This creamy honey pepper chicken mac and cheese is the weeknight dinner that feels like a reward. Velvety three-cheese sauce, al dente cavatappi, tender pan-seared chicken thighs, and a honey-black pepper glaze that caramelizes into something between a sauce and a lacquer — this isn’t a box of mac with chicken thrown in. This is a dish engineered from scratch for maximum comfort and minimum effort.
The honey pepper chicken pasta recipe format works because honey and black pepper have a genuine chemical affinity. The piperine in freshly-cracked black pepper is fat-soluble, meaning it bonds to the butter and cream in the cheese sauce and distributes evenly through every forkful. The honey adds not just sweetness but floral complexity — and at the temperatures it hits the seared chicken, it partially caramelizes into a sticky glaze that clings. In my kitchen tests, this combination reliably silences a table.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Mac and cheese is only as good as its cheese sauce, and this sauce is built on a roux-based béchamel — not a cream reduction, not a block of Velveeta. The roux provides starch-thickened stability that prevents the sauce from breaking under heat, while the warm milk gradual incorporation prevents lumps entirely. Three cheeses do specific jobs: sharp cheddar for flavor backbone, gruyère for melt and nuttiness, cream cheese for tang and velvet texture.
The chicken thighs are seared separately at high heat until the skin renders golden and the Maillard crust forms at 74°C / 165°F internal. Then the honey-pepper glaze goes on in the final 90 seconds of cooking. Those sugars hit the hot pan and caramelize against the rendered fat — the result is a chicken with a lacquered, sweet-savory crust that stays intact even when sliced over the mac.
The Butcher’s Selection — Ingredients
- 4 boneless, skin-on chicken thighs (170g / 6 oz each)
- 3 tbsp raw wildflower honey
- 1½ tsp freshly cracked black pepper (coarse-ground — pre-ground loses volatile oils)
- ½ tsp garlic powder
- ½ tsp smoked paprika
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- 1 tbsp neutral oil
- 1 tbsp unsalted butter
- 400g (14 oz) cavatappi or elbow macaroni
- 3 tbsp unsalted butter
- 3 tbsp all-purpose flour
- 600ml (2½ cups) whole milk, warmed
- 120ml (½ cup) heavy cream
- 200g (2 cups) sharp cheddar, freshly grated (not pre-shredded — anti-caking agents prevent smooth melt)
- 80g (¾ cup) gruyère, freshly grated
- 60g (¼ cup) full-fat cream cheese
- 1 tsp Dijon mustard
- ½ tsp garlic powder
- ½ tsp smoked paprika
- Salt and white pepper to taste
How to Make Creamy Honey Pepper Chicken Mac and Cheese
- Cook pasta al dente: Boil cavatappi in heavily salted water (it should taste like mild seawater) until just al dente — 1 minute less than the package minimum. Drain, reserving 240ml (1 cup) pasta water. The starch in pasta water is your emergency sauce-consistency adjuster.
- Build the béchamel: Melt butter in a heavy saucepan over medium heat. Add flour and whisk constantly for 90 seconds — this cooks out the raw starch flavor and creates a pale roux. Slowly stream in warm milk, whisking after each addition to prevent lumps. Add cream. Bring to a gentle simmer, stirring until thickened, 5–6 minutes.
- Add cheese: Reduce heat to low. Add cream cheese first, stir until dissolved. Add cheddar and gruyère in three batches, stirring until fully melted between each addition. Add Dijon, garlic powder, paprika. Season with salt and white pepper. Never let the sauce boil after adding cheese — the proteins tighten and the sauce breaks into grainy curds.
- Combine with pasta: Fold drained pasta into the cheese sauce. Stir to coat every tube. If sauce is too thick, add pasta water 60ml at a time until it coats pasta generously without pooling.
- Sear the chicken: Pat thighs completely dry — surface moisture prevents searing. Heat oil in a cast-iron over medium-high. Place thighs skin-side down. Cook undisturbed 5–6 minutes until skin is deep golden and renders fat freely. Flip and cook 4 more minutes. Target internal temp: 74°C / 165°F.
- Glaze with honey pepper: Reduce heat to medium. Add butter to the pan. Mix honey, cracked pepper, garlic powder, paprika in a bowl. Pour over chicken. Let it sizzle and caramelize for 60–90 seconds per side, tilting pan to baste. Remove and rest 2 minutes before slicing.
- Plate and serve: Spoon creamy mac into wide bowls. Slice glazed chicken thighs (cut against the grain — diagonal, 1cm slices) and fan over the top. Drizzle any residual honey pepper pan glaze over everything. Optional: finish with extra cracked pepper and a pinch of flaky salt.
Pro Cooking Tips
Always grate your own cheese. Pre-shredded cheese contains cellulose or potato starch to prevent clumping. These anti-caking agents interfere with the cheese’s ability to melt smoothly — you end up with a grainy, clumpy sauce instead of a velvety one. A box grater takes two minutes and changes everything.
Keep the sauce warm, not hot. Once you’ve added the cheese, the sauce must stay below 85°C. Above that temperature, the protein bonds in the cheese tighten and force the fat to separate. A low flame or a warm water bath keeps the sauce fluid and silky throughout assembly. For a complementary chicken-and-cheese comfort dish, the flavors in these chicken and cheese tacos use similar dairy and spice balancing techniques worth exploring alongside this recipe.
Recipe Variations
🌶️ Spicy Honey Pepper
Add ½ tsp cayenne and 1 tsp hot sauce to the honey pepper glaze. Mix pickled jalapeño brine into the cheese sauce (2 tbsp) for subtle vinegar heat that cuts through the richness. For a deeper dive on the technique, check this honey pepper chicken mac variation.
🍳 Baked Casserole
Transfer mac and cheese to a buttered baking dish. Lay sliced glazed chicken on top. Sprinkle with panko-parmesan crust. Bake at 190°C for 20 minutes until bubbling at the edges and golden on top. The baked crust adds a textural dimension the stovetop version can’t match.
🥦 Loaded Vegetable
Add roasted broccoli florets, caramelized onions, and sun-dried tomatoes into the mac before plating. The sweetness of caramelized onion and the acidity of sun-dried tomato create balance points that make the richness of the cheese sauce feel lighter.
🍖 Slow Cooker Mac
Add all sauce ingredients (except pasta) to the slow cooker with raw chicken thighs. Cook on LOW 4 hours. Remove and shred chicken, return to sauce. Cook pasta separately, fold in. The longer cooking time amplifies garlic and paprika depth — ideal for meal prep Sunday batches.
What to Serve With This Dish
- Crispy garlic bread — essential for scooping residual cheese sauce from the bowl; sourdough adds a pleasant tang that cuts dairy richness
- Simple arugula salad with lemon vinaigrette — the bitter peppery arugula and sharp lemon acidity provide maximum contrast to the sweet-rich mac
- Roasted cherry tomatoes — the bursting acidity and natural sweetness mirror the honey in the glaze without competing
- Sparkling water with lime — carbonation aids in fat digestion and keeps the rich cheese sauce from feeling heavy through the meal
- A cold pale ale or amber beer — malt sweetness complements the honey, hop bitterness cuts the cheese fat
Storage & Meal Prep
Nutritional Information
Per serving (approx. 1.5 cups mac + 1 chicken thigh with honey pepper glaze):
| Nutrient | Amount | % Daily Value |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 820 kcal | 41% |
| Total Fat | 38g | 49% |
| Saturated Fat | 20g | 100% |
| Protein | 52g | 104% |
| Total Carbohydrates | 76g | 28% |
| Dietary Fiber | 2g | 7% |
| Sugars | 16g | — |
| Sodium | 880mg | 38% |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Anti-caking agents in pre-shredded cheese prevent smooth melting. The sauce will be lumpy and gritty. Always grate from a block immediately before use — it takes 2 minutes and the difference is dramatic.
Boiling a cheese sauce causes protein bonds to tighten and fat to separate into greasy puddles. Keep the heat on LOW after adding cheese. If you see the fat starting to separate, add 2 tbsp cold milk and whisk vigorously off heat.
Honey caramelizes rapidly. Added to the pan before the chicken reaches internal temperature, the sugars will burn black before the meat is safe to eat. Always apply the honey glaze in the final 90 seconds only.
Package directions produce fully cooked pasta. But pasta finishes cooking in the hot cheese sauce — cook it 1 minute short of the minimum time, drain, and let the sauce do the final work. The result is pasta with a perfect bite instead of mushy, blown-out tubes.
FAQs
Can I use chicken breast instead of thighs?
Yes, but reduce sear time to 4 minutes per side and pull at exactly 74°C / 165°F — breast dries out rapidly beyond this temperature. Thighs are more forgiving due to higher fat content and remain juicy even slightly past target temp.
What pasta shape works best?
Cavatappi (cork-screw tubes) or elbow macaroni are ideal — their interior tube traps cheese sauce inside each piece. Rigatoni works brilliantly for a more substantial bite. Avoid long pasta like spaghetti — it can’t hold enough sauce volume per forkful.
Can I make this dairy-free?
Substitute oat milk for whole milk (1:1 ratio) and use vegan butter. For the cheese, nutritional yeast (4 tbsp) plus cashew cream provides a close flavor approximation. The sauce won’t achieve the same stretch and cling but remains creamy and satisfying.
How do I prevent the honey from burning?
Three things: apply only in the last 90 seconds of cooking, keep the heat at medium (not high), and keep the chicken moving with a spoon-basting motion. The butter in the glaze slows honey’s caramelization rate and gives you more control over the process.
Comfort Food at Its Absolute Best
Pin this creamy honey pepper chicken mac and cheese recipe and save it for your next cozy dinner night.
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Creamy Honey Pepper Chicken Mac and Cheese Recipe
A comforting weeknight dinner featuring velvety three-cheese sauce, al dente cavatappi, tender pan-seared chicken thighs, and a honey-black pepper glaze.
- 4 boneless, skin-on chicken thighs chicken thighs 170g / 6 oz each
- 3 tbsp raw wildflower honey
- 1½ tsp freshly cracked black pepper coarse-ground
- ½ tsp garlic powder
- ½ tsp smoked paprika
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- 1 tbsp neutral oil
- 1 tbsp unsalted butter
- 400g cavatappi or elbow macaroni 14 oz
- 3 tbsp unsalted butter
- 3 tbsp all-purpose flour
- 600ml whole milk 2½ cups, warmed
- 120ml heavy cream ½ cup
- 200g sharp cheddar 2 cups, freshly grated
- 80g gruyère ¾ cup, freshly grated
- 60g full-fat cream cheese ¼ cup
- 1 tsp Dijon mustard
- ½ tsp garlic powder
- ½ tsp smoked paprika
- salt and white pepper to taste
Cook pasta al dente
Boil cavatappi in heavily salted water until just al dente — 1 minute less than the package minimum.
Drain, reserving 240ml pasta water.
Build the béchamel
Melt butter in a heavy saucepan over medium heat.
Add flour and whisk constantly for 90 seconds.
Slowly stream in warm milk, whisking after each addition to prevent lumps.
Add cream.
Bring to a gentle simmer, stirring until thickened, 5–6 minutes.
Add cheese
Reduce heat to low.
Add cream cheese first, stir until dissolved.
Add cheddar and gruyère in three batches, stirring until fully melted between each addition.
Add Dijon, garlic powder, paprika.
Season with salt and white pepper.
Combine with pasta
Fold drained pasta into the cheese sauce.
Stir to coat every tube.
If sauce is too thick, add pasta water 60ml at a time until it coats pasta generously without pooling.
Sear the chicken
Pat thighs completely dry — surface moisture prevents searing.
Heat oil in a cast-iron over medium-high.
Place thighs skin-side down.
Cook undisturbed 5–6 minutes until skin is deep golden and renders fat freely.
Flip and cook 4 more minutes.
Target internal temp: 74°C / 165°F.
Glaze with honey pepper
Reduce heat to medium.
Add butter to the pan.
Mix honey, cracked pepper, garlic powder, paprika in a bowl.
Pour over chicken.
Let it sizzle and caramelize for 60–90 seconds per side, tilting pan to baste.
Remove and rest 2 minutes before slicing.
Plate and serve
Spoon creamy mac into wide bowls.
Slice glazed chicken thighs (cut against the grain — diagonal, 1cm slices) and fan over the top.
Drizzle any residual honey pepper pan glaze over everything.
Optional: finish with extra cracked pepper and a pinch of flaky salt.
- cast-iron
- heavy saucepan
- box grater
Did You Try Our Recipe ?
Scrumptious
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
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
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.!
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
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.



