There are weeknight dinners and then there are weeknight dinners that make people think you have been secretly attending culinary school. This chicken in white wine sauce falls very firmly into the second category. It looks impressive, it tastes incredible, and it comes together in one pan in about 35 minutes. Nobody needs to know how easy it actually was.
I first made this on a Thursday evening when I wanted something that felt special but had absolutely no interest in doing a pile of dishes afterward. The white wine sauce came together so beautifully — rich, creamy, with that subtle tang from the wine and a brightness from the lemon — that my family genuinely thought I had put in way more effort than I did. That is the kind of recipe I will always make again.
The secret to this dish is building the sauce in the same pan you sear the chicken in. All those golden bits left behind from searing the chicken dissolve into the sauce and give it this deep, complex flavor that you just cannot replicate any other way. One pan, big flavor, minimal effort. That is the whole story here.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- Tender golden seared chicken smothered in a rich, creamy white wine sauce that tastes like fine dining
- Everything comes together in one single pan — minimal cleanup, maximum flavor
- Ready in just 35 minutes making it genuinely doable on a busy weeknight
- The sauce is built from simple pantry and fridge ingredients you likely already have
- Elegant enough for a dinner party but easy enough for a Tuesday night
- Pairs beautifully with mashed potatoes, pasta, rice, or crusty bread for soaking up every drop of that sauce
Ingredients and key notes
For the chicken:
- 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts — pound them to an even thickness of about 3/4 inch so they cook evenly throughout
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- 1/2 teaspoon paprika — adds a subtle warmth and helps the chicken develop a beautiful golden color
- Salt and black pepper to taste
- 2 tablespoons olive oil — for searing
For the white wine sauce:
- 3 tablespoons unsalted butter — divided; some goes in at the start for the aromatics, the rest finishes the sauce
- 4 cloves garlic, minced — fresh garlic only here, please; jarred garlic will not give you the same depth
- 1 cup dry white wine — a Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, or Chardonnay all work well; use something you would actually drink
- 1 cup chicken broth — low sodium gives you better control over the final seasoning
- 1 cup heavy cream — this is what makes the sauce rich, velvety, and absolutely luxurious
- 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice — this brightens the whole sauce and cuts through the richness perfectly
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard — a small but important addition that adds depth and a very subtle tang
- 2 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped — for finishing and garnish
- Salt and black pepper to taste
Key notes:
- Pounding the chicken to an even thickness is not optional if you want it to cook evenly. Uneven chicken means some parts are overcooked and dry before the thicker parts are done. A meat mallet or rolling pin both work fine.
- Use a dry white wine that you would actually enjoy drinking. Cooking wine from a bottle on the grocery store shelf is loaded with salt and preservatives and it will make your sauce taste flat. A decent bottle does not need to be expensive — anything in the eight to twelve dollar range works beautifully.
- Do not skip the Dijon mustard. You will not taste it as mustard in the finished sauce but it adds a complexity and depth that you will absolutely notice if it is missing.
- Heavy cream gives you the richest, most stable sauce. Half and half can work in a pinch but the sauce will be thinner and more prone to breaking. Do not use milk.
- Let the wine cook down properly before adding the broth and cream. Rushing this step means the alcohol does not fully cook off and your sauce will taste sharp and boozy instead of mellow and rich.
Step-by-step instructions
Step 1: Season the chicken
Pat the chicken breasts completely dry with paper towels — this is the single most important step for getting a good sear. Dry chicken browns beautifully; wet chicken steams in the pan. Season both sides generously with garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, salt, and black pepper.
Step 2: Sear the chicken
Heat the olive oil in a large heavy bottomed skillet or Dutch oven over medium high heat until shimmering. Add the chicken breasts and sear for 4 to 5 minutes per side without moving them — let them develop that beautiful deep golden crust. The chicken does not need to be cooked all the way through at this stage. Remove the chicken from the pan and set it aside on a plate.
Step 3: Build the base of the sauce
Reduce the heat to medium. Add one tablespoon of the butter to the same pan. Once melted, add the minced garlic and cook for about 60 seconds, stirring constantly, until fragrant. Do not let it burn — burnt garlic will make the entire sauce bitter and there is no coming back from that.
Step 4: Deglaze with white wine
Pour the white wine into the pan and use a wooden spoon to scrape up all those golden bits from the bottom of the pan. Those bits are pure flavor and they are going straight into your sauce. Let the wine simmer and reduce by about half, which takes around 3 to 4 minutes. Your kitchen is going to smell absolutely incredible at this point.
Step 5: Add the broth and cream
Pour in the chicken broth and bring it to a gentle simmer. Let it cook for 2 minutes, then pour in the heavy cream. Stir everything together and let the sauce simmer gently for about 3 minutes until it starts to thicken slightly and look glossy and rich.
Step 6: Add the mustard and lemon
Whisk in the Dijon mustard and fresh lemon juice. Taste the sauce at this point and adjust the seasoning with salt and pepper as needed. The sauce should taste rich, slightly tangy, and deeply savory. If it tastes flat, a little extra salt or a squeeze more lemon juice usually fixes it immediately.
Step 7: Return the chicken to the pan
Nestle the seared chicken breasts back into the sauce. Reduce the heat to medium low, cover the pan, and let everything simmer together for 8 to 10 minutes until the chicken is cooked through and registers 165 degrees F on an instant read thermometer. The chicken will finish cooking in the sauce and absorb all that incredible flavor as it does.
Step 8: Finish and serve
Add the remaining two tablespoons of butter to the sauce and stir gently until it melts in. This finishing butter makes the sauce glossy, silky, and restaurant-level good. Sprinkle fresh chopped parsley over the top and serve immediately straight from the pan.
Serving suggestions
This chicken in white wine sauce is one of those dishes that makes everything it is paired with taste better. Here are some great ways to serve it:
- Spoon it over a generous pile of creamy mashed potatoes and let the sauce soak all the way in — this is the classic pairing and it is classic for a very good reason
- Serve it alongside buttered egg noodles or fettuccine for a pasta night that feels genuinely special
- Pair it with steamed green beans or roasted asparagus for a complete plate that looks as good as it tastes
- Serve with thick slices of crusty sourdough or a warm baguette for mopping up every last drop of that white wine sauce — do not waste a single drop of it
- Spoon over white rice for a simple, comforting bowl that stretches the recipe further and works great for meal prep
- Serve with a simple arugula salad dressed with lemon and olive oil on the side for a bright, fresh contrast to the richness of the sauce
Storage tips
Refrigerator: Store leftover chicken and sauce together in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. The sauce thickens significantly as it cools — that is completely normal and it reheats beautifully.
Reheating on the stovetop: Place the chicken and sauce in a skillet over medium low heat. Add a small splash of chicken broth or cream to loosen the sauce as it warms. Heat gently, turning the chicken once, until warmed through. Do not rush this on high heat or the cream sauce can break and become grainy.
Reheating in the microwave: Place in a microwave safe dish and cover loosely. Heat in 30-second intervals on medium power, stirring the sauce between each interval, until warmed through. Add a small splash of broth if the sauce looks too thick.
Freezer: Cream based sauces do not freeze particularly well — the cream tends to separate and become grainy when thawed. This is a make it fresh or refrigerate it recipe. Given how quickly it comes together, making it fresh is always the better option.
Before you go
This chicken in white wine sauce is the kind of recipe that earns a permanent spot in your regular dinner rotation. Not because it is trendy or complicated or requires a long list of specialty ingredients — but because it is simply, genuinely delicious every single time you make it.
One pan, 35 minutes, and a sauce so good your family will be asking you to make it again before the plates are even cleared. That is the goal with every recipe I share here and this one delivers without question.
Make it this week. Serve it over mashed potatoes. Pour yourself a small glass of whatever wine you used in the sauce. And enjoy the fact that a dinner this good really did not take that much effort at all.
With gratitude, Kip
Chicken in white wine sauce — the elegant one-pan dinner that feels like a restaurant meal
Description
This chicken in white wine sauce delivers a restaurant quality dinner with minimal effort and just one pan to clean. Golden seared chicken breasts simmer in a velvety, creamy white wine sauce built with garlic, butter, and a touch of lemon. It is the kind of meal that looks like you spent hours in the kitchen but takes just 35 minutes from start to finish — and every single bite is worth it.
Ingredients
Chicken:
White wine sauce:
Instructions
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Pat chicken dry and season both sides with garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, salt, and pepper.
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Sear chicken in olive oil over medium high heat for 4 to 5 minutes per side until deeply golden. Remove and set aside.
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Reduce heat to medium. Add 1 tablespoon butter and cook minced garlic for 60 seconds until fragrant.
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Pour in white wine and scrape up the pan drippings. Simmer until reduced by half, about 3 to 4 minutes.
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Add chicken broth and simmer for 2 minutes. Pour in heavy cream and simmer for 3 minutes until slightly thickened.
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Whisk in Dijon mustard and lemon juice. Season with salt and pepper.
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Return chicken to the pan. Cover and simmer on medium low for 8 to 10 minutes until chicken reaches 165 degrees F.
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Stir in remaining 2 tablespoons butter. Garnish with fresh parsley and serve immediately.
