This oven baked 4-ingredient chicken Martinique is exactly the kind of company dish my mother leaned on during the warm months: minimal effort, big payoff, and a bit of tropical charm. It’s essentially a midwestern take on old-school “island” baked chicken—sweet, tangy, and peachy, with just enough spice to keep it interesting. The chicken bakes in a glossy, sunset-colored sauce that caramelizes around the edges of the pan, giving you tender meat and sticky, spoonable juices. It’s the sort of recipe you can memorize in one go, pull together in minutes, and slide into the oven while you straighten up the house or pour drinks for guests. Pure nostalgia, no fuss.
Serve this chicken straight from the glass baking dish with a big spoon for those peachy pan juices. It’s lovely over plain white rice, coconut rice, or buttered egg noodles, all of which soak up the sauce beautifully. A crisp green salad with a citrusy vinaigrette or simple steamed green beans balances the sweetness. If you want to lean into the summer feel, add sliced fresh peaches or a pineapple salsa on the side and pour a chilled Sauvignon Blanc or a light, citrusy beer to round out the meal.
Oven-Baked 4-Ingredient Chicken Martinique
Servings: 6
Ingredients
3 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken pieces (thighs and drumsticks)
1 (18-ounce) jar peach preserves
1 (10-ounce) bottle mild chili sauce (tomato-based, such as Heinz)
1 (1-ounce) packet dry onion soup mix
Directions
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Lightly grease a 9x13-inch glass baking dish or coat it with nonstick spray so the sauce doesn’t weld itself to the corners.
Pat the chicken pieces dry with paper towels and trim any large excess flaps of skin or fat. Arrange the chicken in a single layer in the prepared baking dish, skin side up, leaving a little space between pieces so the heat can circulate.
In a medium bowl, combine the peach preserves, chili sauce, and dry onion soup mix. Stir until the preserves are mostly dissolved into the chili sauce and the soup mix is evenly distributed. The mixture should be thick, glossy, and a deep peachy-red color.
Pour the sauce mixture evenly over the chicken, using a spatula to scrape the bowl so you don’t waste any. Spoon or brush the sauce over the tops of the pieces so every bit of chicken is coated. The sauce will pool around the chicken—that’s what you want for juicy meat and lots of pan juices.
Cover the baking dish loosely with foil and place it on the center rack of the preheated oven. Bake for 25 minutes, allowing the chicken to gently poach in the sauce and start to turn tender.
Remove the foil, baste the chicken with some of the pan sauce, and return the uncovered dish to the oven. Continue baking for another 25 to 35 minutes, basting once more, until the chicken is cooked through, the edges of the sauce are caramelized, and the skin is lightly browned. The internal temperature should reach at least 165°F (74°C) in the thickest part of the meat without touching bone.
If you’d like deeper caramelization, switch the oven to broil for 2 to 3 minutes at the end of cooking, watching closely so the sugars in the sauce don’t burn. You’re aiming for sticky, glossy chicken with darkened, flavorful edges, not blackened spots.
Remove the baking dish from the oven and let the chicken rest for 5 to 10 minutes. This allows the juices to settle and the sauce to thicken slightly. Use a wide spatula or serving spoon to lift out the chicken pieces, spooning some of the peachy pan sauce over each portion. Serve directly from the glass dish while still warm.
Variations & Tips
You can adjust this nostalgic base recipe to fit your kitchen and your guests while still keeping the spirit of ‘four ingredients and done.’ For a slightly less sweet version, swap half of the peach preserves for orange marmalade or apricot jam, which add a bit more citrus edge. If you like gentle heat, choose a spicier chili sauce or stir in a pinch of red pepper flakes—just remember that adds an unofficial fifth ingredient. Boneless, skinless chicken thighs also work well; reduce the baking time to around 30–35 minutes total, removing the foil after 15 minutes and checking for doneness early so they don’t dry out. If you prefer white meat, use bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts and place them in the center of the dish, with smaller pieces like drumsticks around the edges; breasts may cook a bit faster, so start checking them at the 35-minute mark once uncovered. For a slightly more “company-ready” presentation, garnish the finished dish with thinly sliced green onions or a handful of chopped fresh parsley for color. Food safety notes: Always keep raw chicken refrigerated until you’re ready to cook and avoid rinsing it, as that can spread bacteria around your sink area. Use a dedicated cutting board and utensils for raw poultry, and wash your hands, board, and tools thoroughly with hot, soapy water before handling other ingredients. Make sure the thickest part of the chicken reaches at least 165°F (74°C) as measured with an instant-read thermometer. Don’t leave the finished dish at room temperature for more than 2 hours (or 1 hour if it’s very warm in the kitchen); refrigerate leftovers promptly in shallow containers and use within 3 to 4 days, reheating to 165°F before serving.