This low carb 3-ingredient Amish butter chicken is the kind of dish that feels like it came straight from a Sunday table in a farmhouse kitchen, but it fits neatly into a modern weeknight. The method is as old-fashioned as it is clever: bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs are roasted in a shallow bath of salted butter until the skin turns glassy and crisp while the meat stays incredibly tender. Amish-style cooking leans on pantry staples and simple techniques, and this recipe follows that tradition—no fuss, no flour, and no complicated steps, just good chicken, real butter, and a touch of seasoning. It’s the sort of recipe a grandma would trust because it always works and everyone goes back for seconds.
Keep the sides as simple and comforting as the chicken itself. For a low carb plate, pair these buttery thighs with roasted or steamed green beans, a pile of garlicky sautéed spinach, or a crisp salad with a tangy vinaigrette to cut through the richness. Cauliflower mash or roasted cauliflower florets soak up that seasoned butter beautifully. If you’re feeding a mixed crowd, you can also offer buttered egg noodles or mashed potatoes on the side while you enjoy your chicken with extra pan juices and plenty of vegetables.
Low Carb 3-Ingredient Amish Butter Chicken
Servings: 4
Ingredients
8 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs (about 2 1/2 to 3 pounds total)
1/2 cup (1 stick) salted butter, melted
2 teaspoons kosher salt and 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper mixed together, plus 1 teaspoon paprika for sprinkling
Directions
Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Choose a white ceramic or other oven-safe baking dish just large enough to hold the chicken thighs in a single layer without crowding; this helps the skin crisp instead of steam.
Pat the chicken thighs very dry on all sides with paper towels. This is key for getting that shatteringly crisp skin. Arrange the thighs in the baking dish, skin side up, leaving a little space between each piece.
In a small bowl, melt the salted butter (on the stovetop or in the microwave) until fully liquid. Pour the melted butter evenly around and over the chicken thighs so that it pools in the bottom of the dish and lightly coats the skin.
Sprinkle the mixed kosher salt and black pepper evenly over the chicken, focusing on the skin. Then dust the tops lightly with the paprika, using just enough to speckle the surface and add warm color without forming a heavy crust.
Place the baking dish on the middle rack of the preheated oven. Bake for 35 to 45 minutes, basting once or twice with the buttery pan juices, until the chicken skin is deep golden brown and crisp, and the internal temperature at the thickest part of a thigh reaches 175°F to 185°F. The butter in the bottom of the dish should be bubbling and lightly browned at the edges.
For extra-crispy skin, move the dish to the top rack and broil on high for 2 to 3 minutes at the end of cooking, watching closely so the paprika doesn’t scorch. Remove from the oven and let the chicken rest in the hot butter for 5 to 10 minutes; the steam will rise, the juices will settle, and the meat will stay incredibly tender while the skin remains crisp.
Serve the chicken thighs straight from the white ceramic baking dish, spooning the yellow, seasoned melted butter over each piece on the plate. Make sure everyone gets some of the pan juices—they are the heart of this simple Amish-style recipe.
Variations & Tips
If you’d like a touch more flavor while staying true to the 3-ingredient spirit, you can swap the plain paprika for smoked paprika or sweet Hungarian paprika to change the aroma without adding carbs. Using ghee instead of whole butter gives a slightly nuttier, more caramelized flavor and can help the butter tolerate the high oven heat a bit better. For a stronger savory note, rub the chicken lightly with extra black pepper and a pinch more salt under the skin before arranging it in the baking dish; this seasons the meat as well as the surface. If you’re cooking for two, simply halve the number of chicken thighs and use a smaller baking dish so the butter still pools around the chicken for self-basting. You can also adapt this method for bone-in, skin-on drumsticks or leg quarters—just adjust the roasting time and check for doneness with a thermometer. Leftovers reheat nicely in a hot oven or air fryer to re-crisp the skin; drizzle with reserved pan butter after reheating to restore that rich, Sunday-supper feel.