Lemon chicken and orzo (the one pan dinner everyone asks for seconds of)

Servings: 4 Total Time: 40 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Golden seared chicken nestled in a creamy lemony orzo with wilted spinach and parmesan — all in one pan
A large white oven safe skillet filled with creamy lemon orzo and wilted spinach with four golden seared chicken breasts nestled on top garnished with fresh parsley and lemon slices pinit

There is a very short list of dinners that manage to be genuinely comforting, impressively flavorful, and made entirely in one pan without any drama. This lemon chicken and orzo sits right at the top of that list.

The concept is simple. You sear the chicken first to get that golden crust that makes everything taste better. Then you build a creamy lemony orzo right in the same pan — garlic, broth, lemon, parmesan, spinach — and nestle the chicken back in to finish everything together in the oven.

What comes out of that oven is something that tastes like it required significantly more skill and effort than it actually did. The orzo is creamy and rich, the chicken is juicy and golden, and the lemon ties every single element together with a brightness that stops this dish from ever feeling heavy.

I make this on nights when I want something comforting but do not want to spend an hour in the kitchen or clean four different pans afterward. It hits every time without fail and the leftovers — if there are any — are genuinely just as good the next day. IMO that is the hallmark of a truly great recipe.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • Everything cooks in one pan which means maximum flavor and minimum cleanup — the orzo absorbs all the pan drippings from the seared chicken and becomes something extraordinary
  • The creamy lemon orzo is rich, bright, and comforting in a way that feels indulgent without actually being heavy
  • The chicken stays incredibly juicy because it finishes cooking in the oven nestled in the moist creamy orzo rather than continuing to dry out on a hot stovetop
  • It is impressive enough to serve to guests but easy enough to make on a random Tuesday without stressing about it
  • Kids love this dish — the orzo has a mild creamy flavor and the lemon is bright rather than sharp making it approachable for younger palates
  • The leftovers reheat beautifully which makes this an excellent option for meal prep lunches throughout the week

Ingredients with key notes

For the chicken

  • 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts — Look for chicken breasts that are roughly even in thickness. If yours are particularly thick, pound them lightly to an even thickness so they cook at the same rate as the orzo. Pat them completely dry before seasoning — this is what gets you that golden crust rather than a steamed grey exterior.
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil — For searing. You need enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan and promote even browning on the chicken.
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder — Seasons the exterior of the chicken and contributes to the golden crust during searing.
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1 teaspoon dried Italian seasoning — A blend of oregano, basil, and thyme that adds a subtle herby complexity to the chicken without requiring multiple separate spices.
  • 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika — Adds depth and contributes to that beautiful golden-red color on the seared chicken exterior.
  • Salt and black pepper to taste

For the lemon orzo

  • 1.5 cups dry orzo pasta — Orzo is a small rice-shaped pasta that cooks beautifully when simmered directly in broth giving you a risotto-like creaminess without any of the risotto-level effort. Do not rinse the orzo before using — the surface starch is what makes the finished dish so creamy.
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced — Goes into the pan first after the chicken comes out and blooms in the residual oil and pan drippings. This step builds the flavor foundation of the entire orzo.
  • 1 medium onion, finely diced — Adds sweetness and body to the orzo base. Cook it until soft and translucent before adding anything else.
  • 1 medium carrot, finely diced — Adds a subtle natural sweetness and color. Small dice ensures it cooks through completely during the orzo simmering time.
  • 3 cups chicken broth — The orzo cooks directly in the broth and absorbs all that savory flavor as it simmers. Use a good quality low sodium broth so you can control the seasoning yourself.
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream — This is what gives the orzo that creamy luxurious texture. You can substitute with half and half for a lighter result.
  • 3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice — Added at the end to brighten everything and cut through the richness of the cream and parmesan. Fresh only — do not use bottled.
  • 1 teaspoon lemon zest — Adds concentrated lemon flavor that the juice alone cannot provide.
  • 1/2 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese — Melts into the orzo at the end and adds a savory nuttiness that takes the creaminess to another level. Grate it fresh from a block — pre-shredded parmesan has anti-caking agents that prevent it from melting smoothly.
  • 3 cups fresh baby spinach — Wilts into the orzo during the last few minutes and adds color, nutrition, and a slight earthiness that balances the lemon beautifully.
  • 2 tablespoons butter — Stirred in at the end for extra richness and that glossy restaurant-quality finish.
  • Fresh parsley for garnish
  • Lemon slices for serving

Optional add-ins

  • Sun-dried tomatoes — Add a concentrated sweet and tangy element that works beautifully with the lemon
  • Artichoke hearts — Deepen the Mediterranean character of the dish
  • Capers — Add a briny pop that complements the lemon perfectly
  • Red pepper flakes — A pinch adds gentle warmth that cuts through the richness

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Preheat the oven and season the chicken

Preheat your oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Pat the chicken breasts completely dry with paper towels. In a small bowl combine the garlic powder, onion powder, Italian seasoning, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper. Rub the spice blend evenly over all sides of each chicken breast until thoroughly coated.

Step 2: Sear the chicken

Heat the olive oil in a large oven-safe skillet or braising pan over medium-high heat until shimmering and hot. Add the seasoned chicken breasts and sear for 3 to 4 minutes per side without moving them until a deep golden crust forms on each side. You are not cooking the chicken through at this point — you are building the crust and locking in flavor. Remove the seared chicken from the pan and set aside on a plate. The pan should have beautiful golden drippings in the bottom — do not clean it.

Step 3: Build the orzo base

Reduce the heat to medium. Add the finely diced onion and carrot to the same pan and cook in the residual oil and chicken drippings for 3 to 4 minutes until softened and the onion is translucent. Add the minced garlic and cook for another 60 seconds until fragrant. Stir constantly so the garlic does not burn.

Step 4: Add the orzo and broth

Add the dry orzo to the pan and stir it around for about one minute to lightly toast it in the pan drippings. This step adds a subtle nutty depth to the finished dish that is worth the extra minute. Pour in the chicken broth and heavy cream and stir everything together, scraping up any golden bits stuck to the bottom of the pan — those bits are pure flavor. Season with salt and pepper. Bring the mixture to a gentle simmer.

Step 5: Nestle the chicken and bake

Place the seared chicken breasts on top of the simmering orzo, nestling them gently into the mixture. Transfer the entire pan to the preheated oven uncovered. Bake for 18 to 20 minutes until the chicken reaches an internal temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit and the orzo has absorbed most of the liquid and is tender and creamy.

Step 6: Finish the orzo

Remove the pan from the oven. Carefully lift the chicken breasts out of the orzo and set them aside briefly on the plate. Return the pan to the stovetop over medium-low heat. Add the baby spinach to the orzo and stir gently until wilted — this takes about 2 minutes. Stir in the butter, freshly grated parmesan, fresh lemon juice, and lemon zest. Taste and adjust the seasoning. The orzo should be creamy, bright, and glossy.

Step 7: Serve

Nestle the chicken breasts back into the finished orzo. Garnish with fresh parsley and lemon slices. Serve directly from the pan at the table — this is a dish that looks as good as it tastes and it deserves to be shown off.

Serving suggestions

This lemon chicken and orzo is a complete and satisfying meal entirely on its own. Here are a few ways to round it out if you want to:

  • With a simple green salad — A light arugula salad with lemon vinaigrette echoes the bright lemon notes in the orzo and provides a fresh contrast to the richness of the dish.
  • With crusty bread — A thick slice of good quality crusty bread for scooping up the creamy orzo is honestly one of the best ways to eat this dish. Do not underestimate how good that is.
  • With roasted asparagus or broccolini — Roast them on a separate sheet pan at the same oven temperature while the chicken and orzo bake. They come out at the same time and the whole dinner is done simultaneously.
  • With a glass of white wine — A crisp dry white wine like Pinot Grigio or Sauvignon Blanc complements the lemon and parmesan in this dish perfectly. Just saying.
  • As a dinner party main — Serve it straight from the pan at the table with a big salad and some crusty bread. It feeds a crowd beautifully and looks impressive without requiring you to do anything fancy.

Storage tips

This dish stores really well and reheats beautifully. Here is how to handle it:

Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. The orzo will thicken as it sits and absorbs any remaining liquid — this is completely normal and it still tastes great.

Reheating: Reheat in a skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of chicken broth or water to loosen the orzo back to its original creamy consistency. Stir frequently and add liquid one tablespoon at a time until you reach the texture you want. The microwave works too — add a splash of broth and cover loosely, heating in 60-second intervals and stirring between each one.

Freezer: The orzo does not freeze particularly well — pasta tends to become soft and mushy after freezing and thawing. The chicken freezes well on its own for up to 2 months. If you plan to freeze this dish, freeze the chicken separately and make a fresh batch of orzo when you are ready to serve.

Make ahead: You can sear the chicken and make the orzo base through step 4 up to one day ahead. Store separately in the fridge and finish the dish by combining and baking when you are ready to serve. This cuts your active cooking time on the day to about 25 minutes.

Closing

One pan dinners get a reputation for being simple and straightforward — and this lemon chicken and orzo absolutely is both of those things. But it is also genuinely delicious in a way that one pan dinners do not always manage to be.

The golden chicken, the creamy lemon orzo, the wilted spinach, the parmesan — everything works together in that pan in a way that feels intentional and considered rather than thrown together. And when you bring it to the table and serve it straight from the pan, it looks like you really cooked something.

Because you did. Make this one this week and let me know what you think in the comments below.

With gratitude, Kip

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 30 mins Total Time 40 mins
Servings: 4 Estimated Cost: $ 17
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

This lemon chicken and orzo is the kind of one pan dinner that feels like a warm hug after a long day. Chicken breasts seasoned and seared until golden, then nestled into a creamy lemony orzo that cooks right in the same pan with wilted spinach, parmesan, garlic, and fresh lemon. Everything finishes together in the oven so the chicken stays incredibly juicy while the orzo absorbs all that flavor from the chicken and the broth and the lemon and becomes something genuinely special. Comforting without being heavy, impressive without being complicated, and ready in 40 minutes from start to finish.

Ingredients

For the chicken:

For the lemon orzo:

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Pat chicken dry and rub with the spice blend on all sides.
  2. Sear chicken in hot oiled oven-safe skillet for 3 to 4 minutes per side until golden. Remove and set aside.
  3. In the same pan, saute onion and carrot for 3 to 4 minutes. Add garlic and cook for 60 seconds.
  4. Add orzo and toast for one minute. Pour in chicken broth and heavy cream, scraping up the pan drippings. Season and bring to a gentle simmer.
  5. Nestle chicken into the orzo and transfer the pan uncovered to the oven. Bake for 18 to 20 minutes until chicken reaches 165 degrees Fahrenheit and orzo is tender.
  6. Remove chicken from pan. Stir spinach, butter, parmesan, lemon juice, and lemon zest into the orzo over medium-low heat until creamy and wilted.
  7. Return chicken to the pan, garnish with parsley and lemon slices, and serve directly from the pan.

Note

  • Do not rinse the orzo before cooking — the surface starch creates the creamy texture
  • Pound thick chicken breasts to an even thickness for consistent cooking
  • Add broth when reheating leftovers to restore the orzo's creamy consistency
  • Grate parmesan fresh from a block for the smoothest melt into the orzo
Keywords: lemon chicken and orzo, one pan lemon chicken orzo, creamy lemon orzo, chicken orzo recipe, easy one pan chicken dinner, lemon chicken orzo bake, chicken and orzo
Did you make this recipe?

Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

What is orzo and where do I find it?

Orzo is a small pasta shape that looks almost identical to a large grain of rice. Despite how it looks, it is made from wheat flour just like any other pasta. It cooks quickly, absorbs liquid beautifully, and develops a creamy almost risotto-like texture when simmered in broth — which is exactly why it works so well in this recipe. You can find it in virtually any grocery store in the pasta aisle. It is usually sold in one pound boxes and is incredibly affordable. If you have never cooked with it before, this recipe is an excellent introduction.

Can I use chicken thighs instead of chicken breast?

Absolutely and chicken thighs are actually an excellent choice here because they are more forgiving and stay juicier through the searing and baking process. Use boneless skinless chicken thighs and follow the recipe exactly as written. The searing time stays the same. The baking time may be slightly shorter — start checking the internal temperature at the 15-minute mark. Bone-in thighs also work but will need a longer baking time of around 25 to 30 minutes.

Can I make this recipe gluten free?

The main barrier to making this gluten free is the orzo which is a wheat-based pasta. You can substitute with a gluten free orzo — several brands make excellent versions that behave very similarly to regular orzo. Alternatively you can use rice instead of orzo, though the texture of the finished dish will be slightly different. Use the same amount of liquid and expect the rice to take a few extra minutes to cook through fully.

How do I stop the orzo from getting mushy?

Two things matter most here. First, do not overcook the orzo on the stovetop before it goes into the oven — you want it just starting to become tender when the pan goes in, not fully cooked. Second, pull the dish out of the oven as soon as the chicken reaches 165 degrees Fahrenheit internally. The residual heat will continue cooking the orzo slightly even after it leaves the oven. If you leave it in too long the orzo goes from creamy and al dente to soft and mushy quickly. Trust the timing and use a meat thermometer to take the guesswork out of it.

Can I add other vegetables to this dish?

Yes and there are several vegetables that work beautifully here. Cherry tomatoes halved and added in the last 10 minutes of baking burst and add a sweet acidity that pairs perfectly with the lemon. Sun-dried tomatoes stirred into the orzo base add a concentrated sweetness and depth. Artichoke hearts add a slightly nutty Mediterranean character. Peas stirred in with the spinach at the end add sweetness and color. Zucchini diced small and added with the onion and carrot cooks down beautifully. The orzo is very accommodating so add whatever sounds good to you.

Can I make lemon chicken and orzo ahead of time?

Yes with a smart approach. Sear the chicken and cook the orzo base through step 4 up to one day ahead. Store the seared chicken and the orzo base separately in airtight containers in the fridge. When you are ready to serve, bring the orzo base back to a simmer in the oven-safe skillet, add a splash of broth to loosen it, nestle the chicken in, and finish in the oven as directed. The total active time on the day drops to about 25 minutes which makes this an excellent option for dinner parties or busy weeknights when you want to do most of the work ahead of time.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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