Recipe: Baked Chicken with Bacon (2024)

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Faith Durand

Faith DurandSVP of Content

Faith is the SVP of Content at Apartment Therapy Media and former Editor-in-Chief of The Kitchn. She is the author of three cookbooks, including the James Beard Award-winning The Kitchn Cookbook. She lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband and two daughters.

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published Aug 29, 2012

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Recipe: Baked Chicken with Bacon (1)

Serves6 to 8Makes40 individual pieces

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Recipe: Baked Chicken with Bacon (2)

My friend Aura is a very good cook. She lives in Florida with her husband, Leo, and two adorable (I do not use that word glibly) children. When I think of Aura’s cooking, I think of fruit salads, smoothies, and the freshest dishes from her native Guatemala — light, healthy, and driven by Florida’s tropical fruits and vegetables. So I was surprised, one winter evening a few years ago, to sit down at her table and find a big, bubbling casserole of chicken wrapped in bacon. “It’s Leo’s favorite,” she said, with a grin.

Leo grew up in Colombia, and this dish is one that his family nurse would make. His memories of it stretch back into childhood, and he loves the bacon-rich dish, fragrant with tomatoes, onions, and garlic.

I did too! How can you not? The chicken was tender and moist, cooked slowly in the simple creamy sauce of tomato, and each morsel of chicken was wrapped in its own slice of thick bacon. Bacon infused the whole dish, right down to the potatoes in the bottom of the casserole. Its simplicity appealed to me too — this is a true one-pot meal, with potatoes, chicken, sauce, and bacon all emerging at once from the oven.

When Aura sent me the recipe it was just a brief sketch — her notes from watching Leo’s old nurse put the dish together during one of their trips to his home town in Colombia. “Use individual size pieces of chicken,” it said — “brown the chicken pieces in a pan.” This is how family recipes are passed down, hand to mouth, quite literally, with notes from watching and scribbling and tweaking in your own kitchen.

Aura made her own adjustments, substituting sour cream for canned cream of chicken soup, and seasoning more to her taste. I also tweaked — adding a dash of smoked paprika and measuring and weighing all the ingredients for a more precise recipe.

This is a big dish of food, smoky, garlicky, and tender, with extra flavorful sauce to save and pour over pasta or rice later. It’s a family dish, a dish that children should love unreservedly. It feeds a crowd. And maybe it will become someone else’s favorite too.

Thank you, Aura!

Comments

Makes 40 individual pieces

Serves 6 to 8

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 3 pounds

    boneless skinless chicken breasts or thighs, or a mix

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • 1/2 tablespoon

    vegetable or peanut oil

  • 3 to 4

    medium tomatoes, about 1 pound

  • 1

    medium onion, about 3/4 pound

  • 4

    large garlic cloves

  • 1 pound

    bacon (20 strips)

  • 2 pounds

    fingerling or small potatoes

  • 1 teaspoon

    smoked paprika

  • 1/2 cup

    sour cream

Instructions

  1. Heat the oven to 350°F. Cut the chicken into pieces about 2 inches wide and 3 inches long. Cut each breast into about 5 pieces, or chicken thighs into 2 to 3 pieces. You should end up with about 40 pieces of chicken. Toss the chicken pieces with about 1 teaspoon salt and a generous amount of black pepper.

  2. Heat the oil in a wide, deep skillet over high heat. Brown the chicken pieces for 1 to 2 minutes on each side, letting them develop a medium brown crust. Do this in several batches. Remove the browned chicken pieces to a baking sheet and let cool slightly.

  3. While the chicken is cooling, core the tomatoes and chop them roughly, and peel the onion and chop it roughly too. Blend them in a blender or food processor with the garlic cloves until smooth. Pour into the deep skillet you used to brown the chicken and bring to a boil. Lower to a simmer and cook for about 10 to 15 minutes while wrapping the chicken.

  4. Cut the bacon strips in half. Wrap 1/2 piece bacon around each piece of chicken. If desired, secure with a toothpick.

  5. Cut the fingerling potatoes in half lengthwise and spread in the bottom of a deep roasting dish or large Dutch oven. Lay the bacon-wrapped chicken pieces on top of the potatoes.

  6. Turn off the heat under the tomato sauce. Whisk in 1/2 teaspoon salt, the smoked paprika, and the sour cream. Pour over the chicken and potatoes and cover the pan tightly with aluminum foil or a lid.

  7. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes, or until the potatoes are tender and the chicken is cooked through. Let cool 10 minutes before serving.

More chicken recipes:

(Images: Faith Durand)

Filed in:

Baking

Braising

Chicken

dinner

Ingredient

Latin American

Recipe: Baked Chicken with Bacon (2024)

FAQs

Do you bake chicken covered or uncovered? ›

Larger cuts, such as whole chickens or bone-in pieces, often benefit from covered baking to ensure thorough and even cooking. Smaller cuts, like chicken breasts or tenders, can be baked uncovered for quick results. Lastly, think about the desired texture and flavor you're trying to achieve.

Can you cook chicken and bacon together in the same pan? ›

Add the chicken to the skillet and cook for 4-5 minutes per side, or until cooked through and golden brown. Remove the chicken from the skillet and set aside. In the same skillet, add the chopped bacon and cook until crispy. Remove the bacon from the skillet, leaving the grease behind.

How do you bake chicken without making it tough? ›

To start, brine your chicken in a mixture of water and a few tablespoons of salt for about 20 to 30 minutes. This will boost the natural flavor and moisture of the chicken breasts and will leave you with a super tender piece of meat. This is the one step that will really ensure your chicken won't be dry or tough.

Is it better to bake chicken at 350 or 400? ›

You can roast or bake anywhere between 325 and 450 degrees F. When roasting a whole chicken, a nice rule of them is to start at 400 to 425 degrees F and then turn the oven down to 350 after 15 minutes and cook until the internal temp of the chicken is 165 – 175 degrees F on an instant read thermometer.

Do you put water in the pan when baking chicken? ›

It's usually not necessary to add water to the pan for a roast chicken: the steam created by the water can prevent the skin from becoming browned and crisp.

Can raw chicken and bacon be cooked together? ›

Yes, you can cook raw chicken with bacon. The two cooking together is what creates such wonderful flavor. If your chicken is already cooked, make Air Fryer Bacon or Oven Baked Bacon, then crumble it over the top.

Can you cut raw chicken and bacon together? ›

If you are referring to raw meat, no. Use separate cutting boards or wash the board with soap and hot water before cutting the next.

Is it better to bake or pan fry bacon? ›

Cooking bacon in the oven doesn't take any longer than in a pan. Oven bacon gets just as crispy, if not crispier, and there's very little mess to clean up after. Making a batch of bacon in the oven also means you can do other things while it's cooking.

What keeps chicken moist when baking? ›

Brine. Like a marinade, a brine helps chicken breast soak up as much moisture as possible before cooking. It only requires three ingredients: water, salt, and a pinch of sugar.

How do chefs get chicken so tender? ›

Brines and marinades help tenderize the meat by bringing more moisture in the protein. With that extra moisture, you lose less when you cook. The simplest way to do this is with a dry brine — unwrap the chicken breasts, salt them on both sides and let them sit in the fridge for at least an hour.

Should I cover chicken breast with foil when baking? ›

It's nothing complicated at all. The concept to making juicy, perfect chicken breasts in your oven every single time is with a high temperature, little baking temperature, covering the chicken breasts in foil, and then allowing them to rest for 5-10 minutes. That's it.

Does chicken get more tender the longer you bake it? ›

Yes, chicken breast will become softer and more tender the longer it is cooked, provided it is cooked at a low enough temperature. If it is cooked at too high of a temperature, the chicken breast will become dry and tough.

Do you cook chicken breast up or breast down? ›

Place chicken breast-side up in a roasting pan or large ovenproof skillet. Stuff cavity with herbs and tie the legs together with kitchen twine. (If you don't have twine, leave the legs as they are.) Roast 50 minutes, then baste chicken with pan juices.

Do you bake chicken at 400 covered or uncovered? ›

If you're in a hurry, you'll want to know how long you bake chicken at 400°F: Follow step 1 above, then bake the chicken pieces, uncovered, in the 400°F oven 25 to 30 minutes, until no longer pink or until chicken is done (using baked chicken temperatures above).

What is the best temperature to bake chicken? ›

Let's start out by saying 500 degrees isn't a temperature we'd recommend for chicken. Given the fact that drumsticks and thighs are dark meat and won't dry out as easily as breasts, the range from 350 to 450 degrees is okay for baking them. 350 to 375 is generally best for breasts.

Do I bake chicken thighs covered or uncovered? ›

Don't Cover the Chicken.

When baking chicken thighs with the skin on, you're trying to achieve crispy chicken thighs in the oven. Therefore, leaving them uncovered ensures a crispy skin that turns perfectly golden.

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