one pan lemon butter chicken and orzo
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One Pan Lemon Butter Chicken and Orzo


One pan lemon butter chicken and orzo is the weeknight dinner that looks and tastes like it required more effort than it did. Bone-in chicken thighs with crispy golden skin, orzo cooked directly in the same pan in a lemon butter broth until it’s rich and creamy, finished with parmesan and spinach. The whole thing runs on the stovetop in one pan and takes about 40 minutes. There is no oven required, no second pot for the pasta, and no separate sauce to make.

The reason it works as well as it does comes down to one decision that most similar recipes don’t make: bone-in, skin-on thighs seared at medium heat for 12 to 14 minutes before anything else happens. That long, patient sear renders the fat properly, crisps the skin all the way through, and leaves a layer of browned chicken fat in the pan that the orzo then toasts and cooks in. That fond — the brown bits left behind — dissolves into the broth when the liquid goes in and flavors the entire dish. Skip to boneless thighs or crank the heat and the dish still works but the depth of flavor isn’t there.

Most recipes say “sear until golden.” This one is more specific: medium heat, skin-side down, 12 to 14 minutes without moving it. That sounds long. It’s correct.

High heat produces a golden surface before the fat beneath the skin has had a chance to render. The result looks crispy but has a layer of soft, unrendered fat underneath the exterior. Medium heat gives the fat 12 minutes to slowly render out, and by the time the skin is golden it’s genuinely crispy all the way through. The pan will also accumulate a significant amount of rendered chicken fat by the time the thighs come out — this is a feature, not a problem. The orzo cooks in it.

The orzo toasts for a minute in the butter and chicken fat before any liquid goes in. That toasting adds a subtle nuttiness and coats the starch on the outside of each piece, which slows how fast it absorbs the broth and keeps it from going mushy. Then the broth and lemon go in, the chicken nestles back on top skin-side up, and the orzo absorbs all of the lemon, garlic, and chicken flavor as it cooks instead of just getting tossed with a sauce at the end.

Stir the orzo around the chicken every 4 to 5 minutes while it simmers. Orzo sticks to the bottom of the pan more readily than larger pasta shapes — a brief stir keeps it moving and prevents a scorched bottom layer.

Fresh lemon juice and lemon zest both go in. The juice provides the acidity and brightness. The zest provides the aromatic lemon flavor without adding more liquid. Together they give the dish a lemon presence that reads as bright rather than sour. Start with the juice of one lemon — about 3 tablespoons. Taste after the orzo is cooked and add more if you want it brighter.

This is a complete dinner from one pan — protein, starch, and a vegetable from the spinach stirred in at the end. A simple green salad alongside is optional but the dish doesn’t need anything else. For other chicken thigh dinners that run in a different direction, the Honey Garlic Chicken Thighs and One Pan Lemon Garlic Chicken Thighs cover the same cut with different flavor profiles.

Keeps for 3 days in the fridge. The orzo absorbs more liquid as it sits — add a splash of chicken broth when reheating on the stovetop over low heat and stir until warmed through. The chicken skin will not re-crisp but the flavor holds completely. Microwave works on medium power in 90-second intervals.

one pan lemon butter chicken and orzo

One Pan Lemon Butter Chicken and Orzo

Bone-in chicken thighs seared until the skin is crispy, then orzo cooked directly in the same pan in a lemon butter chicken broth until creamy and rich — finished with parmesan and spinach. One pan, 40 minutes, no oven required.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Servings 4 servings

Ingredients
  

Meat & Protein

  • 4 bone-in skin-on chicken thighs patted completely dry

Produce

  • 5 garlic cloves minced
  • 1 lemon juiced — about 3 tbsp juice
  • 1 tsp lemon zested
  • 2 cups baby spinach packed
  • 3 tbsp fresh parsley roughly chopped, for garnish

Dairy

  • 3 tbsp unsalted butter divided — 1 tbsp for searing, 2 tbsp for orzo
  • cup parmesan cheese freshly grated, plus more for serving

Pantry & Canned Goods

  • 1.5 cups orzo pasta dry
  • 2.5 cups chicken broth low sodium
  • 1 tbsp olive oil

Seasonings & Spices

  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp kosher salt divided
  • ½ tsp black pepper
  • ¼ tsp crushed red pepper flakes optional

Instructions
 

  • Pat the chicken thighs completely dry with paper towels — both sides and under the skin where possible. Season all over with the garlic powder, smoked paprika, Italian seasoning, ½ tsp kosher salt, and black pepper.
  • Heat the olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a large deep-sided skillet over medium heat. Add the chicken thighs skin-side down. Do not move them. Cook for 12 to 14 minutes until the skin is deeply golden and releases easily from the pan. The low-and-slow approach renders the fat properly — rushing this step with high heat browns the outside before the fat has rendered. Flip and cook for 5 minutes on the other side. Remove to a plate — the chicken will finish cooking when it goes back in with the orzo.
  • Reduce heat to medium. Add the remaining 2 tbsp butter to the same pan. Add the minced garlic and cook for 30 seconds. Add the dry orzo and stir to coat in the butter and chicken fat, toasting for 1 to 2 minutes until the orzo is slightly golden at the edges.
  • Pour in the chicken broth, lemon juice, and lemon zest. Add the remaining ½ tsp kosher salt and red pepper flakes if using. Stir and scrape up any browned bits from the bottom of the pan. Bring to a gentle simmer.
  • Nestle the chicken thighs skin-side up back into the orzo. The orzo should be mostly submerged in the liquid with the chicken sitting on top. Cover with a lid and cook on medium-low for 12 to 15 minutes, stirring the orzo around the chicken every 4 to 5 minutes, until the orzo has absorbed the liquid and is fully cooked through and the chicken reaches an internal temperature of 165°F.
  • Remove from heat. Stir the grated parmesan into the orzo and fold in the baby spinach — it will wilt from the residual heat in about 1 minute. Taste and adjust salt and lemon. Garnish with fresh parsley and extra parmesan. Serve directly from the pan.

Notes

The low-and-slow skin sear — medium heat, 12 to 14 minutes skin-side down — is what produces properly crispy skin. High heat browns the surface before the fat beneath has rendered, leaving a layer of chewy fat under a golden exterior. Medium heat gives the fat time to render completely and the skin crisps through properly.
Toasting the orzo in the chicken fat and butter before adding liquid adds nuttiness and helps it hold its texture rather than going soft as it absorbs the broth.
The parmesan and spinach go in off the heat only. High heat can cause the parmesan to clump. Remove the pan first, then stir them in.
Leftovers keep for 3 days. The orzo absorbs more liquid as it sits — add a splash of chicken broth when reheating on the stovetop over low heat.
Keyword easy chicken orzo recipe, lemon butter chicken orzo, lemon chicken orzo skillet, lemon orzo chicken thighs, one pan chicken orzo, one pan lemon butter chicken and orzo
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