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This simple Skillet White Pesto Chicken and Orzo is the perfect winter dinner. Quick, easy, and so delicious! Pan-seared Italian seasoned chicken in a creamy sun-dried tomato sauce. Cooked together with orzo pasta for a quick dinner made in one skillet. Everyone at the dinner table loves this dish. It’s great for a weeknight but fancy enough to serve up at your next holiday dinner. It’s a hit all around!

Ingredients
December is always the craziest month. It’s my favorite month of the year but also the busiest. And this December has been a lot. But I’m so thankful for it and loving every second of the chaos!
On top of multiple work trips and my day-to-day schedule, there’s been holiday fun, and most of my brothers are now in town. My parent’s house is once again full! Per usual, this means they’re all looking for dinner. I always try to have simple recipes like this skillet chicken on rotation this time of year! Easy dinners are key to keeping everyone happy and well-fed!

Lately, everyone has requested the recipe I shared for Smothered Chicken a few months ago. They love that dish, especially the creamy sauce.
When I set out to make this, I used that recipe as my base. But then I turned it into a quick-cooking spicy Italian dinner with lots of delicious basil pesto in the mix!

Step 1: the sun-dried tomatoes
Start with the sun-dried tomatoes. I love using a jar of oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes. Not only are the tomatoes delicious, but I also use the oil from the jar to cook the chicken. The oil is always seasoned, so it adds even more flavor. Just make sure it’s extra virgin olive oil.
Most people will discard the oil, but you must use it! It adds a lot of flavor to recipes.

Step 2: season and sear the chicken.
Sear the chicken with salt and pepper. Then, take each piece and dip it through some flour. The flour gives the chicken a coating for the yummy sauce to stick to. Additionally, the flour on the chicken will help to thicken the sauce.
Pan-sear the chicken in the oil from the sun-dried tomato jar. Then, just before pulling the chicken out of the skillet, sprinkle each piece with Italian seasoning.
It’s a delicious mix and makes the chicken very flavorful.

Step 3: the orzo
When you pull the chicken out, add the orzo and some garlic. Then toss in some butter too. Let the butter toast around the dry 0rzo and add the chicken broth and cream.
Then mix in the pesto, sun-dried tomatoes, and the chicken.

Step 4: bake
Next, add the parmesan cheese and take the whole skillet and put it in the oven to finish baking.
It’s going to smell wonderful as you pull the skillet out of the oven. Like your favorite Italian restaurant!
This dish is everything you’d expect out of a multi-step recipe, but made in way less than an hour. Plus, everything is made in one pot. Simple, simple – and we love that.
You can serve this up on busy weeknights, but I think it’s equally great for holiday dinners with friends and family. I’m sure I’ll be remaking this over the holidays; we’re having a very special Christmas this year.

Looking for winter pasta recipes? Here are a few ideas:
Pesto Tortellini Zuppa Toscana
Creamy Roasted Garlic Butternut Squash Pasta
One Pot French Onion Pasta with Crispy Prosciutto
Basil Parmesan Pasta with Crispy Chicken, Prosciutto, and Arugula
Creamy Sun-Dried Tomato Chicken Pasta
Lastly, if you make this Skillet White Pesto Chicken and Orzo, be sure to leave a comment and/or give this recipe a rating! Above all, I love to hear from you guys and always do my best to respond to each and every comment. And, of course, if you do make this recipe, don’t forget to tag me on Instagram! Looking through the photos of recipes you all have made is my favorite!
Nutritional information is only an estimate. The accuracy of the nutritional information for any recipe on this site is not guaranteed.

We just made this and didn’t do the dredging of the flour bc I didn’t notice it in the instructions of just the recipe- and it still came out great!
I am assuming that the flour was for the chicken and salt and pepper to taste
In a rare “typo” in the recipe, it seems to have forgotten the step to season the chicken with salt and pepper before cooking and then dredge the raw chicken pieces in the flour. Then proceed with adding the chicken to the heated oil in the skillet. This step was mentioned in the discussion but not the actual recipe. Otherwise the recipe sounds wonderful.
Rare? Ma’am, be serious.
Interesting! What makes it “marry me” chicken?
When do you add the flour?
If you’re using basil pesto how is this white pesto? Why did you call this marry me chicken and orzo?
What is “white pesto” referring to? I don’t think I’ve heard of that before!
In the recipe it mentions pan searing the chicken only once but in the writing up above you indicate to do it twice, a second time after you dredge the chicken in flour. Which is correct?
The recipe sounds delightful! My husband is all about anything smelling remotely Italian.
Saw this in the beginning of the article:
Step 2: season and sear the chicken.
Sear the chicken with salt and pepper. Then, take each piece and dip it through some flour. The flour gives the chicken a coating for the yummy sauce to stick to. Additionally, the flour on the chicken will help to thicken the sauce.
I think she meant season with salt and pepper not “sear”
Are you searing the chicken first, then dredging it through the flour as it says above or do you dredge first then sear?
Saw this in the beginning of the article:
Step 2: season and sear the chicken.
Sear the chicken with salt and pepper. Then, take each piece and dip it through some flour. The flour gives the chicken a coating for the yummy sauce to stick to. Additionally, the flour on the chicken will help to thicken the sauce.
Hmmmm coincidence this was in the NYT cooking article last week..
Saw this in the beginning of the article:
Step 2: season and sear the chicken.
Sear the chicken with salt and pepper. Then, take each piece and dip it through some flour. The flour gives the chicken a coating for the yummy sauce to stick to. Additionally, the flour on the chicken will help to thicken the sauce.
Marry me chicken was all over the internet before it appeared in NYT last week too. It isn’t the property of one person or organization 🙂
Sure, but it might be helpful for readers to actually describe why it’s called “marry me chicken” and not just stick it in the title without explanation?
But Anna, someone came up with it first and they should be credited for the inspiration.
They’re not even the same recipe. Folks need a hobby. This is such a popular “recipe” right now with different cuts of chicken, different pasta shapes (some without pasta), different methods of cooking.
What’s the flour for?
Saw this in the beginning of the article:
Step 2: season and sear the chicken.
Sear the chicken with salt and pepper. Then, take each piece and dip it through some flour. The flour gives the chicken a coating for the yummy sauce to stick to. Additionally, the flour on the chicken will help to thicken the sauce.
Looks absolutely, divinely delicious.
Sounds delicious. The NYT ‘s article clearly refers to the viral Tik Tok recipe. There is nothing wrong with grabbing inspiration where you find it. Hope everyone has a beautiful holiday!
Andrea, yes the NYT recipe DOES refer to the fact that it’s a viral tiktok recipe. This post, however, doesn’t even explain the name, let alone credit anyone. Happy holidays!
Thank you so much Judy! xT
So we dredge the chicken in flour? I don’t see that step in the directions
Saw this in the beginning of the article:
Step 2: season and sear the chicken.
Sear the chicken with salt and pepper. Then, take each piece and dip it through some flour. The flour gives the chicken a coating for the yummy sauce to stick to. Additionally, the flour on the chicken will help to thicken the sauce.
Sounds delicious but I don’t care for sundried tomatoes. Can I replace them with “fresh” roasted cherry tomatoes, or something similar? Many thanks and Season’s Greetings to all!
Hi there! Yes, that would be yummy! It wouldn’t be quite as flavorful because the flavor also comes from the oil of the sundried tomatoes, but roasted cherry tomatoes should work well! xT
Can I replace the heavy cream
With a dairy free alternative?
Hi there! Yes you could use coconut milk! xT