Creamy Garlic Parmesan Chicken Breasts (Pan-Seared with Mashed Potatoes, 35 Min)

Creamy garlic parmesan chicken tutorial — sear chicken, build cream sauce with garlic and parmesan in same pan, serve over potatoes.

This is my go-to date-night dinner because it tastes way fancier than the 35 minutes it takes. Creamy garlic parmesan chicken breasts is the steakhouse-style dinner with pan-seared chicken in a silky garlic-parmesan cream sauce with fresh herbs, plated over buttery mashed potatoes with sauce spooned over everything. One pan for the chicken, restaurant flavor at home.

Fun fact: the creamy garlic-parmesan sauce technique comes from Italian “burro e parmigiano” (butter and parmesan), which Roman chefs use as a foundation for pasta alfredo. Adding heavy cream is an American invention from the 1950s that turns the same flavor profile into a sauce thick enough to coat chicken. Real Italian alfredo uses no cream — just butter, parmesan, and pasta water.

Why this recipe works

  • Pound chicken even thickness. 1/2-inch even thickness ensures the whole breast cooks at the same rate — no raw center, no dry edges.
  • Sear hard, finish gentle. High heat for golden crust, then low heat in the cream sauce to finish cooking without drying out the chicken.
  • Real parmesan grated fresh. Pre-shredded parmesan has anti-caking agents that prevent smooth melting. Block parm grated on a Microplane = silky sauce.

Ingredients

Serves 4.

For the chicken

  • 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts (about 6 oz each), pounded to 1/2-inch thickness
  • 1 tsp salt + 1/2 tsp black pepper + 1 tsp garlic powder + 1 tsp paprika + 1/2 tsp Italian seasoning
  • 2 tbsp olive oil + 2 tbsp butter

For the creamy garlic parmesan sauce

  • 3 tbsp butter
  • 6 cloves garlic minced
  • 1/2 cup chicken broth (low-sodium)
  • 1.5 cups heavy cream
  • 1 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning + 1/2 tsp salt + 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh parsley + 1 tbsp chopped fresh thyme (optional)

For the mashed potatoes

  • 2 lb Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and 1-inch cubed
  • 1/2 cup butter + 1/2 cup warm milk or cream
  • 1 tsp salt + 1/4 tsp black pepper

Smart substitutions

  • Chicken thighs: Sub bone-in skin-on thighs — increase cook time to 25 min covered in sauce
  • Lighter sauce: Half-and-half instead of heavy cream, less parmesan — still rich
  • Mushroom version: Add 8 oz sliced mushrooms with garlic to sauce
  • Over pasta: Serve over linguine or fettuccine instead of potatoes

Instructions

Step 1: Start the mashed potatoes

Place cubed potatoes in a pot, cover with cold salted water by 1 inch. Bring to a boil, reduce to simmer, and cook 15-18 minutes until fork-tender. Drain well.

Step 2: Season and sear the chicken

While potatoes cook, pat chicken dry. Mix salt, pepper, garlic powder, paprika, and Italian seasoning; rub all over chicken. Heat olive oil and 2 tbsp butter in a large skillet over medium-high. Sear chicken 5 minutes per side until deeply golden and 90% cooked. Transfer to a plate.

Step 3: Build the sauce

Lower heat to medium. Add 3 tbsp butter to the same skillet. Add minced garlic; cook 1 minute (don’t brown). Pour in chicken broth, scraping up brown bits from the pan. Simmer 2 minutes to reduce.

Step 4: Add cream and parmesan

Pour in heavy cream. Bring to a gentle simmer. Reduce heat to low; gradually whisk in grated parmesan until smooth. Add Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper. Sauce should coat the back of a spoon.

Step 5: Return chicken and finish

Return chicken to the pan, nestling into the sauce. Simmer 3-4 minutes, spooning sauce over chicken, until chicken is fully cooked (165°F internal). Stir in fresh parsley and thyme.

Step 6: Finish potatoes and plate

Mash drained potatoes with butter, warm milk, salt, and pepper until creamy. Plate a generous scoop of mashed potatoes; top with a chicken breast and spoon plenty of the garlic parmesan sauce over both. Sprinkle with extra parmesan and parsley. Serve immediately.

Nutrition information

  • Calories: 720 kcal per serving (chicken + potatoes + sauce)
  • Protein: 48 g
  • Carbohydrates: 32 g
  • Fat: 44 g
  • Calcium: 28% DV
  • Potassium: 35% DV

Pro tips for restaurant-quality results

  • Pound chicken evenly. Place between plastic wrap, use a flat meat mallet or heavy pan. Even thickness = even cooking = juicy results.
  • Grate parmesan yourself. Pre-shredded has cellulose anti-caking agents that make sauce gritty. Block parm grated fresh = silky smooth.
  • Don’t boil after cream. Keep at gentle simmer once cream is added — boiling causes the sauce to break and look curdled.
  • Spoon sauce over everything. The sauce is the star — don’t be shy. Use a deep spoon for generous coverage.

Frequently asked questions

Why did my sauce get grainy?

Either used pre-shredded parmesan (cellulose coating) or added cheese to boiling sauce (proteins seized). Reduce heat to low before adding cheese, and always grate from a block.

Can I use half-and-half instead of cream?

Yes, but sauce will be thinner. Add 1 tsp cornstarch dissolved in 1 tbsp cold water to thicken. Or reduce sauce 2-3 more minutes to thicken naturally.

How long do leftovers keep?

Refrigerator 3 days. Reheat gently in a skillet over low with a splash of cream or broth to revive the sauce. Don’t microwave — sauce will break.

What sides work besides mashed potatoes?

Buttered noodles, rice pilaf, roasted vegetables, polenta, or crusty bread for sopping up sauce. A simple green salad balances the richness perfectly.

Can I use bottled garlic?

Fresh garlic is dramatically better here — it’s a featured ingredient. Bottled garlic loses flavor and adds metallic notes. Fresh is worth the 2 extra minutes of peeling and mincing.

How do I prevent dry chicken?

Three rules: pound to even thickness, don’t overcook (pull at 160°F — it climbs to 165°F resting), and let it finish cooking in the sauce, not over direct heat.