Baked Tuscan Chicken

Category: Dinner Recipes

Golden-roasted chicken thighs tucked into a sun-dried tomato cream sauce make this baked Tuscan chicken the kind of dinner that gets scraped clean from the pan. The skin stays crisp on top while the sauce turns silky underneath, with Parmesan, garlic, and spinach giving every bite a rich, savory finish that tastes like much more work than it is.

The key is building the sauce in the same skillet you used for the chicken. Those browned bits left behind after searing carry a lot of flavor, and the quick splash of broth loosens them without watering down the cream. The chicken goes back in skin-side up, so the top stays golden while the sauce bubbles around the edges instead of softening that crust.

Below, you’ll find the small details that keep the sauce smooth, plus a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s already in the kitchen.

The chicken skin stayed crisp even after baking, and the sauce thickened up beautifully without curdling. My husband kept going back for more of the sun-dried tomato sauce, and the leftovers were just as good the next day.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Creamy baked Tuscan chicken with crispy skin and sun-dried tomato sauce belongs on your dinner rotation.

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The Trick Is Keeping the Chicken Skin Out of the Sauce Until the End

The biggest mistake with skillet-to-oven chicken dishes is nestling the meat back into the sauce too soon. That traps steam against the skin and turns all that hard-earned browning soft. Here, the chicken goes back in skin-side up only after the cream sauce is built, so the oven finishes the meat without sacrificing the crust.

That also means you want a real sear at the beginning. If the skin looks pale, the finished dish will taste flatter no matter how good the sauce is. Wait until the fat renders and the skin releases cleanly from the pan with deep amber edges before you flip it.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Baked Tuscan Chicken

Baked Tuscan chicken creamy sun-dried tomato spinach
  • Bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs — These stay juicy in the oven and give you the best shot at crisp skin. Boneless thighs work in a pinch, but they won’t bring the same texture or richness.
  • Sun-dried tomatoes in oil — The oil-packed kind are softer and more concentrated, which matters here because they melt into the sauce instead of staying leathery. Drain them, but don’t rinse them; a little of that oil helps bloom the garlic and deepens the base.
  • Heavy cream — This is what keeps the sauce smooth through baking. Half-and-half can split more easily and won’t cling to the chicken the same way.
  • Parmesan cheese — Freshly grated Parmesan melts more cleanly than the shelf-stable shaker stuff. If you use pre-grated Parmesan, expect a slightly grainier sauce and stir it in off the heat if possible.
  • Baby spinach — It wilts fast and softens into the sauce without overpowering the other flavors. If you use regular spinach, chop off the thick stems first so you don’t end up with stringy pieces.
  • Chicken broth — This loosens the browned bits in the pan and gives the sauce enough depth to keep from tasting heavy. Water works only if you have no other choice, but the flavor will be thinner.

The 20 Minutes That Build the Sauce and Finish the Chicken

Rendering the Skin First

Start the chicken skin-side down in a hot skillet and don’t move it until it releases on its own. You’re looking for deep golden skin and a good layer of fat in the pan, not just light browning. If the pan is crowded or the heat is too low, the thighs will steam instead of sear, and the sauce will never make up for that missing flavor. Flip them only when the skin is crisp and the color is even.

Cooking the Garlic and Tomatoes

Once the chicken comes out, the garlic only needs about 30 seconds before the sun-dried tomatoes go in. If the garlic browns, it turns bitter fast, especially under cream. The tomatoes should sizzle as they hit the oil, which tells you the pan is hot enough to pull flavor from the bottom without scorching anything.

Building the Cream Sauce

Add the broth first and scrape until the pan looks clean, then stir in the cream, Parmesan, Italian seasoning, and red pepper flakes. Keep the heat low enough that the sauce barely simmers; a hard boil can make the dairy grainy or split. The sauce should look glossy and lightly thickened before the spinach goes in.

Finishing in the Oven

Let the spinach wilt, return the chicken skin-side up, and bake uncovered until the thighs reach 165°F. Uncovered baking matters here because it keeps the skin from steaming in the sauce. If the sauce seems thin when it goes into the oven, it will tighten as the chicken finishes cooking and the Parmesan settles in.

How to Adjust This Dish Without Losing What Makes It Work

Make It Dairy-Free

Use a full-fat unsweetened coconut cream or a dairy-free cooking cream, then skip the Parmesan or replace it with a dairy-free Parmesan-style topping. The sauce will taste a little different — less sharp, a little rounder — but it still coats the chicken well if you keep the heat gentle.

Use Chicken Breasts Instead

Chicken breasts work, but they need less oven time and more attention so they don’t dry out. Sear them briefly, then pull the dish as soon as the thickest part hits 165°F. You’ll lose a little of the thigh meat’s richness, but the sauce still carries the dish.

Make It Gluten-Free

This recipe is naturally gluten-free as written, as long as your broth is certified gluten-free. That makes it an easy dinner to serve without changing the texture or technique.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The sauce thickens as it chills, and the skin softens, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: The chicken freezes better than the sauce. Cream sauces can separate after thawing, so freeze only if you’re fine with a slightly less silky texture.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of broth or cream. High heat can make the sauce break and dries out the chicken before the center warms through.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use boneless chicken thighs instead?+

Yes, but they’ll cook faster and won’t give you the same crisp skin. Start checking them a few minutes earlier in the oven so they stay juicy. The sauce still works the same way, but the finished dish will be a little lighter.

How do I keep the cream sauce from splitting?+

Keep the heat low once the cream goes in and don’t let it boil hard. Parmesan melts best into a gentle simmer, not a raging one. If the sauce starts looking grainy, pull it off the heat and whisk in a splash of broth.

Can I make baked Tuscan chicken ahead of time?+

You can cook it a day ahead, but it’s best reheated gently so the sauce doesn’t tighten too much. I’d keep the basil off until serving. The chicken stays tender if you stop reheating as soon as it’s hot through.

How do I know when the chicken is done?+

Use an instant-read thermometer and check the thickest part of the thigh. You’re looking for 165°F. The juices should run clear, and the meat should feel firm but still springy when pressed.

Baked Tuscan Chicken

Baked Tuscan chicken with golden-roasted, crispy-skinned chicken thighs in a sun-dried tomato and spinach Parmesan cream sauce. The oven keeps the chicken tender while the sauce bubbles around it for an Italian baked chicken dinner.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Italian-American
Calories: 650

Ingredients
  

Chicken thighs
  • 4 bone-in skin-on chicken thighs Keep skin on for crisping.
Seasonings
  • 0.5 tsp salt To taste.
  • 0.5 tsp pepper To taste.
  • 0.5 tsp garlic powder To taste.
  • 0.5 tsp Italian seasoning To taste (plus 1 tsp in sauce).
  • 0.5 tsp smoked paprika To taste.
Sauce base
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 garlic, minced Use fresh garlic cloves.
  • 0.5 cup sun-dried tomatoes in oil, drained and sliced
  • 0.5 cup chicken broth
  • 1 cup heavy cream For creamy texture.
  • 0.5 cup Parmesan cheese, grated Grate for smooth melting.
Spinach and heat
  • 2 cup fresh baby spinach Stir until wilted.
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning For sauce flavor.
  • 0.5 tsp red pepper flakes Adjust for heat.
Garnish
  • 1 Fresh basil for garnish Add fresh leaves right before serving.

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Preheat and season
  1. Preheat the oven to 400°F. Season the chicken thighs generously with salt, pepper, garlic powder, Italian seasoning, and smoked paprika.
Sear chicken
  1. Heat the olive oil in an oven-safe skillet over medium-high heat and place chicken skin-side down. Sear for 6-7 minutes until deeply golden.
  2. Flip the chicken and sear for 3 more minutes. Remove the chicken from the skillet and set aside.
Build the sauce
  1. Add the minced garlic to the skillet and cook for 30 seconds until fragrant. Stir in the sun-dried tomatoes and cook for 1 minute, then deglaze with the chicken broth.
  2. Stir in the heavy cream, Parmesan cheese, Italian seasoning, and red pepper flakes. Simmer briefly until the mixture looks cohesive and slightly thickened.
  3. Add the fresh baby spinach and stir until wilted. Nestle the chicken skin-side up into the sauce so the edges stay surrounded by the Parmesan cream.
Bake and garnish
  1. Bake uncovered for 18-20 minutes at 400°F until the internal temperature reaches 165°F. Garnish with fresh basil right before serving.

Notes

For the crispiest skin, pat the chicken dry and don’t move it during the first sear so it can develop deep color. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge up to 3 days; reheat gently in the oven or skillet until warmed through. Freezing is not recommended because the cream sauce can break after thawing. For a lighter option, use half-and-half instead of heavy cream, expecting a slightly thinner sauce.

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