Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (2024)

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“Delish! A welcome new dish for our Keto meal plan – thanks for the recipe!.” ~Suzanne

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (1)

when it comes to chicken recipes, Tuscan chicken is king!

This creamy Tuscan chicken recipe is the kind of meal that draws people like a magnet…they wander into the kitchen from all directions, noses high in the air, begging to know what smells so delicious. What cook doesn’t live for those moments? And it all comes together in about 30 minutes…check it out!

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (2)

did you know?

Tuscan garlic chicken is a cult favorite pasta dish at The Olive Garden, and it’s been copied a lot because it’s so mouthwatering. Leave it to a large chain restaurant to come up with such an irresistible combination of ingredients ~ they know what people want. My version ditches the pasta and uses chicken thighs, but there’s no reason you can’t put it over pasta if you crave that.

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (3)

chicken thighs are best for this recipe

I like to use bone in, skin on, thighs. Why? Thigh meat is fattier, more tender and flavorful than other cuts. I use bone-in thighs because cooking chicken with the bone adds even more flavor. However you can use whatever part of the chicken you like, including chicken breasts, or a whole fryer chicken cut in parts, it all works.

TIP: if you use skin on thighs you’ll want to keep that skin out of the sauce until serving, so it stays crisp. If you use skinless chicken you can submerge it in the sauce.

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (4)

how to build a quick pan sauce for Tuscan chicken thighs

Just like with your Thanksgiving turkey, the gravy is everything in this recipe. I love to sauté minced shallots and garlic in those drippings before adding the Marsala wine to deglaze the bottom and really grab up every bit of flavor. You’ll brown whatever chicken you’re using in some olive oil until both sides are nice and golden. You can either cook the meat right on the stove top, or pop it in the oven to finish cooking while you make the sauce.

The Tuscan sauce finishes with chicken stock and heavy cream. It gets more flavor, color, and texture from sun dried tomatoes, and fresh spinach. I threw in a few chopped cherry tomatoes because they were sitting on the counter. Good move.

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (5)

the right pan for Tuscan chicken thighs

A wide shallow cast iron casserole with a lid (sometimes called a braiser) is perfect for this dish. These can range from pricey, to not so pricey, and there are lots of choices. I think every kitchen needs one, they cook evenly and make a beautiful stove or oven to table presentation.

If you cook from my blog you might recognize this pan from these other chicken recipes:

  • CHICKEN THIGHS WITH WHITE BEANS AND WILTED GREENS
  • LEMON CHICKEN BIRYANI
  • CHICKEN WITH CRACKED OLIVES AND HERBS
Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (6)


“This is my second time making this dish and it’s delicious! It was so easy to make and also the ingredients weren’t too expensive to buy. Great family dinner meal.” ~Cassie

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (7)

Creamy Tuscan Chicken Thighs

3.66 from 645 votes

Creamy Tuscan chicken thighs inspired by Olive Garden ~ crispy chicken in a creamy sauce is a 30 minute chicken thigh recipe the family loves!

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Cook Time:40 minutes minutes

Total Time:40 minutes minutes

Servings: 6 servings

Ingredients

  • 6 bone in/skin on chicken thighs
  • olive oil
  • salt and fresh cracked black pepper
  • 1 large shallot, peeled and minced
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/4 cup Marsala wine (or Vermouth, or dry white wine)
  • 1/4 cup chicken broth
  • 1 1/2 cups heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup chopped sun-dried tomatoes, jarred, in olive oil
  • 1/2 cup shredded Parmesan cheese (go for the good stuff!)
  • 2 cups fresh spinach, roughly chopped (I like to use baby spinach)
  • 1/2 cup chopped cherry tomatoes, or any good red tomatoes
  • parsley or fresh thyme for garnish

Instructions

  • Coat the bottom of a large shallow cast iron skillet or braising pan with olive oil and heat on medium heat until hot. Season the chicken on both sides with salt and pepper and then brown, skin side down for about 15 minutes, until the skin is nice and crisp. Flip the chicken and cook for another 15 minutes, or until done. The meat should read 160F on an instant read thermometer. Set aside on a plate and cover with foil, or put in a warm oven while you make the sauce.

  • Add the shallot and garlic to the pan and saute, stirring constantly, for a couple of minutes. Then add the Marsala wine and let it bubble down while you scrape up the browned bits from the bottom of the pan.

  • Add the chicken stock, heavy cream, and sun dried tomatoes, and cook the sauce for a few minutes until it starts to thicken, stirring frequently. Scrape up everything from the bottom and sides of the pan into the sauce. NOTE: This isn’t a super thick sauce, but it will thicken somewhat as it cooks.

  • Add the cheese and stir until incorporated. Add the chopped spinach and fresh tomatoes to the pan, and cook until the spinach has wilted. Add the chicken back into the pan and heat through before serving, garnished with fresh parsley or thyme.

Video

Notes

  • My husband’s a dedicated thigh man, hence I used thighs, but this recipe is just as good with any chicken parts, and you can make a super quick meal with chicken cutlets, which are thinly sliced boneless skinless chicken breasts.
  • Use chopped chicken instead of the whole thighs, and serve this over pasta. The pasta absorbs all that creamy sauce and it’s fantastic.
  • Cut calories and fat by using a little more chicken stock and less cream. Let the chicken stock reduce, and you can thicken the sauce with a little Wondra flour.
  • I use the sun-dried tomatoes that come in oil, in a jar, but if you only have the dry kind, re-hydrate them in warm water before using.
  • For no-alcohol version replace wine with chicken stock, although be aware that some of the alcohol evaporates off, and the flavor payoff is huge. Even a tablespoon or two will make a difference in the flavor of this sauce.

NEW FEATURE! Click here to add your own private notes.

Course: dinner

Cuisine: Italian American

Author: Sue Moran

Keyword: chicken, chicken thighs, dinner, one pot

Nutrition

Calories: 620 kcal · Carbohydrates: 9 g · Protein: 29 g · Fat: 52 g · Saturated Fat: 22 g · Polyunsaturated Fat: 6 g · Monounsaturated Fat: 18 g · Trans Fat: 0.1 g · Cholesterol: 216 mg · Sodium: 345 mg · Potassium: 625 mg · Fiber: 1 g · Sugar: 3 g · Vitamin A: 2176 IU · Vitamin C: 16 mg · Calcium: 146 mg · Iron: 2 mg

Nutritional information is provided as a courtesy and is an estimate only. This information comes from online calculators. Although The View from Great Island attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures are only estimates.

Did You Make This?We love seeing what you’ve made! Tag us on social media at @theviewfromgreatisland for a chance to be featured.

Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (8)

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Creamy Tuscan Chicken • best chicken thigh recipe!! (2024)

FAQs

How to make chicken thighs taste better? ›

Spices like smoked paprika, cumin, coriander, cayenne, and thyme will make the most flavorful spice rub for your chicken, so make sure to always have your pantry stocked with some spices. Preheat a cast iron or non-stick pan over medium-high heat for 2 minutes with 1 tablespoon of oil.

Do you bake chicken thighs covered or uncovered? ›

Don't Cover the Chicken.

Some chicken thighs in the oven recipes require covering with aluminum foil. This is not one of them. When baking chicken thighs with the skin on, you're trying to achieve crispy chicken thighs in the oven. Therefore, leaving them uncovered ensures a crispy skin that turns perfectly golden.

What does Tuscan chicken go with? ›

We love this dish served with bread, but you can also serve it over rice or pasta, or with creamy mashed potatoes. Whatever you do, we highly recommend serving this alongside something to sop up all of that incredible Tuscan sauce—let's be honest, it's the real star of the show here.

What tenderizes chicken thighs? ›

Using a marinade is a good way to achieve soft and tender chicken, with plain yogurt or buttermilk being the most commonly used marinades. The two contain acids and enzymes that combine to break the proteins and fiber in the chicken.

How do you keep chicken thighs from getting rubbery? ›

Cook at Higher Temperatures

The ideal temperature to cook your chicken should be around 275 °F – 320 °F (135 °C – 160 °C). As you start to decrease temperature beyond this threshold, the skin will become rubbery. The chicken fat needs to be cooked into the meat, and that cannot happen when your temperature is very low.

Is it better to cook chicken thighs fast or slow? ›

The key is to cook them slowly.

Gentle techniques—such as braising at a relatively low heat and grilling over an indirect fire—work best. The goal is to keep the meat at an internal temp between 140 and 195 degrees—the collagen-breakdown sweet spot—for as long as possible.

Where is Tuscan sauce from? ›

Different areas of Italy include different ingredients to the tomato sauce they make. In northern Italy, where the area of Tuscany is located, they include a mixture of vegetables to add extra flavour to their tomato sauce. This mixture is called a soffritto.

Why is it called Tuscan? ›

Tuscany is named after its pre-Roman inhabitants, the Etruscans. It was ruled by Rome for many centuries. In the Middle Ages, it saw many invasions, but in the Renaissance period it helped lead Europe back to civilization.

Which leading sauce is a sauce suprême prepared from? ›

According the Larousse Gastronomique, a seminal work of French haute cuisine, first published in 1938, suprême sauce is made from the mother sauce velouté (white stock thickened with a white roux—in the case of suprême sauce, chicken stock is usually preferred), reduced with heavy cream or crème fraîche, and then ...

What does Mary Berry serve with Tuscan chicken? ›

Based on a classic creamy chicken dish, Tuscan chicken is one of Mary Berry's favourites when she needs an easy supper. It's lovely served with potatoes, rice or pasta.

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