Chicken Burrito Casserole

Category: Dinner Recipes

Chicken burrito casserole lands in that sweet spot between hearty and low-effort: spoonable rice, seasoned chicken, black beans, sweet corn, and melted cheese all baked together until the edges get a little crisp. It eats like a full burrito bowl with none of the wrapping, and the pan goes from the oven to the table without any extra work.

The key is building enough flavor before it ever hits the oven. Rotel and enchilada sauce bring the moisture, cumin and chili powder carry the Tex-Mex backbone, and the rice gives the casserole structure so it slices and scoops cleanly instead of turning watery. Draining the tomatoes and beans matters here, because this is a bake, not a soup.

Below, I’ve included the small details that keep the cheese from drying out and the rice from going mushy, plus a few easy ways to shift this into a spicier or lighter dinner when you need it.

The rice stayed fluffy, the cheese browned up at the edges, and the enchilada sauce gave it that baked-in burrito flavor without making the whole pan soggy. I added jalapeños on top and my husband asked for the leftovers the next night.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save this Chicken Burrito Casserole for a cheesy Tex-Mex bake with crisp edges and a spoonable, no-wrap dinner.

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The Reason This Casserole Stays Creamy Instead of Turning Heavy

Most burrito casseroles go wrong because they’re treated like a dump-and-bake soup. The trick here is that the rice is already cooked, the beans are drained, and the tomatoes are drained before they go in. That keeps the filling layered and scoopable instead of collapsing into a wet, dense pan.

The other thing that matters is balance. Enchilada sauce carries the seasoning, but cumin and chili powder keep the dish from tasting flat once the cheese melts over the top. If the mixture looks a little loose before baking, that’s fine. The rice absorbs some of that moisture in the oven, which is exactly what gives the casserole its finished texture.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Pan

Chicken Burrito Casserole cheesy Tex-Mex bake
  • Cooked chicken — Shredded chicken gives you little pockets of meat that catch the sauce and cheese. Rotisserie chicken works well here because it’s already seasoned and stays tender in the oven.
  • Cooked white rice — This is the backbone of the casserole. Use rice that’s fully cooked and cooled a bit so it doesn’t turn gummy when mixed with the sauce.
  • Black beans — They add body and that classic burrito filling texture. Canned beans are perfect, but drain them well or the casserole can slacken at the bottom.
  • Rotel tomatoes and enchilada sauce — This is where the Tex-Mex flavor comes from. Draining the Rotel keeps the bake from getting watery while the enchilada sauce carries the seasoning through the whole dish.
  • Mexican cheese blend — A blend melts better than a single hard cheese and gives you those browned, stretchy edges on top. Shred your own if you want the smoothest melt, though bagged cheese still works.

Building the Filling So the Casserole Bakes, Not Soups

Mixing the base

Stir the chicken, rice, beans, drained Rotel, enchilada sauce, corn, cumin, chili powder, and garlic powder together in a large bowl until everything looks evenly coated. The mixture should look moist but not sloshy. If there’s a puddle of liquid at the bottom of the bowl, it will collect in the casserole dish too, so drain a little more before moving on.

Spreading it into the dish

Transfer the filling to a greased 9×13 baking dish and press it into an even layer without packing it down hard. You want the top level so the cheese browns evenly, but compacting it too much makes the casserole dense. A loose fill bakes better and scoops cleaner.

Melting the cheese on top

Scatter the cheese over the surface all the way to the edges. That edge coverage matters because it creates the crispy, browned bits people always fight over. Bake uncovered until the cheese is fully melted and the corners are bubbling; if the top is browned before the center is hot, the dish went in too high in the oven or the pan was too cold.

Finishing with fresh toppings

Let the casserole sit for a few minutes after it comes out, then top with sour cream, cilantro, and jalapeños. That short rest helps the filling settle so the first scoop holds together instead of sliding apart. The cool toppings sharpen the rich, cheesy base and keep every bite from feeling too heavy.

How to Adapt This Casserole When You Want a Different Kind of Dinner

Make it spicier

Use hot enchilada sauce, leave the seeds in the jalapeños, or stir a diced chipotle pepper into the filling. The smoke and heat work well with the cheese, but don’t add so much heat that it overwhelms the rice and beans.

Make it gluten-free

Use a certified gluten-free enchilada sauce and check the labels on your spices and Rotel. The casserole itself is naturally gluten-free as long as the sauce and seasoning blend are clean.

Swap in brown rice

Brown rice gives the casserole a nuttier bite and a little more chew. It also holds up well if the dish sits for a few minutes before serving, though it makes the casserole feel a touch less soft and burrito-like.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The rice firms up a little as it chills, but the flavor stays strong.
  • Freezer: It freezes well in portions or as a whole baked casserole. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw overnight before reheating.
  • Reheating: Reheat covered in a 350°F oven until hot in the center, or microwave individual portions with a damp paper towel on top. Don’t blast it uncovered or the cheese turns rubbery before the middle is warm.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use uncooked rice in this casserole?+

I wouldn’t. This version is built around fully cooked rice, so the liquid ratio isn’t enough to properly cook raw rice in the oven. If you want to use uncooked rice, you’d need a different method and much more liquid, or the casserole will come out crunchy in the middle.

How do I keep my chicken burrito casserole from getting watery?+

Drain the Rotel and black beans well, and don’t use freshly cooked rice that’s still steaming wet. If the filling looks loose in the bowl, it will bake up loose in the pan, so a quick extra drain is the fix. The casserole should look thick before it goes into the oven.

Can I make this ahead of time?+

Yes. Assemble the casserole up to a day ahead, cover it, and refrigerate it before baking. Let it sit on the counter while the oven preheats so the center isn’t icy cold, which helps it heat through without drying the top.

How do I make this with leftover taco chicken?+

Leftover taco chicken works great as long as it isn’t too saucy on its own. If it already has a lot of liquid, reduce the enchilada sauce by a few spoonfuls so the casserole doesn’t tip into soupy territory. The rice will still carry everything together.

Can I freeze leftover burrito casserole?+

Yes, and it holds up better than a lot of rice casseroles. Freeze it in portions so it thaws and reheats evenly, then warm it gently so the cheese doesn’t seize up. A splash of water or extra enchilada sauce helps bring the texture back after freezing.

Chicken Burrito Casserole

Chicken burrito casserole is a Tex-Mex burrito bake with layers of rice, shredded seasoned chicken, black beans, and a bubbling Mexican cheese blanket. Bake uncovered until the edges go golden and the cheese melts into a thick, crispy-top casserole texture.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Tex-Mex
Calories: 540

Ingredients
  

Chicken
  • 2 cup cooked chicken Shredded.
Rice
  • 2 cup cooked white rice
Beans
  • 1 can (15 oz) black beans Drained.
Tomatoes
  • 1 can (10 oz) Rotel tomatoes Drained.
Enchilada sauce
  • 1 can (10 oz) red enchilada sauce
Corn
  • 1 cup frozen corn Thawed.
Spices
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp chili powder
  • 0.5 tsp garlic powder
Cheese
  • 2 cup Mexican cheese blend Shredded.
Serving toppings
  • 1 sour cream To serve.
  • 1 cilantro Fresh, to serve.
  • 1 jalapeños Sliced, to serve.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and mix
  1. Preheat oven to 375°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish. Lightly coat the pan so the casserole releases cleanly after baking.
Combine layers
  1. In a large bowl, combine shredded cooked chicken, cooked white rice, black beans, Rotel tomatoes, red enchilada sauce, frozen corn, cumin, chili powder, and garlic powder. Mix until the seasonings are evenly distributed and everything looks well-coated.
Bake
  1. Transfer the mixture to the prepared baking dish and spread evenly. Press it into an even layer so the casserole bakes uniformly.
Melt and brown
  1. Top with shredded Mexican cheese blend and bake uncovered for 25–30 minutes at 375°F. Bake until the cheese is melted and the edges are bubbling.
Serve
  1. Let the casserole rest briefly, then serve topped with sour cream, fresh cilantro, and sliced jalapeños. Finish each portion so the melted cheese stays warm while the toppings look fresh.

Notes

For the best golden edges, spread the rice-chicken mixture all the way to the corners of the dish so every area bakes through. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container for up to 3–4 days; reheat in the oven or microwave until hot. Freezing is yes—freeze tightly wrapped portions for up to 2 months and thaw overnight before reheating. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat Mexican cheese blend so the top still melts and stretches.

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