The first time I made chicken piccata pasta, I was trying to stretch leftovers — a single chicken breast and about three tablespoons of piccata sauce sitting in a pan. I boiled some linguine, tossed it in the pan with a splash of pasta water, and what came out was better than the original dish. The pasta’s starchy cooking water emulsified the sauce into something even silkier; the linguine carried the lemon-caper flavor into every bite instead of sitting under it. I’ve been making it intentionally ever since.
This recipe builds the whole thing from scratch — golden chicken cutlets, a bright piccata sauce, and perfectly cooked linguine all finishing together in one pan. It’s the kind of dish that looks like it took considerably more effort than it did.
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Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Chicken piccata pasta solves the one issue that sometimes comes up with the classic dish: it needs something to catch the sauce. When you build pasta directly into the piccata framework, every strand of linguine becomes a vehicle for lemon-caper butter, and the dish transforms from an elegant protein-with-sauce into a full, deeply satisfying one-pan meal.
Technically, this dish is a study in how pasta water works. The cloudy, starchy water leftover from cooking pasta is a natural emulsifier — when added to a butter-based sauce, it helps fat and water bind more stably. It also adds a subtle roundness to the sauce’s acidity. The chicken reaches its safe internal temperature of 165°F / 74°C before being sliced and tossed with the pasta, so every element is perfectly cooked when it meets the plate.
Ingredients
- 400g (14 oz) dried linguine or spaghetti
- 2 large boneless, skinless chicken breasts, butterflied thin
- ½ cup (65g) all-purpose flour + salt and pepper
- 3 tbsp olive oil
- 4 tbsp unsalted cold butter, divided
- 4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
- ½ cup (120ml) dry white wine
- ⅓ cup (80ml) fresh lemon juice (2 lemons)
- ½ cup (120ml) pasta cooking water, reserved
- 3 tbsp capers, drained
- Zest of 1 lemon
- ½ cup (30g) fresh flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
- Grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, for serving (optional)
Pasta shape matters: Long flat noodles — linguine, spaghetti, or tagliatelle — work best because their surface area grips the emulsified butter sauce more effectively than short pasta. Avoid rigatoni or penne here; the chunky shapes don’t distribute the sauce evenly and the sliced chicken sits awkwardly alongside them.
How to Make Chicken Piccata Pasta
- Start the pasta water. Bring a large pot of heavily salted water to a boil — it should taste like mild sea water. This is your flavor base and your sauce emulsifier. Don’t skip the salt.
- Prep and dredge chicken. Butterfly each breast and pound to ¼-inch thickness. Season with salt and pepper, dredge in flour, shake off excess. Have the chicken ready before the pasta goes in.
- Sear the chicken. Heat oil in a large 12-inch skillet over medium-high. Add 1 tbsp butter, sear cutlets 3 minutes per side until golden and cooked through. Rest on a cutting board, then slice on the bias into ½-inch strips. Keep the pan — don’t clean it.
- Cook the pasta. Drop pasta into the boiling water. Cook 2 minutes less than the package directions — it should be very al dente since it’ll finish in the sauce. Reserve 1 full cup of pasta water before draining.
- Build the sauce. In the chicken pan over medium heat, add sliced garlic and cook 45 seconds. Deglaze with white wine, scraping fond. Add lemon juice, capers, and ½ cup of pasta water. Simmer 3 minutes.
- Toss and emulsify. Add drained pasta directly to the sauce. Toss vigorously for 90 seconds — the pasta starch and the sauce liquid will bind together. Remove from heat. Add remaining cold butter in two additions, tossing constantly. The sauce should cling to every strand.
- Plate and finish. Divide pasta between bowls, arrange sliced chicken over the top. Scatter lemon zest, parsley, and optional Parmigiano. Serve immediately — this dish waits for no one.
Pasta cooking water contains dissolved starch — primarily amylose and amylopectin — that leach out of the pasta during cooking. When this starchy water hits the butter sauce, the starch molecules act as a secondary emulsifier alongside the butter’s lecithin. The result is a sauce that clings to pasta rather than pooling at the bottom of the bowl. Always reserve more pasta water than you think you need; you can always add more but you can’t remove it.
Pro Cooking Tips
Pull your pasta out of the water 2 minutes before al dente. It looks slightly underdone — pale, slightly chalky in the center when you bite it. That’s correct. Those 2 minutes get made up while tossing in the sauce, and the pasta absorbs some of the sauce’s flavor in the process. Finish it fully in the pasta pot and you’ll have overcooked, soft strands that can’t hold the sauce’s weight.
Toss, don’t stir. When combining pasta and sauce, use tongs and a circular tossing motion rather than stirring with a spoon. Tossing introduces air, keeps the pasta moving in the sauce evenly, and doesn’t break the strands. A spoon drags and clumps.
For a complete understanding of how different pasta shapes interact with different sauce types — and why some pairings work and others don’t — the Serious Eats pasta shapes guide is the most comprehensive resource currently available on the topic.
If you prefer to serve this dish with the chicken whole rather than sliced, see our classic chicken piccata recipe for full technique on keeping the cutlets intact and sauced separately — the pasta can still be served alongside as an accompaniment.
Recipe Variations
Slow Cooker
Cook seared chicken in slow cooker with wine, lemon, and capers on LOW 2 hours. Shred the chicken and toss with freshly cooked pasta and a butter-mounted version of the slow cooker liquid.
Instant Pot
Sauté cutlets, pressure cook 4 minutes with the sauce liquids, then quick-release. Use the Sauté mode to reduce and mount butter before tossing with separately cooked pasta.
With Artichokes
Add ½ cup drained, quartered artichoke hearts with the capers. Their earthy, slightly sweet flavor adds dimension to the bright sauce and pairs beautifully with pasta’s starchiness.
Spicy Piccata Pasta
Add ½ tsp red pepper flakes with the garlic. The heat builds slowly in the background, cutting through the butter’s richness and giving the whole dish a more assertive personality.
What to Serve Alongside
This is a complete, protein-and-carb meal in one bowl. Keep the sides light and simple to let the pasta shine.
- Arugula and shaved parmesan salad — dressed with lemon and oil that mirrors the main dish
- Roasted cherry tomatoes — their sweetness balances the lemon’s acidity
- Garlic bread or focaccia — for sauce mopping
- Steamed broccolini — slight bitterness cuts through the butter richness
- A dry white wine — Pinot Grigio, Vermentino, or Soave mirror the sauce’s flavors
Storage & Meal Prep
Keeps 2–3 days. Reheat in a skillet over medium-low with a splash of water or broth, tossing gently. Pasta absorbs sauce overnight so the leftovers need liquid to loosen.
Not ideal — cooked pasta and butter sauces don’t freeze well together. Freeze the chicken separately (up to 2 months) and cook fresh pasta when reheating.
Prep chicken (pound, season, dredge) and sauce components (juice lemons, measure capers) 24 hours ahead. Assemble and cook the pasta fresh on the day for the best texture.
Nutritional Information
| Nutrient | Per Serving | % Daily Value |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 580 kcal | — |
| Protein | 42g | 84% |
| Total Fat | 18g | 23% |
| Saturated Fat | 7g | 35% |
| Carbohydrates | 62g | 23% |
| Sodium | 680mg | 30% |
| Fiber | 3g | 11% |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
FAQs
Your New Favorite Pasta Night
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Chicken Piccata Pasta: Toss Your Favorite Sauce With Linguine
A one-pan meal featuring golden chicken cutlets, a bright piccata sauce, and perfectly cooked linguine
- 400g g dried linguine or spaghetti
- 2 large boneless, skinless chicken breasts butterflied thin
- ½ cup cup all-purpose flour
- salt and pepper
- 3 tbsp tbsp olive oil
- 4 tbsp tbsp unsalted cold butter divided
- 4 cloves cloves garlic thinly sliced
- ½ cup cup dry white wine
- ⅓ cup cup fresh lemon juice
- ½ cup cup pasta cooking water reserved
- 3 tbsp tbsp capers drained
- zest of 1 lemon
- ½ cup cup fresh flat-leaf parsley roughly chopped
- grated Parmigiano-Reggiano optional
Start the pasta water
Bring a large pot of heavily salted water to a boil
Prep and dredge chicken
Butterfly each breast and pound to ¼-inch thickness
Season with salt and pepper, dredge in flour, shake off excess
Sear the chicken
Heat oil in a large 12-inch skillet over medium-high
Add 1 tbsp butter, sear cutlets 3 minutes per side until golden and cooked through
Cook the pasta
Drop pasta into the boiling water
Cook 2 minutes less than the package directions
Build the sauce
In the chicken pan over medium heat, add sliced garlic and cook 45 seconds
Deglaze with white wine, scraping fond
Add lemon juice, capers, and ½ cup of pasta water
Toss and emulsify
Add drained pasta directly to the sauce
Toss vigorously for 90 seconds
Plate and finish
Divide pasta between bowls, arrange sliced chicken over the top
Scatter lemon zest, parsley, and optional Parmigiano
- large pot
- 12-inch skillet
This dish is a study in how pasta water works, with the cloudy, starchy water leftover from cooking pasta acting as a natural emulsifier
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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!
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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 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.



