

– Joe
Jul 2 at 19:07













That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

– user76333
Jul 2 at 19:15





That's good to know, thanks. Makes sense that larger surface area means more moisture dissipation.

– user76333
Jul 2 at 19:15

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Seasoned Advice!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fcooking.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f99926%2fadvice-for-making-keeping-shredded-chicken-moist%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Category:9 (number) SubcategoriesMedia in category "9 (number)"Navigation menuUpload mediaGND ID: 4485639-8Library of Congress authority ID: sh85091979ReasonatorScholiaStatistics

Circuit construction for execution of conditional statements using least significant bitHow are two different registers being used as “control”?How exactly is the stated composite state of the two registers being produced using the $R_zz$ controlled rotations?Efficiently performing controlled rotations in HHLWould this quantum algorithm implementation work?How to prepare a superposed states of odd integers from $1$ to $sqrtN$?Why is this implementation of the order finding algorithm not working?Circuit construction for Hamiltonian simulationHow can I invert the least significant bit of a certain term of a superposed state?Implementing an oracleImplementing a controlled sum operation

Magento 2 “No Payment Methods” in Admin New OrderHow to integrate Paypal Express Checkout with the Magento APIMagento 1.5 - Sales > Order > edit order and shipping methods disappearAuto Invoice Check/Money Order Payment methodAdd more simple payment methods?Shipping methods not showingWhat should I do to change payment methods if changing the configuration has no effects?1.9 - No Payment Methods showing upMy Payment Methods not Showing for downloadable/virtual product when checkout?Magento2 API to access internal payment methodHow to call an existing payment methods in the registration form?