I think that @Benny Neugebauer comment on the OP question about the Fetch API should be presented here as an answer since the OP was looking for a functionality in Chrome to manually create HTTP POST requests and that exactly what the fetch command do.
There is a nice simple example of the Fetch API here
// Make sure you run it from the domain 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/'. (cross-origin-policy)
fetch('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts',{method: 'POST', headers: {'test': 'TestPost'} })
.then(response => response.json())
.then(json => console.log(json))
Some of the advantages of the fetch command are really precious:
Its simple, short, fast, available and even as a console command it stored on your chrome console and can be used later.
The simplicity of pressing F12, write the command in the console tab (or press the up key if you used it before) then press enter, see it pending and returning the response is what making it really useful for simple post requests tests.
Of course, The main disadvantage here is that unlike Postman, This wont pass the cross-origin-policy but still I find it very useful for testing in local environment or other environments where I can enable CORS manually.
$.post('/resource/path/')
– FearlessFuture Mar 15 '17 at 16:51Edit and Resend
it which is pretty cool. – jurl Mar 26 '18 at 13:01