Golden chicken strips, blistered peppers, and charred zucchini make this chicken and vegetables skillet the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The vegetables keep their shape and bite, the chicken stays juicy, and the light garlic herb pan sauce pulls everything together without turning heavy. It’s the sort of one-pan meal that looks colorful on the table and still feels practical enough for a Tuesday night.
What makes this version work is the order. The chicken gets a hard sear first, then comes out so the vegetables can hit the same hot pan and pick up those browned bits left behind. That’s where the flavor lives. A quick splash of broth loosens everything up, and the butter at the end gives the sauce just enough body to coat the chicken and vegetables instead of pooling underneath them.
Below you’ll find the timing that keeps the chicken from drying out, the vegetable cues that tell you when to stop cooking, and a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s already in the fridge.
The chicken stayed juicy, and the peppers and zucchini still had some bite instead of turning soft. I loved how the broth picked up all the browned bits in the pan.
Save this chicken and vegetables skillet for a fast one-pan dinner with golden chicken, blistered vegetables, and a light garlic butter finish.
The Trick to Keeping the Chicken Juicy While the Vegetables Char
The biggest mistake with skillet chicken and vegetables is crowding the pan and letting everything steam. Chicken needs direct contact with hot metal to brown, and the vegetables need enough room to blister instead of soften into a pile of juice. That’s why the chicken goes first and gets removed before the vegetables hit the pan. Once the broth goes in, the browned bits release into the sauce instead of burning onto the skillet.
This also keeps the chicken from overcooking while the vegetables finish. If you leave it in the pan the whole time, the strips sit in the heat too long and turn dry before the peppers and zucchini are ready. The brief return at the end is enough to warm the chicken through and coat everything in the buttered pan sauce.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Skillet

- Chicken breasts — Cutting them into strips gives you fast, even cooking and more browned edges. Chicken thighs work too if you want a little more richness, but they’ll need a minute or two longer in the skillet.
- Bell peppers, zucchini, and red onion — This combination gives you sweetness, moisture, and enough structure to hold up over high heat. If you swap in softer vegetables like mushrooms or cherry tomatoes, add them later so they don’t collapse.
- Italian seasoning and smoked paprika — These spices do the heavy lifting before the sauce ever starts. Fresh herbs aren’t necessary here, but the paprika matters because it gives the chicken a deeper color and a subtle smoky edge.
- Chicken broth — This is the deglazing liquid that lifts the browned bits from the pan and turns them into sauce. Water works in a pinch, but it won’t add the same savory depth.
- Butter — Added at the end, it softens the sharper edges of the broth and helps the sauce cling. If you add it too early, it can separate and disappear into the pan instead of coating the food.
Getting the Sear, the Char, and the Finish in the Right Order
Seasoning the Chicken First
Toss the chicken strips with the Italian seasoning, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper before they touch the pan. That seasoning clings better to dry chicken than to chicken that’s already sitting in oil, and it helps the surface brown instead of turning pale. If the strips are very wet, pat them dry first or they’ll spit in the pan and struggle to sear. The goal is a deep golden edge, not just opaque meat.
Building the Chicken Crust
Heat the olive oil in a large cast iron skillet over high heat, then lay the chicken in a single layer. Don’t move it around right away. Let the first side brown for a few minutes before turning so it develops color instead of releasing liquid and boiling. Pull it when it’s cooked through to 165°F; it will finish warming later, and that keeps it from drying out.
Blistering the Vegetables
Add the peppers, zucchini, and onion to the same pan and leave the heat high. Stir only enough to keep the pieces from burning, because too much stirring stops the edges from charring. You want the onions to soften and the peppers to blister, with the zucchini still holding some shape. If the pan looks dry, the vegetables need a moment longer, not more oil right away.
Finishing With Broth and Butter
Add the garlic for just a minute, then pour in the broth and scrape the bottom of the pan. That quick deglaze captures the flavor from the chicken and vegetables before it has a chance to burn. Return the chicken, add the butter, and toss until everything looks glossy. The sauce should lightly coat the ingredients, not drown them.
How to Adapt This Chicken and Vegetables Skillet for What’s in Your Kitchen
Make It Dairy-Free
Skip the butter and finish with another teaspoon of olive oil instead. You’ll lose a little of the glossy richness, but the dish still tastes clean and bright, especially with the lemon at the end.
Use Chicken Thighs Instead
Boneless skinless thighs give you a juicier, slightly richer result. They usually need a couple of extra minutes in the skillet, but they’re more forgiving if you’re cooking for a crowd or want a little more margin before they dry out.
Swap the Vegetables by Texture
Broccoli florets, mushrooms, or green beans all work, but they behave differently in the pan. Broccoli needs a splash of water and a lid for a minute, mushrooms need space so they can brown, and green beans need a little longer than zucchini to turn tender.
Make It Low-Carb Without Changing the Method
This skillet is already naturally low in carbs as written. If you serve it with cauliflower rice, spoon the chicken and vegetables over the rice just before eating so the vegetables stay charred and don’t get watered down.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The vegetables soften a little, but the flavor stays strong.
- Freezer: It freezes, but the zucchini loses some of its texture after thawing. If you want to freeze it, cool it completely first and use within 2 months.
- Reheating: Warm it in a skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of broth or water. The common mistake is blasting it in the microwave, which dries the chicken and makes the vegetables limp all at once.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Chicken and Vegetables Skillet
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Season the chicken strips with Italian seasoning, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper.
- Heat olive oil in a large cast iron skillet over high heat and sear the chicken for 4-5 minutes until golden and cooked through to 165°F, then remove.
- Add bell peppers, zucchini, and red onion to the same pan and cook over high heat for 5-6 minutes until blistered and slightly charred.
- Add the minced garlic and cook for 1 minute, then pour in the chicken broth and deglaze the pan.
- Return the chicken to the pan and add the butter, then toss everything to coat.
- Garnish with fresh parsley and serve with lemon wedges.


