This oven baked 4-ingredient Amish chicken and rice casserole is the kind of dish that quietly steals the show at a potluck. My neighbor brought it over once, and the whole pan vanished before people even made it to the dessert table. It’s unbelievably creamy, comforting, and hearty, yet it only uses four simple ingredients you can keep on hand. The style is very much in the spirit of old-fashioned Amish casseroles—humble pantry staples, baked low and slow until the chicken is tender, the rice is fluffy, and the edges turn golden and bubbly.
Serve this casserole straight from the glass baking dish while it’s still hot and creamy, with those golden browned edges everyone fights over. It pairs nicely with a simple green salad or steamed green beans to balance the richness. Buttered peas or roasted carrots are kid-friendly sides that go over well in my house. A basket of warm dinner rolls or buttered toast is great for scooping up every last bit of the creamy sauce. For potlucks, I like to set it out with a big spoon and let people help themselves family-style.
Oven Baked 4-Ingredient Amish Chicken and Rice Casserole
Servings: 6
Ingredients
1 1/2 cups long-grain white rice, uncooked
2 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs (about 4–6 pieces)
2 cans (10.5 ounces each) condensed cream of chicken soup
2 cups low-sodium chicken broth
Directions
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly grease a 9x13-inch glass baking dish so the rice and sauce don’t stick.
Spread the uncooked long-grain white rice evenly over the bottom of the prepared glass baking dish. Shake the dish gently to level it out so the rice cooks evenly.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the condensed cream of chicken soup and the chicken broth until smooth and well combined. The mixture will be thick but pourable and will turn into the creamy sauce as it bakes.
Pour the soup and broth mixture evenly over the rice in the baking dish, making sure all the rice is submerged in liquid. Gently tap the dish on the counter to help the liquid settle around the rice.
Nestle the chicken thighs, skin side up, into the dish on top of the rice and sauce mixture. Space them out so each piece has a little room; this helps the skin brown and the sauce bubble up around the edges.
Cover the baking dish tightly with aluminum foil, making sure there are no big gaps. This traps in the steam so the rice cooks through and the sauce turns silky and creamy.
Bake the covered casserole in the preheated oven for 1 hour. During this time, the rice will absorb the sauce and broth while the chicken starts to become tender.
After 1 hour, carefully remove the foil (watch out for hot steam). Return the dish to the oven, uncovered, and bake for an additional 25–35 minutes, or until the chicken skin is golden brown, the sauce is bubbling around the edges, and the rice is tender when tested with a fork.
If you’d like deeper browning on the chicken and edges, you can turn the oven to broil for the last 2–3 minutes, watching closely so it doesn’t burn. The top should look lightly golden with some browned spots around the edges of the glass dish.
Remove the casserole from the oven and let it rest for 5–10 minutes before serving. This helps the sauce thicken slightly and makes it easier to scoop neat portions of chicken with the creamy rice underneath.
Variations & Tips
For picky eaters, you can remove the skin from the chicken after baking if they don’t like it, while still getting all the flavor the skin added during cooking. If your family prefers boneless, skinless chicken breasts or thighs, you can swap them in; just check for doneness around the 50–55 minute mark after uncovering, as they may cook a bit faster. For a slightly lighter version, use one can of cream of chicken soup and one can of cream of mushroom or cream of celery soup, still keeping the total at two cans. If you like a bit more texture, stir in up to 1/2 cup of rinsed long-grain rice (without changing the liquid) for a slightly thicker, heartier base, but don’t go overboard or it can get too dry. To stretch the casserole for a crowd, serve it over buttered egg noodles or mashed potatoes so everyone still gets some of the creamy sauce. You can also prep this earlier in the day: assemble the dish, cover, and refrigerate up to 4 hours, then let it sit at room temperature for about 20 minutes before baking, adding 5–10 minutes to the covered bake time if it’s going into the oven cold.