The Secret to Cooking Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts: Tender, Juicy, Never Boring
Wondering how to cook boneless skinless chicken breasts so they’re tender, juicy, and full of flavor? With the right approach, you can turn those plain-Jane breasts into something, dare I say…delicious. Today I’m sharing two of my go-to methods—poaching and sautéing—that take the guesswork out of cooking BSCBs (yes, we’re shortening that because whew, that’s a mouthful). Oh, and I’ve got a simple honey garlic sauce that’ll make you feel like a weeknight dinner hero.
Boneless, skinless chicken breasts. They’re convenient, they’re (allegedly) healthy, and they’re probably sitting in your fridge right now. But let’s be honest—getting them to turn out juicy and flavorful? That’s where things get tricky. One wrong move and you’re chewing your way through a dry, bland dinner, wondering why you didn’t just order pizza.
Here’s the problem: Chicken skin helps to keep the chicken moist and the bones add flavor. Remove both and what do you have? The potential for dry, tasteless, tough chicken.
But don’t worry—I’ve got you. With the right method, boneless, skinless chicken breasts can be tender, flavorful, and anything but dull. Here are two foolproof techniques—poaching and sautéing—that guarantee great results every time. I’m also including a honey garlic sauce that’s so good, you’ll want to spoon it over everything.
Method 1: Poaching for Perfectly Moist Chicken
If you’re making chicken salad, enchiladas, or any dish where you want tender, juicy chunks or shreds of chicken with no added browning or seasoning—this is your method. Poaching keeps the chicken moist and cooks it gently, so it stays tender instead of turning into something you have to politely pretend to enjoy.
Here’s how to do it:
- Start with a wide, shallow pan—something with a lid. Arrange the boneless, skinless chicken breasts in a single layer, then pour in enough chicken broth (or a mix of broth and water) to cover them by about an inch.
- Turn the heat to medium and bring the liquid just to a simmer—no rolling boils here. Gently nudge the chicken around with a spoon to make sure everything is evenly surrounded by liquid.
- As soon as the liquid begins to bubble, cover the pan with a lid and turn the heat completely off. Yes, off. Don’t touch anything. Just walk away.
- Let it sit, undisturbed, for 45 minutes. And I do mean undisturbed. No peeking, no poking, no lifting the lid to check on progress. The gentle heat in the covered pan will finish the cooking, and it works like a charm.
- Once time’s up, remove the chicken from the poaching liquid. (Pro tip: strain and freeze that flavorful broth—it’s kitchen gold.)
And that’s it! You now have perfectly cooked, moist chicken that’s ready to be shredded, cubed, or sliced however you like. It’ll keep in the fridge for about 3 days if tightly wrapped, making it perfect for meal prep or quick throw-together dinners.
This method also works beautifully with bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts. Just remove the skin and bones after cooking, and you’re good to go.
Method 2: Sautéing for a Golden, Flavorful Finish
This is my go-to when I want boneless, skinless chicken breasts to look and taste like they came from a fancy café—lightly golden on the outside, juicy and tender inside, with flavor in every bite.
Here’s how to nail it:
- Pound the chicken to an even thickness. This helps it cook evenly (read: no dry edges with a raw center). Place each breast between two sheets of plastic wrap or in a zip-top bag. Use the flat side of a meat mallet—or the bottom of a heavy pan—and give it a few gentle whacks from the center out. You’re not making schnitzel here, so don’t go too thin—just aim for uniform.
- Lightly flour the chicken. In a shallow dish, combine ½ cup all-purpose flour with 1 teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon black pepper. Dredge each breast so it’s lightly coated. This tiny step adds a delicate crust and helps lock in moisture.
- Get the pan hot. Heat a sauté pan (with a lid—you’ll need it soon) over medium-high heat. Once hot, add 3 tablespoons olive oil and 2 teaspoons butter. Swirl to coat the bottom.
- Add the chicken. Reduce heat to medium and lay in the chicken breasts. Let them cook for just 1 minute—not to fully brown or sear, just to give one side a head start.
- Flip and finish low and slow. Turn the chicken over, reduce heat to low, and put the lid on. Set a timer for 10 minutes. No peeking! The trapped steam and gentle heat do all the work.
- Still no peeking. After 10 minutes, turn the heat off—yes, off—and set the timer for another 10 minutes. Let the pan sit, covered. This is where the magic happens.
- Finally, take a peek. Remove the lid and you should find golden, juicy chicken that’s fully cooked and ready to slice. To be extra sure, especially if your chicken breasts are on the thicker side, check with an instant-read thermometer—they should hit at least 165°F in the thickest part.
Serve it as-is with a side of veggies, slice it for salads, or pair it with your favorite sauce (hello, honey garlic!).
Enhance Your Chicken with Honey Garlic Sauce
The most perfect way I know to serve sautéed chicken breasts? With Honey Garlic Sauce. It’s fast, it’s simple, and it makes plain chicken sing. Honestly, this sauce could make cardboard taste good (but let’s stick with chicken or salmon, okay?).
Here’s how it works: While your chicken is doing its thing on the stovetop—lid on, no peeking—you’ve got just enough time to stir together a few pantry staples. A little honey, a splash of vinegar, some soy sauce, and plenty of garlic. Simmer it gently, and in under 10 minutes, dinner’s ready to shine.
Once your chicken is cooked through, just spoon that warm, sticky-sweet sauce over the top and let it soak in. Serve it whole, sliced, or chopped—whatever works for you.
Get the full Honey Garlic Sauce recipe here →Â
How to Cook Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts (No-Fail Secrets!)
Ingredients
For Either Method
- 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts
For Sautéed Method
- 1 tsp salt
- ½ tsp black pepper
- ½ cup all-purpose flour
- 3 Tbsp olive oil
- 2 tsp butter
For Poached Method
- Enough chicken broth or water or a mix of both to cover chicken by 1 inch
Instructions
Poached Chicken Method
- Place chicken breasts in a wide, shallow pan with a lid.
- Pour in enough chicken broth or a mix of broth and water to cover the chicken by about 1 inch.
- Set over medium heat and bring just to a simmer (not a full boil), uncovered.
- Use a spoon to gently move chicken around to ensure even coverage.
- Once the liquid just starts to bubble, cover the pan and turn off the heat.
- Let the pan sit undisturbed for 45 minutes—no lifting the lid!
- After 45 minutes, remove chicken and discard skin/bones if present.
- Use immediately or store tightly wrapped in the fridge for up to 3 days.
Sautéed Chicken Method
- Place each chicken breast between waxed paper, plastic wrap, or in a bag. Pound to an even thickness (not too thin).
- In a shallow dish, mix flour with salt and pepper. Lightly dredge the chicken in this mixture.
- Heat a sauté pan with a lid over Medium-High heat. Add olive oil and butter; swirl to coat.
- Reduce heat to Medium. Add chicken and cook for 1 minute to lightly brown one side. Flip carefully.
- Reduce heat to Low. Cover the pan, set a timer for 10 minutes, and walk away—no peeking.
- After 10 minutes, turn off the heat but leave the lid on. Set a timer for another 10 minutes. Still no peeking!
- When the timer’s up, remove the lid. Chicken should be golden and juicy. Check internal temp (165°F) if needed. Slice, serve, and enjoy!
Notes
Nutrition
Question: Chicken lovers! What’s your go-to method for cooking boneless, skinless chicken breasts to perfection? Share your secrets in the comments below.
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I used your recipe to sautee the chicken breasts. Worked great. Very easy, very delicious. You have many wonderful recipes, Mary. Thank you!
Boneless/skinless chicken breasts are also good sort of poached in the microwave. They sort of “puff up” and stay nice and moist.
I tried the poached method today. The meat is very tender and moist. Thanks so much!
Greetings Mary! Thank you for all the wonderful tips, short cuts and experienced knowledge in recipes and more! I look for ward to it every day.
So happy to know you’re out there! Thanks for your encouragement.
I have cooked small pieces of chicken breast in a pan with OLIVE OIL…..and then drizzle some honey YUM…..
The poached chicken breasts sounds like it would be great for shredded chicken in a recipe. Could this be shredded, sealed tightly and frozen? Thanks!
Sure!
Have you tried this method with chicken thighs and/or legs?
The microwave works wonders – the breasts “puff up” and are tender and juicy.
Can your three cooking methods start with either frozen or raw chicken breasts?
I cannot suggest that as I have never tested on frozen. However as these methods are time sensitive, I would say no. But if you come up with alternative timing that produces equal results let us know.
I often cook the boneless, skinless breasts in the microwave as they stay nice and moist and actually kind of “puff up” so they’re wonderful for slicing or cutting into pieces for salads, etc.
Thanks for the recipes! What size breasts are best to use? It seems I can only find large, 1-pound or more, breasts anymore (one is enough for two people!). I hate to flatten them, so the one suggestion someone made about slicing a breast in two sounds great.
That may work, however the goal is to make the thickness uniform by pounding the high spots.
hi Mary,
Thank you for these chicken breast recipes. Perhaps i missed it each time I looked at the recipes but i didn’t see how much chicken for each recipe and i know sometimes the breasts are so big that i have to cut them in half. Hope the new year is wonderful for you and your family and as always i look forward to your column in my daily email. You are amazing. Thank you
Marge
This is now my go to recipe for chicken breasts! Very moist. I admit I had my doubts that it was going to cook through with only about 20 minutes over the flame for the saute method. But it did cook beautifully and I didn’t even coat with flour, just salt and pepper. The Honey Garlic Sauce was also delicious. My Husband thinks he hates garlic, but I slip it into alot of recipes when he is not looking. I had to stiffle laughs when he kept adding more of the sauce to his chicken! Thank You! Diana
I tried this method and it was sooo good and tender that I am thinking of using it on boneless pork chops…. I bet it will be just as great !! Thanks for ALL your advice I have read and used so many of your hints and enjoy every posting!!!
Great methods. Tried to print but got the whole thing including comments. Usually you set it up so we can print recipes. The only recipie I could print was for the Honey Garlic Sauce.
Try again, Pat! 😉
for the poaching do I remove the pan from the burner?
Thank you.
No. Cover and leave undisturbed for 45 minutes. Do not peek!
If I poach the CB how safe is it?
Does it reach the recommended temp and does it cook thoroughly? If I don’t have a wide shallow pan can I use an electric skillet?
A simmer occurs in the temperature range of between 185 and 205 degrees F., which is significantly higher than the recommended internal temp for chicken breasts of 165 F. Air bubbles on the surface of the liquid will be less prominent during simmering as compared to boiling. Yes, you can use an electric skillet to poach chicken breasts as directed in this post.,
I brine my chicken breasts. As little as 15 minutes keeps them moist. I do not grill or bake them without doing this. Just put a handful of kosher salt in lukewarm water, stir until dissolved and put the breasts in. You can do this for hours or just 15 minutes. Works every time!
I have been doing a version of the poached method for a few years and wonder why I didn’t think of it sooner. Besides the chicken broth, I add a huge clove of thinly sliced elephant garlic, Celtic sea salt and Spice Hunter Organic Poultry Seasoning (available on Amazon). Note, their organic poultry seasoning is a different mixture than the non-organic. Also, if you haven’t tried Spice Hunter’s Chef’s Shake, you are missing some serious YUM! I buy it two bottles at a time.
Rather than pound, breaking molecular structure – to make uniformly thin- place breast on your side of cutting board , close to you, with board to edge of counter, using sharp knife, horizontally, make uniform cut producing two thin breasts of chicken.
Been cooking breast fillets this way since you first posted this years ago. I literally would rather have this than steak….it’s that good!
I have what may be a silly question. I have a gas stove so when i turn off the heat, it doesnt have any residual cooldown effect, are you cooking these on a gas or electric stove? That may make a difference in times for others. Thank you.
No difference in this situation, Tina.
Thank you Mary for this sautéed chicken recipe! I had all but given up on serving chicken breast. With this new to me technique, I will be preparing/serving this at least twice a month. Thanks again!
How about showing us how to make that tasty looking chicken salad, please.
Thank you for all the great hints and recipes. God bless you and your family.
I also cover my chicken in yellow mustard before cooking, baking or grilling. You don’t taste the mustard but it keeps the chicken moist. My most favorite way is to cook the chicken in my instant pot! So easy. You tend to have to over season it though as I guess the seasoning fall off during the process. I can’t wait to try your recipes as well.
Sounds very interesting, in a yummy way, Theresa!
I have been sauteing my boneless breast fillets using your technique for a couple of years, now. I can absolutely testify that I’d rather have them than steak….they are that tender, moist, and delicious!
Thanks for that endorsement, Darlene! You have encouraged me.
your methods sound great, but I have a third that is amazingly good and easy. coat a cast iron dutch oven with oil or cooking spray, put in your chicken, put the lid on and bake 45 min at 350. there will be broth in the pan, after cooking even though you didn’t add water. the chicken will be moist and delicious, you can even do the same thing with frozen breasts, just increase cooking time till meat thermometer shows them done, you should move the breasts around once they have thawed enough to seperate
That sounds great, Beth. I’ll have to try this … ! Thanks for sharing.
This looks great! I will try it and let you know how they come out.