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Lemon Butter Chicken Recipe: Juicy, Silky & Weeknight Easy

E
By Emma Delacourt · March 25, 2026 · 13 min read
lemon butter chicken
Reader Rating★★★★★
Total Time25 mins
Servings4 servings
Lemon Butter Chicken Recipe: Juicy, Silky & Weeknight Easy

There’s a moment in the pan — about 90 seconds into the butter melt — when a lemon butter chicken sauce transforms from a collection of liquids into something unified, silky, and entirely its own. The fat and acid emulsify, the garlic softens into the background, and the whole thing smells like every Italian grandmother’s kitchen you’ve ever wished you had access to. I’ve made this dish more times than I can count, and the reaction at the table is always the same: people can’t believe it took 25 minutes.

Unlike its close cousin chicken piccata (which relies on capers and flour dredging), lemon butter chicken is more approachable for beginner cooks — no dredging station, no caper sourcing required — while delivering an equally impressive result on the plate.

8 min Prep
17 min Cook
25 min Total
4 pers. Servings
360 kcal Calories

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

Lemon butter chicken is the gateway drug to French-influenced pan sauce cookery. The technique — sear the protein, build the sauce in the same pan using the fond, mount cold butter at the end — is the foundation behind hundreds of restaurant dishes. Mastering it here means you can apply it to fish, veal, pork, and vegetables without ever consulting a recipe again.

From a meat science perspective, the absence of a flour dredge changes the texture equation entirely. Without a crust barrier, the chicken’s surface proteins contract directly on the hot pan, creating sear marks and a slight chew at the edges while keeping the interior tender. Target internal temperature remains 165°F / 74°C — measured at the thickest point, never the center of a thin spot.

Ingredients

Ingredients — Serves 4
  • 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts (170g / 6 oz each)
  • 1 tsp garlic powder + 1 tsp onion powder
  • Salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 tbsp unsalted butter, cold and cubed, divided
  • 4 cloves garlic, finely minced
  • 1 cup (240ml) chicken stock, preferably homemade or low-sodium
  • ⅓ cup (80ml) fresh lemon juice (2 large lemons)
  • 1 tsp lemon zest
  • 1 tsp fresh thyme leaves (or ½ tsp dried)
  • 2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped

Key selection note: The lemon zest is often skipped but shouldn’t be. The essential oils in lemon peel contain limonene and citral — aromatic compounds that survive heat better than the volatile acids in the juice. Adding zest at the end of cooking delivers a floral citrus note that juice alone cannot provide.

How to Make Lemon Butter Chicken

  1. Prep the chicken. Pat chicken breasts thoroughly dry with paper towels — surface moisture is the enemy of a proper sear. Season all surfaces with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder. Press the seasoning gently into the meat.
  2. Sear to golden. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add 1 tbsp butter and let it foam and subside. Add chicken and sear 5–6 minutes undisturbed until a deep golden crust forms. Flip and cook 4–5 minutes more until internal temp reads 165°F (74°C). Transfer to a warm plate.
  3. Build the aromatic base. Reduce heat to medium. Add minced garlic to the same pan and cook 30–45 seconds, stirring constantly, until fragrant but not browned. Garlic burns in seconds — watch this step.
  4. Deglaze and reduce. Pour in chicken stock and scrape up every brown bit on the pan bottom. Add lemon juice and thyme. Simmer 4–5 minutes until reduced by about a third and slightly syrupy.
  5. Mount with butter. Remove pan from heat entirely. Add remaining cold butter cubes one at a time, swirling constantly between each addition. The sauce should turn opaque, glossy, and thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.
  6. Finish and serve. Return chicken to the pan, spoon sauce over repeatedly for 60 seconds, scatter lemon zest and parsley, and serve immediately.
🔬 Why Cold Butter Matters

The glossy sauce you see in restaurants comes from beurre monté — butter emulsified into a warm liquid. Cold butter releases water slowly as it melts, allowing fat droplets to disperse evenly. Room-temperature butter releases water too fast and the fat separates, creating a greasy puddle. The pan must be off direct heat for this to work.

Pro Cooking Tips

💡 Tip: The Dry-Surface Advantage

After seasoning, let the chicken rest uncovered in the fridge for 20–30 minutes. The surface dries out slightly, which dramatically improves sear quality. This is the same principle behind dry-brining steaks — reduced surface moisture equals faster Maillard reaction, deeper color, and more flavor.

Use a splatter screen when the butter hits the hot pan — the initial foam can be aggressive. A screen contains mess without trapping the steam that softens a crust.

For an authoritative breakdown of how heat transfer works in different pan materials and why stainless outperforms nonstick for searing, the Serious Eats guide to pans for chicken is worth bookmarking before you invest in new cookware.

Rest before slicing. Give the cooked chicken 3–4 minutes under loose foil before cutting. Cutting against the grain on the bias — at a 45-degree angle across the muscle fibers — shortens individual fibers and makes each bite noticeably more tender.

Recipe Variations

Slow Cooker

Sear first for fond and crust, then transfer to the slow cooker. Cook on LOW 3 hours in broth and lemon juice. Make the butter sauce separately on the stove and pour over before serving.

Instant Pot

Sauté function for the sear, then add broth and cook on HIGH pressure for 6 minutes. Quick-release, remove chicken, switch to Sauté, reduce sauce, then mount butter off-heat.

Keto Version

The base recipe is already naturally low-carb. Serve over cauliflower rice or spiralized zucchini instead of pasta or potatoes. Increase butter to 5 tbsp for a more luxurious keto-friendly sauce.

Herb-Cream Twist

After reducing the stock, stir in ¼ cup heavy cream before mounting the butter. Add fresh tarragon instead of thyme. The cream creates a more indulgent, bistro-style sauce that clings magnificently to linguine.

What to Serve With This Dish

The silky, bright sauce pairs best with sides that absorb rather than clash. Pair this alongside our Italian chicken recipes collection to build a full dinner party menu around these flavors.

  • Orzo or angel hair pasta — tossed directly in the remaining sauce
  • Steamed white rice — absorbs the lemony butter sauce beautifully
  • Roasted green beans with almonds — textural contrast
  • Crusty baguette — mandatory for sauce collection
  • Wilted spinach — takes 90 seconds in the same pan after the chicken is done

Storage & Meal Prep

❄️
Refrigerator

Store chicken and sauce together in an airtight container. Reheat gently over low heat with a splash of broth to prevent sauce from breaking. Keeps 3 days.

🧊
Freezer

Freeze the seared chicken alone. The butter-based sauce doesn’t freeze cleanly — make it fresh in under 10 minutes when reheating the thawed chicken.

🍱
Meal Prep

Season and dry-brine breasts up to 48 hours ahead. Keep uncovered on a rack in the fridge. The drier surface produces a dramatically better sear when you’re ready to cook.

Nutritional Information

NutrientPer Serving% Daily Value
Calories360 kcal
Protein40g80%
Total Fat17g22%
Saturated Fat8g40%
Carbohydrates5g2%
Sodium540mg23%
Fiber0.3g1%

Common Mistakes to Avoid

1
Not patting the chicken dry. Even a thin film of surface moisture causes the chicken to steam rather than sear. Dry surfaces = Maillard reaction. Wet surfaces = grey, steamed protein.
2
Moving the chicken too soon. The crust will release naturally from the pan when it’s ready. If you’re fighting to flip it, it’s not done forming. Force it and you rip the sear off.
3
Burning the garlic. Garlic goes from golden to bitter in under 30 seconds. Use medium heat, keep stirring, and have your liquid ready to add the moment it smells fragrant.
4
Adding butter on the burner. Every gram of emulsified butter sauce gets destroyed if the pan is still on heat. Off the heat, always.

FAQs

What’s the difference between lemon butter chicken and chicken piccata?
Chicken piccata uses a flour dredge on the chicken, dry white wine, and capers as its signature ingredient. Lemon butter chicken skips the dredge and capers, relies on chicken stock, and tends to be slightly lighter and more approachable. The butter-mounting technique is identical in both.
Can I use salted butter?
Technically yes, but unsalted gives you control. Salted butter varies significantly between brands — some are aggressively salty and will throw off the balance of the sauce. Taste as you go and adjust salt separately.
How do I know when the sauce is properly emulsified?
The sauce should be opaque (not translucent), coat the back of a spoon, and leave a clean line when you drag your finger through it. If it looks separated or oily, you likely added butter too fast or the pan was too hot.
Can I make this dairy-free?
Replace butter with a high-quality vegan butter (Miyoko’s or Violife work well for sauce mounting). The emulsification behavior is similar but slightly less stable — cook the sauce to a slightly thicker consistency before mounting.

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Lemon Butter Chicken Recipe: Juicy, Silky & Weeknight Easy

Lemon Butter Chicken Recipe: Juicy, Silky & Weeknight Easy

A French-influenced pan sauce cookery dish with a silky, bright sauce made from lemon butter, garlic, and chicken stock, served with chicken breasts.

Prep time8 mins
Cook time17 mins
Total25 mins
Servings 4 servings
Course Main Course
Cuisine French-Italian
Calories 360
Quantities:
  • 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts chicken breasts 170g / 6 oz each
  • 1 tsp tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp tsp onion powder
  • salt to taste
  • freshly cracked black pepper to taste
  • 2 tbsp tbsp olive oil
  • 4 tbsp tbsp unsalted butter cold and cubed, divided
  • 4 cloves cloves garlic finely minced
  • 1 cup cup chicken stock preferably homemade or low-sodium
  • ⅓ cup cup fresh lemon juice 2 large lemons
  • 1 tsp tsp lemon zest
  • 1 tsp tsp fresh thyme leaves or ½ tsp dried
  • 2 tbsp tbsp fresh parsley chopped

Prep the chicken

1

Pat chicken breasts thoroughly dry with paper towels — surface moisture is the enemy of a proper sear.

2

Season all surfaces with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder.

3

Press the seasoning gently into the meat.

Sear to golden

4

Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat.

5

Add 1 tbsp butter and let it foam and subside.

6

Add chicken and sear 5–6 minutes undisturbed until a deep golden crust forms.

7

Flip and cook 4–5 minutes more until internal temp reads 165°F (74°C).

8

Transfer to a warm plate.

Build the aromatic base

9

Reduce heat to medium.

10

Add minced garlic to the same pan and cook 30–45 seconds, stirring constantly, until fragrant but not browned.

Deglaze and reduce

11

Pour in chicken stock and scrape up every brown bit on the pan bottom.

12

Add lemon juice and thyme.

13

Simmer 4–5 minutes until reduced by about a third and slightly syrupy.

Mount with butter

14

Remove pan from heat entirely.

15

Add remaining cold butter cubes one at a time, swirling constantly between each addition.

16

The sauce should turn opaque, glossy, and thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.

Finish and serve

17

Return chicken to the pan, spoon sauce over repeatedly for 60 seconds, scatter lemon zest and parsley, and serve immediately.

  • large skillet
  • splatter screen
Servingper serving
Calories360 kcal
Carbohydrates5g
Protein40g
Fat17g
Saturated Fat8g
Sodium540mg
Fiber0.3g

The lemon zest is often skipped but shouldn't be. The essential oils in lemon peel contain limonene and citral — aromatic compounds that survive heat better than the volatile acids in the juice.

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Scrumptious

March 25, 2026

My husband (who is extremely picky) loved the liver & onions so much!! I didn’t have any beef broth or Sherry so I used about a tbl of Worcestershire and 1/4 c of white wine …..it was scrumptious

Camille

Response from MeatRecipesBox

Oh wow, I’m so happy to hear that!! 😍 I love that you made it work with what you had on hand — Worcestershire and white wine sound like a delicious twist. So glad your husband enjoyed it, especially being picky! Thank you for sharing your version, it makes me smile knowing it turned out scrumptious!

This was amazing

March 6, 2026

This recipe turned out really amazing! It’s juicy and spiced deliciously. I definitely would use less of the spicy pepper next time, but it really was delicious and I don’t think I’ll make chicken legs any other way from now on.!

Emily

Response from MeatRecipesBox

Thank you for taking the time to leave such a thoughtful review. I’m really glad to hear the recipe turned out juicy and full of flavor for you. That’s exactly what I was hoping for when putting it together. Good call on the spicy pepper as well. Adjusting the heat level to your own taste is always the best approach, and using a little less next time should make it just right for you. I really appreciate you trying the recipe and sharing your experience. It’s great to know it worked so well for you.

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Emma Delacourt

Emma Delacourt

Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox

Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.

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