Stuffing-Coated Chicken
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All you need is 4 ingredients to make my easy stuffing-coated chicken breast recipe. It’s deliciously flavorful, delightfully crunchy, and perfectly tender; what more could you want?
I pulled this stuffing-coated chicken recipe out of Grandmama’s crate of recipes, which are currently residing at my house while I go through them and pull out recipes for my next book. My husband declares it’s right up there along with Granny’s oven-fried chicken, which is a big accolade in this household.
The best part is, this is even less work than that recipe, which gives it a bonus point in my books. Seriously, this is such a quick and easy crunchy chicken recipe. It takes between 30 and 40 minutes from start to finish, which gives you enough time to whip up a side dish to go along with it.
All you need is 4 ingredients: chicken breasts, stovetop stuffing mix (in the flavor of your choosing), milk, and cream of chicken soup. We use the milk and cream of chicken soup instead of egg to hold the breading in place. Trust me y’all, this adds the perfect pop of flavor AND ensures the chicken is deliciously moist and tender at the end. Then instead of breadcrumbs, we use crumbled stuffing mix. Sounds weird, but tastes so good.
All you’re gonna do is crush the stuffing mix, mix together the soup and milk, and then dip each chicken breast in the soup mixture and then the stuffing mixture. Pop these on a greased baking sheet and let them cook until golden brown.
Serve this with a side of Homemade Mashed Potatoes, Roast Vegetables, Parmesan Fries, Zucchini Fries, Fresh Green Beans, or Loaded Baked Potato Salad and you will have the perfect meal.
Enjoy!
What You’ll Need to Make Stuffing-Coated Chicken:
Recipe Ingredients
- Cream of chicken soup (here’s my homemade cream of chicken soup recipe).
- Milk
- Boxed stuffing mix (the flavor of your choice)
- Boneless skinless chicken breasts
Helpful Kitchen Tools
How to Make Stuffing-Coated Chicken:
Start by placing the stuffing mix in a large zipper seal bag and beating the living mess out of it with a rolling pin or meat tenderizer.
You can also use a food processor.
It will look like this.
Stir together the milk and cream soup in a small bowl or measuring cup until well blended.
Make a breading station by placing the stuffing mix crumbs in one bowl and the soup mixture in another.
Dip each chicken breast on both sides into the soup…
Then into the crushed stuffing mix, both sides as well.
Place these on a lightly greased baking sheet and bake at 400 for 20-30 minutes until golden brown.
Thicker chicken breasts will need closer to 30 minutes and thinner breasts will be closer to 20 minutes.
To check for doneness, just cut in the center of one and pull it apart a bit to make sure there isn’t any pinkness.
Serve this hot and crispy stuffing-coated chicken as soon as it’s done with the side dish of your choice.
Recipe Notes
- Feel free to use any kind of stuffing mix. I’m using chicken but herb, pork, or turkey stuffing mix all work as well.
- You can also use chicken tenders instead of chicken breasts. Just reduce the cooking time accordingly.
- For extra flavor, add 1 minced garlic clove or 1/2 cup of shredded cheese to the soup mixture. Cheddar cheese, parmesan cheese, or even Colby Jack cheese work.
- Another way to add flavor? Pour 1/4 cup of melted butter over the coated chicken breasts before baking.
- You can also swap the cream of chicken soup for cream of mushroom soup.
Recipe FAQs
How do you get the coating to stick to the chicken?
Here are some tips if you’re struggling:
- Pat dry the chicken breasts with a paper towel before adding the coating.
- Ensure all surface area is covered in the milk and soup mixture.
- Don’t be afraid to pat the coating onto the chicken with your hands to ensure it sticks.
- A final option is to place the chicken on a wire rack or platter in the fridge for 30 minutes before baking. This helps the ingredients solidify and thus stick better.
What should I coat my chicken with?
You can coat chicken in panko breadcrumbs, cracker crumbs, cereal crumbs, or… stuffing mix!
What do you serve with stuffing-coated chicken?
You can serve your crunchy chicken with so many different side dishes:
- Homemade Mashed Potatoes
- Roast Vegetables
- Parmesan Fries
- Zucchini Fries
- Fresh Green Beans
- Loaded Baked Potato Salad
- Roasted Asparagus
- Zucchini and Squash
- 3-Ingredient Buttermilk Biscuits
- Country Gravy
You may also like these crunchy chicken recipes:
Blackened Chicken With Cheese Topping
Fried Chicken Cordon Bleu, Southern-Style
3-Ingredient Ritz Cracker Chicken
Chicken Planks (Like Chicken Fingers, Only Better)
Southern Fried Chicken (Fuss-Free)
Ingredients
- 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts
- 1 box stovetop stuffing mix
- 1 10-ounce can cream of chicken soup
- 1/2 cup milk
Instructions
- Place the stuffing mix in a large zipper seal bag and crush it with a rolling pin or meat tenderizer (or your hands).1 box stovetop stuffing mix
- In a bowl or measuring cup, stir together the canned soup and milk until well blended.1 10-ounce can cream of chicken soup, 1/2 cup milk
- Pour stuffing mix crumbs into one bowl and the soup mixture into another.
- Dip each chicken breast, on both sides, first into the soup mixture and then into the stuffing mix crumbs.4 boneless skinless chicken breasts
- Place them on a greased baking sheet.
- Bake at 400 for 20-30 minutes or until chicken is golden brown and no longer pink in the center.
Nutrition
Christy – if you haven’t read them already, think about adding Richard Peck’s books to Katy’s library. I especially recommend “A Long Way from Chicago” and “A Year Down Yonder”. Both are written so that each chapter is nearly a short story on it’s own. When I homeschooled, we would sit at night and take turns reading aloud. Even Daddy enjoyed the shared time and voices. We read a lot of classics, but also just some great books for young folks. Enjoy handling those books – nothing like real paper and ink…
Thank you for letting me know about the books Lee, I can’t wait to check them out!
=D Richard Peck was our favorite Read Aloud author during our home school days.
Just thinking about those books make me giggle!
I hear there is a new one out: A Season of Gifts and I can’t wait to get it. Never mind my kids are 21 and 24 now 😉
My mom was a librarian and my dad a minister and college professor who had more than 10,000 books so I grew up reading. In fact we didn’t have a TV and I never got one until I was 31 years old. I must have a thousand or more books of my own but I have found use for ereaders without feeling like I’m cheating on paper! I borrow online books from my local library and have them delivered to the kindle reader ap on my ipad. I also joined an e book subscription service for 8.99 a month where you get unlimited online reading for that price. I do feel like my retention is waaaaay better when reading a physical copy of a book but I think there is a place for ereaders as well. I have a kindle firehdx and also a nook but have found it just as easy to use their aps on my ipad.
I absolutely agree. I will probably always use that app from time to time, as long as the internet and grid holds up at least :). What rich upbringing you had – in more ways that one!
Hi Christy, Can’t wait to try to make chicken. My daughter is coming home from college this weekend and I am going to plan to make this chicken. She is a stuffing queen and I think she will appreciate this meal. I do want to say also that I am a book in the hand kinda girl do not like the computer books. I want to feel the book turn each page and see it. I love love buying books and never do I feel guilty of spending money on books, magazines etc. I love reading and going to new and different places in my head. Thanks for sharing with us about your book love.
Christy, thanks for this recipe, can’t wait to try it, but tonight for supper I am using boneless pork chops along with the pork stuffing mix and using cream of mushroom soup.
I am an avid reader of books that I can hold in my hand. My nightly sleeping pill is a good book. I have just finished reading several series of books by Dee Henderson. I use and participate in an online book store called Paperback Swap. Once you become a member, you have access to about 5 million books. That number includes all kinds of books . You can spend hours just going through what you are interested in and reading the synopsis. When you find a book you want, click it and the person who has posted it will mail it to you. A visit to the website will be beneficial. As for me, I really like the convenience.
I am eagerly looking forward to your new cookbook. At most meals my husband wiill ask, “Is this Christy’s recipe”?
What a wonderful concept, I am definitely going to have to check it out!! Thank you so much for sharing the information with me!!
Christy, I have to say a big thank you for all your recipes. It just struck me as I was looking at those pictures of your hand dipping the chicken: “This part of the job is always SO MESSY (and yucky), and here Christy is dipping, holding a camera, probably washing her hands every 7.3 seconds going back and forth between the two, JUST so she can give us these amazing picture tutorials. How much she must love us all!” The chicken looks fabulous!
I love “real” books so much! There is nothing like reading a 100 year old treasure, by a favorite author, found for 50 cents in a second hand store. : )
My wife is now on a boneless chicken kick so this will be on the menu next week. I made something like this not long ago and used a new soup from Campbell’s call cream of chicken and mushroom soup. What a great idea.
Started on a reading jag back in 2006 and have barely missed a day since.
Hi Christy, I love seeing chicken recipes. My husband and daughter have sworn off red meat and pork :-(. I’m not happy. I saw a recipe for chicken croquette somewhere just wondering if you have one you could post? It was bread crumbs diced peppers but that’s all I remember. Sigh
Hey! I just call them Chicken Patties but I do have a great recipe and they are SO good and freeze really well! https://www.southernplate.com/2012/03/chicken-patties-the-one-thing-i-dont-like-about.html