The first time I made spicy Brazilian coconut chicken, it was because I’d completely messed up my grocery order and ended up with two cans of coconut milk I hadn’t planned on buying. Standing in my kitchen on a Wednesday night with chicken thighs defrosting and no real plan, I googled “chicken coconut milk spicy” and stumbled across a Brazilian recipe that looked doable. I threw it together hoping for the best, and when Lina took his first bite, he actually stopped talking mid-sentence-which if you know him, never happens. Then he just pointed at his plate and nodded. That’s when I knew this was going into the regular rotation.
Why You’ll Love This Spicy Brazilian Coconut Chicken
Back making this Brazilian-inspired chicken recipe for busy weeknights, dinner parties, and “I need something exciting” moments, I know exactly what makes it special. The sauce is creamy and rich from the coconut milk but not heavy it’s got this bright, fresh quality from lime juice and cilantro that keeps it from feeling too thick. The chicken thighs get incredibly tender simmering in all that spicy Brazilian coconut chicken goodness, and the peppers add pops of sweetness along with the heat. When you take a bite, you get creamy coconut, then a little kick of spice that builds slowly, then that lime brightness cuts through everything.
What really makes this spicy Brazilian coconut chicken a winner is how ridiculously easy it is while tasting like you spent hours on it. Everything cooks in one pan brown the chicken, sauté the peppers and onions, dump in spicy Brazilian coconut chicken milk and spices, simmer for 20 minutes, done. Lina’s teacher tried this after I brought leftovers for lunch one day and texted me asking for the recipe, convinced I’d spent my whole evening cooking. I didn’t tell her it took 35 minutes start to finish. It’s one of those recipes where the ingredient list looks long and intimidating but it’s really just throwing everything in a pan and letting it bubble.
Jump to:
Ingredients for Spicy Brazilian Coconut Chicken
For the Chicken:
- Boneless chicken thighs
- Salt and black pepper
- Olive oil or palm oil
- Paprika or smoked paprika
The Sauce Base:
- Full-fat coconut milk
- Red bell peppers
- Yellow or orange bell peppers
- Onion
- Garlic
- Fresh ginger
The Heat and Flavor:
- Red chili peppers or jalapeños
- Cayenne pepper or red pepper flakes
- Ground cumin
- Fresh lime juice
- Fresh cilantro
- Bay leaves
To Serve:
- White rice or jasmine rice
- Extra cilantro
- Lime wedges
- Crusty bread for soaking up sauce
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Spicy Brazilian Coconut Chicken Step By Step
Brown the Chicken
- Season chicken thighs with salt, pepper, and paprika
- Heat oil in large skillet over medium-high heat
- Brown chicken 3-4 minutes per side until golden
- Don’t cook through, just get color on it
- Remove chicken and set aside

Build the Sauce
- In same pan, add onions and bell peppers
- Sauté 5 minutes until soft
- Add garlic, ginger, and chili peppers
- Cook 1 minute until fragrant
- Don’t let garlic burn
Simmer Everything
- Pour in both cans of coconut milk
- Add cumin, cayenne, and bay leaves
- Stir everything together
- Return chicken to pan, nestling it into sauce
- Bring to simmer, then reduce heat

Cook Until Tender
- Simmer uncovered 20-25 minutes
- Chicken should be cooked through and tender
- Sauce will thicken as it cooks
- Stir occasionally so nothing sticks
Finish and Serve
- Serve over rice immediately
- Remove from heat
- Squeeze fresh lime juice over everything
- Taste and add more salt if needed
- Garnish with fresh cilantro

Smart Swaps for Spicy Brazilian Coconut Chicken
Protein Changes:
- Chicken thighs → Chicken breasts (cook less time)
- Chicken → Shrimp (cooks in 5 minutes)
- Poultry → White fish like cod or halibut
- Meat → Tofu or chickpeas (vegetarian)
Heat Level Adjustments:
- Red chili peppers → Jalapeños (milder)
- Fresh peppers → Red pepper flakes (easier)
- Spicy → Skip cayenne entirely (mild version)
- Standard → Add habanero (way hotter)
Coconut Milk Options:
- Full-fat → Light coconut milk (thinner sauce)
- Canned → Coconut cream (richer, thicker)
- Regular → Almond milk mixed with coconut oil (different)
- Standard → Add peanut butter (Brazilian fusion style)
Pepper Swaps:
- Bell peppers → Cherry tomatoes
- Fresh peppers → Frozen pepper mix
- Red and yellow → Whatever color you have
- Standard → Add zucchini or eggplant
Herb Changes:
- Standard → Add fresh mint at the end
- Fresh cilantro → Parsley (different flavor)
- Cilantro → Basil (not traditional but good)
- Fresh → Dried cilantro (not as bright)
spicy Brazilian coconut chicken Variations
Moqueca-Style:
- Add diced tomatoes to the sauce
- Use palm oil instead of olive oil
- Include chunks of white fish with chicken
- Serve in clay pot if you have one
- More traditional Brazilian approach
Extra Creamy Version:
- Add coconut cream at the end
- Stir in cream cheese for richness
- Double the coconut milk
- Lina calls this “coconut soup chicken”
Pineapple Coconut:
- Add fresh pineapple chunks
- Sweet and spicy combination
- Reduces the heat slightly
- Summer vacation vibes
Veggie-Loaded:
- Add zucchini, carrots, and green beans
- Makes it more of a stew
- Still same great sauce
- Healthier version
Spicy Kick Version:
- Double the chili peppers
- Add habanero or Thai chilies
- Serve with cooling cucumber salad
- For people who like pain
Slow Cooker Method:
- Brown chicken first
- Dump everything in slow cooker
- Cook on low 4 hours
- Come home to amazing smells
Equipment For spicy Brazilian coconut chicken
- Large deep skillet or Dutch oven (at least 12 inches)
- Sharp knife for chopping
- Cutting board
- Wooden spoon
- Grater or microplane (for ginger)
- Can opener
- Tongs for flipping chicken
Storing Your Spicy Brazilian Coconut Chicken
In the Fridge (4-5 days):
- Store in airtight container
- Keep sauce and chicken together
- Gets more flavorful as it sits
- The spices really soak in overnight
Reheating Methods:
- Stovetop is best-heat gently in pan
- Microwave works but stir halfway through
- Add splash of coconut milk if it’s too thick
- Tastes fresh even days later
Freezing (3 months):
- Cool completely before freezing
- Use freezer-safe containers
- Leave space at top for expansion
- Thaw overnight in fridge before reheating
Meal Prep Strategy:
- Saves so much time on busy nights
- Make double batch on Sunday
- Portion into containers with rice
- Reheat individual servings all week

Top Tip
- My neighbor who grew up in Brazil makes this coconut chicken that’s somehow way better than mine, even when I follow her recipe exactly. For months, I kept asking what she did differently, and she’d just say “practice” or “I don’t measure anything.” Finally, at a block party last summer, I caught her in the kitchen making a batch and watched her like a hawk. That’s when I saw what she’d been doing that she never mentioned.
- After browning the chicken, she didn’t wipe out the pan. All those brown bits stuck to the bottom she left them there on purpose. When she added the onions and peppers, she scraped the bottom of the pan with her wooden spoon, getting all those caramelized chicken pieces mixed into the vegetables. Then when the coconut milk went in, she scraped again, and all that flavor dissolved into the sauce. She called it “fond” and said it’s where all the deep, rich flavor comes from.
- Her other trick was letting the chicken rest in the finished sauce for 10 minutes off the heat before serving. She said the chicken keeps absorbing flavor even when it’s done cooking, and that resting time makes everything taste more cohesive. Now I always leave my pan sitting on the stove for those extra 10 minutes while I make rice, and the difference is huge. Lina noticed immediately and asked if I’d made it the restaurant way.
How My Sister’s Kitchen Became Our Family’s Heart
My sister learned to make this spicy Brazilian coconut chicken from a roommate she had in college who was from São Paulo. For years, every time we’d visit her apartment, she’d make this dish, and it became the thing we all looked forward to. Her tiny kitchen could barely fit three people, but somehow eight of us would squeeze in there some sitting on the counter, some standing in the doorway while she cooked. The smell of coconut milk and garlic simmering would fill the entire apartment, and we’d all just hang out talking while she stirred the pot.
After she got married and moved into a house, she kept making it for family dinners. Her kitchen became the place where everyone gathered holidays, birthdays, random Sundays when someone needed comfort food. That coconut chicken was always on the stove in her big Dutch oven, and we’d eat it standing around the kitchen island with rice and way too much bread for soaking up sauce. When I finally asked her to teach me how to make it, she showed me something important. After browning the chicken, she never wiped the pan clean.
FAQ
What is spicy Brazilian coconut chicken?
spicy Brazilian coconut chicken is chicken cooked in a creamy coconut milk sauce with peppers, lime, and spices. It’s inspired by moqueca, a traditional Brazilian fish stew, but adapted with chicken instead. The coconut milk makes it rich and creamy, while lime juice and cilantro keep it bright and fresh. It’s comfort food with bold tropical flavors.
Which spices go well with coconut milk?
Cumin, paprika, ginger, garlic, and cayenne all work great with coconut milk. The creaminess of coconut pairs perfectly with warm spices and heat. Fresh herbs like cilantro and basil also complement coconut really well. Lime juice is crucial-it cuts through the richness and makes everything taste brighter. Don’t skip the lime.
What is a famous Brazilian chicken dish?
Frango com quiabo (chicken with okra) is popular, along with galinhada (chicken rice). But the most famous is probably frango à passarinho-fried chicken pieces with garlic. This coconut chicken is inspired by moqueca, which is traditionally made with fish but works amazingly with chicken. Brazilian cooking loves bold flavors and fresh ingredients.
What is spicy Brazilian coconut chicken?
Cocada is a traditional spicy Brazilian coconut chicken or sweet made with shredded coconut and condensed milk. It’s completely different from this savory chicken dish cocada is dessert, usually cut into squares or rolled into balls. Some versions add peanuts or chocolate. It’s super sweet and coconutty, popular at Brazilian festivals and street markets.
Brazilian Flavor in Your Kitchen!
Now you’ve got all the secrets for making spicy Brazilian coconut chicken from leaving those caramelized bits in the pan to letting it rest before serving. This isn’t just another chicken recipe, it’s the one that turns your kitchen into the place everyone wants to be. Keep coconut milk in your pantry and you’ll always be ready to make something that tastes like vacation.
Want more comfort food with bold flavors? Try our Delicious Chili Cheese Tater Tot Casserole Recipe for crispy tots and gooey cheese that feeds a crowd. Our Healthy Italian Penicillin Soup Recipe is what you need when someone’s sick and needs real healing food. And for Mexican comfort that’s rich and deeply satisfying, our Easy Birria Enchiladas Recipe transforms taco night into something special!
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with spicy Brazilian coconut chicken

spicy Brazilian coconut chicken
Creamy, spicy, and full of bright tropical flavor, this Spicy Brazilian Coconut Chicken is inspired by Brazilian moqueca but swaps fish for tender chicken thighs simmered in coconut milk, peppers, and lime. Quick enough for a weeknight but special enough for company.
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
-
Season chicken thighs with salt, pepper, and paprika. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Brown chicken 3-4 minutes per side until golden (don’t cook through). Remove and set aside.
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In the same pan, add sliced onions and bell peppers. Sauté for 5 minutes until soft, scraping up browned bits (fond). Add garlic, ginger, and chopped chili peppers; cook 1 minute until fragrant.
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Pour in coconut milk. Stir in cumin, cayenne, and bay leaves. Nestle browned chicken into the sauce. Bring to a gentle simmer, then reduce heat. Simmer 20-25 minutes until chicken is cooked through.
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Remove from heat; let rest 10 minutes so flavors meld. Stir in lime juice and taste for salt. Garnish with cilantro. Serve over rice with lime wedges and bread if desired.
Nutrition
Notes
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
