This oven baked 3-ingredient chicken Piedmont is the kind of simple, rustic dish that makes the whole house smell like Sunday supper at Grandma’s. My dad actually requested this for his 80th birthday dinner and said it reminded him of the chicken his mother used to make after church: golden, crackly skin, tender meat, and a shallow puddle of savory pan juices perfect for sopping up with bread. It’s inspired by the straightforward, no-fuss cooking of Italy’s Piedmont region—good chicken, good fat, and a little wine—baked together on one pan. It’s weeknight-easy but still special enough for a milestone birthday.
Serve the chicken straight from the foil-lined sheet pan with all those flavorful juices spooned over the top. It’s perfect with crusty bread or garlic toast to soak up the drippings, plus a simple green salad or steamed green beans for something fresh and light. Roasted potatoes or buttered egg noodles also work really well, especially if you ladle some of the pan juices over them. A crisp white wine like Pinot Grigio or a light red like Barbera feels right at home with this rustic, Piedmont-style chicken.
Oven Baked 3-Ingredient Chicken Piedmont
Servings: 4

Ingredients
3 to 3 1/2 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs and drumsticks (about 8 pieces)
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 cup dry white wine (ideally Italian, like Pinot Grigio or Gavi)
1 1/4 teaspoons kosher salt (or to taste)
3/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper (or to taste
Directions
Line a large rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil for easy cleanup. Lightly crimp up the edges of the foil to help catch the juices. Place a wire rack inside the pan if you have one, but it’s optional—this recipe works beautifully right on the foil.
Pat the chicken pieces very dry with paper towels. This step is key for getting that deep golden, crispy skin that feels like an old-fashioned Sunday supper. Arrange the chicken on the prepared baking sheet in a single layer, leaving a little space between each piece so the heat can circulate.
Drizzle the olive oil evenly over the chicken, turning the pieces with your hands or tongs to coat them all over. Season generously with the salt and pepper on both sides, ending with the skin side facing up. Press the chicken down slightly so the skin makes good contact with the foil; this helps it crisp.
Slowly pour the white wine around the chicken on the baking sheet, avoiding pouring directly over the tops of the pieces so you don’t wash off the oil and seasoning. You want a shallow pool of wine and oil under and around the chicken—this will turn into rich, savory pan juices as it bakes.
Let the chicken sit at room temperature for about 15 minutes while you preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). This short rest helps the meat cook more evenly and gives the wine and oil a moment to mingle with the seasonings.
Bake the chicken on the middle rack for 35 to 45 minutes, or until the skin is deep golden and crisp, the juices are bubbling, and the thickest part of a thigh registers at least 165°F (74°C) on an instant-read thermometer. If your pieces are large, lean toward the longer time. About halfway through baking, rotate the pan front to back for even browning.
If the skin is not quite as browned as you’d like once the chicken is cooked through, switch the oven to broil and broil on the upper-middle rack for 2 to 4 minutes, watching closely so it doesn’t burn. The goal is a rich, burnished color and a bit of crackle on the skin.
Remove the pan from the oven and let the chicken rest on the baking sheet for 5 to 10 minutes. During this time, the juices will settle back into the meat and the winey pan juices will thicken slightly. Use tongs to lift a piece and tilt it over the pan so any extra juices drip back down.
Serve the chicken directly from the foil-lined pan, spooning the olive oil and wine juices over each piece on the plate. Don’t skip this part—that simple, concentrated sauce is what gives the dish that nostalgic, old-world flavor that feels like it’s been passed down through generations.
Variations & Tips
To keep the spirit of a 3-ingredient, old-fashioned dish, I like to stick to the basics, but there are a few small tweaks you can make if you want to nudge the flavor without complicating your life. For slightly richer flavor, swap half the olive oil for melted butter; Grandma-style chicken often had that buttery depth. If you don’t cook with wine, you can use low-sodium chicken broth with a squeeze of lemon for brightness, though it will taste a bit less Piedmont-style. You can also tuck a few peeled garlic cloves or a sprig of rosemary under the chicken if you have them on hand; just consider them “bonus” pantry items rather than core ingredients. For meal prep, you can season and oil the chicken in the morning, cover, and refrigerate; take it out 20 to 30 minutes before baking and add the wine right before it goes into the oven. If you’re cooking for two, halve the chicken and keep the wine and oil amounts roughly the same so you still get plenty of pan juices—leftovers are great shredded over rice or salads. Food safety tips: Always wash your hands, knives, and cutting boards after handling raw chicken. Make sure the internal temperature of the thickest piece reaches at least 165°F (74°C) before serving. Don’t rinse raw chicken (it can spread bacteria around the sink), and refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours, storing them in a shallow, covered container for up to 3 to 4 days. Reheat leftovers to 165°F, preferably in a 350°F oven so the skin can re-crisp a bit instead of getting soggy in the microwave.