There are some dishes that feel like they belong to summer potlucks, folding lawn chairs, and paper plates balanced on your knee, and this oven baked 3-ingredient chicken Belvedere is one of them. It’s the kind of recipe a Midwestern aunt could make by heart, with hardly a note written down, and still have folks hovering by the table waiting for the lid to come off. With just a few pantry staples and a baking dish, you get tender chicken with a sweet-savory glaze that turns glossy and golden in the oven, making it a fine choice for busy weeknights, church suppers, or any gathering where simple food is the first thing to disappear.
Serve this chicken with buttery mashed potatoes, steamed rice, or egg noodles to catch every bit of the amber glaze. For a true backyard-supper feel, add green beans, corn on the cob, deviled eggs, or a cool scoop of potato salad on the side. A crisp cucumber salad or simple coleslaw also balances the richness nicely, and if you’re feeding a crowd, a basket of warm dinner rolls never goes to waste.
Oven Baked 3-Ingredient Chicken Belvedere
Servings: 6
Ingredients
3 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken pieces
Directions
1. Heat your oven to 350°F and lightly grease a white ceramic casserole dish or 9x13-inch baking dish.
2. Pat the chicken pieces dry with paper towels and arrange them skin-side up in the prepared baking dish.
3. In a small bowl, stir together the dry Italian dressing mix and the apricot preserves until well blended.
4. Spoon the apricot mixture evenly over the chicken, coating each piece well.
5. Bake uncovered for 50 to 60 minutes, or until the chicken is cooked through and the skin is browned and caramelized, basting once or twice with the pan juices if you like.
6. Let the chicken rest for 5 minutes before serving, then spoon some of the glaze from the dish over the top.
Variations & Tips
Use different chicken pieces: Thighs and drumsticks stay especially juicy, but split breasts work too. Just be sure all the pieces are similar in size so they finish baking at about the same time.
Make it a little tangier: If your family likes a sharper sweet-and-savory flavor, stir in a spoonful of yellow mustard or a splash of cider vinegar with the preserves. It’s not the old three-ingredient version anymore, but it gives the glaze a nice little edge.
Prevent over-browning: Because preserves contain sugar, the glaze can darken quickly near the end of baking. If the chicken is browning too fast, loosely tent the dish with foil for the last 15 minutes.
Check doneness the safe way: The chicken is ready when the thickest part reaches 165°F on an instant-read thermometer and the juices run clear. That little check saves a lot of guesswork.
Turn it into a potluck dish: You can bake the chicken ahead, cover it loosely, and keep it warm on low heat for a short while before serving. Spoon the pan glaze over just before it goes to the table so everything still looks glossy and fresh.