My sister-in-law brought this simple little supper over one busy weeknight, and I’ll tell you, we all sat there marveling at how something with only three ingredients could be so tender and juicy. It reminds me of the kind of no-fuss oven meals our Midwestern mothers leaned on when the days were full and the pantry was lean. This oven baked 3-ingredients garlic butter chicken is all about practical comfort: just chicken, real butter, and plenty of garlic, baked together in a glass casserole dish until the meat is moist and the top turns a beautiful golden brown. It’s the kind of recipe you tuck into your back pocket for company, church potlucks, or any evening when you want a home-cooked meal without a lot of fuss.
This chicken is rich and buttery, so it’s lovely with simple sides that soak up the juices. Serve it with mashed potatoes or buttered egg noodles to catch every drop of the garlic butter from the casserole dish. A pan of roasted carrots or green beans, or even a crisp tossed salad with a tangy vinaigrette, balances the richness nicely. Warm dinner rolls or a slice of crusty bread are perfect for sopping up the glossy sauce left in the bottom of the pan.
Oven Baked 3-Ingredients Garlic Butter Chicken
Servings: 4
Ingredients
4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts (about 2 pounds total)
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted
4 large cloves garlic, finely minced or pressed
Directions
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Set out a 9x13-inch glass casserole dish so it’s ready for the chicken.
Pat the chicken breasts dry with paper towels so they brown better, then lay them in a single layer in the glass dish, leaving a little space between each piece.
In a small bowl, stir the melted butter and minced garlic together until the garlic is evenly distributed.
Pour the garlic butter mixture slowly over the chicken breasts, making sure each piece is well coated and some of the butter pools in the bottom of the dish.
Use a spoon to scoop a little of the garlic from the bottom of the dish and spoon it back over the tops of the chicken so every breast has a good layer of garlic on it.
Place the casserole dish on the middle rack of the preheated oven and bake for 25–35 minutes, or until the chicken is cooked through and reaches 165°F (74°C) in the thickest part.
About halfway through baking, carefully open the oven and use a spoon to baste the chicken with the hot garlic butter from the bottom of the dish. This helps keep the meat extra juicy and adds more flavor to the top.
When the chicken is cooked through and the tops are a light golden brown, turn the oven to broil on high for 1–3 minutes, watching closely, just until the surface deepens to a rich golden brown and the garlic butter looks glossy and bubbling.
Remove the dish from the oven and let the chicken rest in the hot garlic butter for 5–10 minutes. This short rest keeps the meat tender and juicy and lets the flavors settle in.
Serve the chicken straight from the glass casserole dish, spooning the melted garlic butter over each piece on the plate.
Variations & Tips
If you’d like to stretch the flavor a bit without losing the spirit of a three-ingredient supper, you can lean on what I call “kitchen freebies” like salt and pepper, which most Midwestern cooks don’t even count. A light sprinkle of salt and freshly ground black pepper on the chicken before the butter goes on will deepen the flavor nicely. For a slightly different twist, you can use salted butter and skip extra seasoning altogether. If your family prefers dark meat, substitute 6–8 boneless, skinless chicken thighs and bake a little longer, until very tender; the thighs stay wonderfully juicy. For a touch of color, you can tuck a few sprigs of fresh parsley or thyme around the chicken before baking, then discard them before serving, treating the herbs as a garnish rather than a true extra ingredient. To make this more weeknight-friendly, assemble the dish earlier in the day, cover, and refrigerate; when suppertime rolls around, let it sit on the counter while the oven heats, then bake as directed. Leftovers reheat well in a covered dish at a low oven temperature, and the extra garlic butter is lovely drizzled over rice, potatoes, or even tomorrow’s vegetables.