When the dog days of August settle in and nobody wants to stand over a hot stove, this old-fashioned 4-Ingredient Oven 1970s Bicentennial Chicken is the sort of supper that feels like a small blessing. It’s a casserole-style baked chicken dish with that unmistakable sweet-and-savory glaze so many home cooks leaned on in the 1970s, when pantry shortcuts and dependable family meals ruled the supper table. The sauce turns dark, glossy, and sticky in the oven, coating the chicken in a way that feels both practical and a little celebratory, just the kind of hearty meal you could slide into the oven and let it do the work.

This chicken is mighty good with plain white rice, buttered egg noodles, or fluffy mashed potatoes to catch every bit of that rich glaze. A simple green bean side, corn on the cob, or a cold cucumber salad balances the sweetness nicely, and if you’re feeding a crowd, a basket of soft dinner rolls and a pitcher of iced tea make it feel like a full summer supper without much extra effort.

4-Ingredient Oven 1970s Bicentennial Chicken

Servings: 6

Finished glazed chicken in a Pyrex dish
Finished glazed chicken in a Pyrex dish

Ingredients

2 1/2 to 3 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken pieces

1 cup bottled Russian dressing
1 packet dry onion soup mix, about 1 ounce
1 cup apricot preserves

Directions

1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease a 9x13-inch Pyrex or other glass baking dish and arrange the chicken pieces in a single layer.

2. In a medium bowl, stir together the Russian dressing, dry onion soup mix, and apricot preserves until the mixture is well blended.

3. Spoon the sauce evenly over the chicken, turning the pieces once if needed so they are thoroughly coated.

4. Bake uncovered for 50 to 60 minutes, basting once or twice with the pan sauce, until the chicken is cooked through and the glaze is dark, bubbling, and caramelized around the edges.

5. Let the chicken rest for 5 minutes before serving, then spoon the extra sauce from the pan over each piece.

Variations & Tips

Use boneless chicken: Boneless thighs work beautifully here and tend to stay juicy under the glaze. Start checking for doneness around 35 to 45 minutes since they often cook faster than bone-in pieces.

Keep the glaze from scorching: If your sauce starts getting too dark before the chicken is done, lay a sheet of foil loosely over the dish for the rest of the baking time. Glass dishes can encourage deep caramelization, which is delicious, but it pays to keep an eye on it.

Make it a little less sweet: If you prefer a more savory supper, use slightly less apricot preserves or add a small spoonful of vinegar to balance the glaze. That little nudge of tang helps the onion soup flavor come through.

Turn it into a company casserole: For a fuller one-pan meal, tuck in a layer of parboiled potato wedges or thick slices of onion under the chicken before baking. They soak up the drippings and make the dish stretch a little further, just the way many family suppers used to.