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Chicken Scampi Recipe — Garlic Butter Pasta Ready in 25 Minutes

E
By Emma Delacourt · May 20, 2026 · 14 min read
Chicken Scampi
Reader Rating★★★★★
Total Time25 mins
Servings4 servings
Chicken Scampi Recipe — Garlic Butter Pasta Ready in 25 Minutes

If you’ve been eyeing the chicken scampi on every Italian-American menu and wondering why it’s so dramatically better than anything you’ve made at home — the answer is almost always butter quantity and technique. This garlic butter chicken pasta scampi recipe doesn’t hold back. It uses generous amounts of good butter, properly browned garlic, and dry white wine deglazed into a glossy, silky pan sauce that coats every strand of angel hair with savory, garlicky richness.

In my kitchen tests, I’ve found the 25-minute timeline is not marketing — it’s achievable when you sequence the steps correctly: pasta water boiling while chicken cooks, sauce built in the same pan as the chicken, pasta finishing in the sauce. One pan, one pot, restaurant-quality result.

Prep Time
8 min
Cook Time
17 min
Total Time
25 min
Servings
4
Calories
640 kcal

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

Classic shrimp scampi derives its flavor from the lipid compounds in shellfish fat reacting with garlic’s allicin in hot butter. For chicken scampi, the same principle applies: chicken thigh fat renders into the butter as the meat cooks, creating a fortified cooking fat that absorbs the garlic’s fat-soluble flavor molecules and carries them into every drop of sauce.

The white wine deglazes all the browned protein fragments from the pan bottom — those caramelized bits are pure concentrated flavor. The butter finish (called montée au beurre in classical technique) emulsifies the sauce into a glossy, coating consistency that doesn’t break and doesn’t feel heavy. It coats pasta beautifully and clings without pooling.

I’ve found that finishing the pasta directly in the sauce — rather than just pouring the sauce over — allows the pasta starch to thicken the sauce from within while the sauce hydrates the final minute of pasta cooking. The result is an inseparable, cohesive dish rather than pasta with sauce sitting on top.

The Butcher’s Selection — Ingredients

🍗 Chicken
  • 700g (1.5 lbs) boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into 3cm strips
  • Salt and coarse black pepper to season
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp unsalted butter
🧄 Garlic Butter Scampi Sauce
  • 6 tbsp (85g) high-quality unsalted butter, divided
  • 8 garlic cloves, minced (approximately 3 tbsp) — do not use garlic powder here
  • ½ tsp red pepper flakes
  • 180ml (¾ cup) dry white wine (Pinot Grigio or Sauvignon Blanc)
  • 180ml (¾ cup) low-sodium chicken broth
  • 2 tbsp fresh lemon juice
  • 1 tsp lemon zest
  • 3 tbsp fresh flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
  • Salt and white pepper to taste
🍝 Pasta
  • 400g (14 oz) angel hair pasta or linguine
  • Heavily salted boiling water
  • 240ml (1 cup) reserved pasta water — do not skip this

How to Make Chicken Scampi

  1. Start pasta water: Bring a large pot of water to boil. Salt heavily. While water heats, prep all other components — this is how the 25-minute timeline holds.
  2. Sear chicken strips: Pat chicken dry. Season generously with salt and pepper. Heat olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a large skillet over medium-high until butter foam subsides. Add chicken in a single layer — do not crowd. Sear 3 minutes per side until golden and cooked through. Internal temp: 74°C / 165°F. Remove and tent loosely with foil.
  3. Toast the garlic: Reduce heat to medium. Add 2 tbsp butter. Add minced garlic and red pepper flakes. Cook, stirring constantly, 60–90 seconds until fragrant and just golden at the edges — never brown. Burnt garlic is bitter and ruins the entire sauce.
  4. Deglaze with wine: Pour in white wine. Use a wooden spoon to scrape all browned bits from the pan bottom — that’s flavor. Simmer 2 minutes until wine reduces by half and the sharp alcohol smell softens into something sweet and mellow.
  5. Build the sauce: Add chicken broth, lemon juice, and zest. Simmer 3 minutes until slightly reduced. Drop pasta into boiling water simultaneously — angel hair cooks in 3–4 minutes, making this timing ideal.
  6. Butter finish: Reduce heat to low. Add remaining 3 tbsp cold butter one piece at a time, swirling the pan constantly. The cold butter emulsifies into the sauce — it will visibly thicken and turn glossy. Do not add butter while sauce is still at a rolling boil or it will split into greasy droplets rather than emulsifying cleanly.
  7. Finish pasta in sauce: Reserve pasta water, drain pasta 1 minute early. Add pasta directly to the sauce. Toss vigorously for 60 seconds — the pasta releases starch that completes the sauce’s consistency. Add pasta water 60ml at a time if sauce is too thick. Return chicken strips to pan. Toss to coat. Finish with fresh parsley. Serve immediately — scampi sauce breaks down if left to sit.
🔬 Meat Science Moment
Cutting chicken thighs into strips rather than pounding them flat exposes more surface area to the searing pan. More surface contact means more Maillard browning per unit of protein, which means the chicken strips contribute more caramelized flavor to the garlic butter sauce than an equivalent whole breast would.

Pro Cooking Tips

Use cold butter for the finish. Room-temperature or melted butter will not emulsify — it separates into oil and milk solids immediately. The temperature differential between cold butter and hot sauce creates the physical conditions for emulsification. Keep your finishing butter in the fridge until the moment you add it.

Don’t skip the pasta water. The starchy, salty water left after cooking pasta is one of the most functional ingredients in Italian cooking. Adding it to the sauce adjusts consistency, enhances sauce adherence, and adds sodium and starch that bind the entire dish together. For another approach to intensely flavored garlic chicken cooking, the honey BBQ chicken taco technique uses a similar method of building sauce in the same pan as the protein — worth reading alongside this recipe. For the definitive reference technique on butter emulsification in scampi, this chicken scampi breakdown explains the emulsification chemistry in detail.

💡 Emma’s Tip
If you don’t drink alcohol, substitute the white wine with an equal amount of chicken broth plus 1 tbsp white wine vinegar. The acidity the wine provides is essential to cut the butter richness — don’t just increase the broth without adding the acid component.

Recipe Variations

🌶️ Spicy Scampi

Double the red pepper flakes and add 1 tsp of Calabrian chili paste to the garlic butter stage. The chili oil blooms into the butter, distributing heat evenly through every strand of pasta. Finish with a drizzle of good olive oil for additional richness.

🥦 Primavera Scampi

Add asparagus tips, cherry tomatoes halved, and baby spinach to the sauce after the butter finish. The spinach wilts in 60 seconds; asparagus needs 2–3 minutes added alongside the wine reduction. This version reduces the calorie density significantly while adding fiber and sweetness.

🧀 Creamy Scampi

Add 120ml (½ cup) heavy cream after the wine reduction, before the butter finish. Reduce by a third before adding the cold butter. The cream adds richness and body — this version holds better as leftovers since the cream stabilizes the emulsion.

🍋 Lemon Caper Version

Add 2 tbsp capers (rinsed) and increase lemon juice to 3 tbsp. The capers add a briny, funky saltiness that echoes classic shrimp scampi and adds complexity without extra prep. Pair with linguine instead of angel hair for better caper distribution.

What to Serve With Chicken Scampi

  • Crusty sourdough or ciabatta — mandatory for mopping the garlic butter sauce from the bowl; this is non-negotiable
  • Simple Caesar salad — the anchovy-parmesan umami anchors the meal; the crisp romaine provides textural relief from the pasta
  • Dry white wine (Pinot Grigio, Vermentino) — mirrors the wine in the sauce, amplifying the garlic and lemon notes with each sip
  • Roasted cherry tomatoes — their concentrated acidity and sweetness provide the contrast the butter-heavy sauce needs
  • Shaved parmesan — aged parmesan on the finished dish adds crystalline salt pockets and umami depth without competing with the garlic flavor

Storage & Meal Prep

Best Immediately
Scampi sauce begins to break and separate within 30 minutes of completion. Angel hair absorbs the sauce and clumps rapidly. Serve this dish the moment it’s finished.
❄️
Refrigerator
Store leftovers up to 3 days in an airtight container. The pasta will clump. Reheat in a skillet with 3 tbsp chicken broth over medium-low, tossing to separate and re-emulsify the sauce.
🧄
Prep Ahead
Mince garlic, zest lemon, and measure all sauce components up to 24 hours ahead. Store in small covered bowls. The cook time drops to 15 minutes with this mise en place approach.

Nutritional Information

Per serving (approx. 300g plated portion with pasta and chicken):

NutrientAmount% Daily Value
Calories640 kcal32%
Total Fat28g36%
Saturated Fat13g65%
Protein42g84%
Total Carbohydrates58g21%
Dietary Fiber2g7%
Sugars2g
Sodium720mg31%

Common Mistakes to Avoid

01
Browning the garlic

Garlic has a narrow window between perfectly golden (sweet, nutty, complex) and burnt (bitter, acrid, dish-ruining). Cook it over medium heat with constant stirring and remove from heat immediately if it starts to darken past golden at the edges.

02
Adding hot butter for the finish

Hot butter separates into fat and milk solids — it doesn’t emulsify. Always use cold butter, added in small pieces, while the pan is off high heat. Swirling the pan continuously creates the emulsification motion.

03
Not reserving pasta water

Pasta water is the sauce adjuster, binder, and salt supplement in one. Pouring it down the drain before you remember you needed it is one of the most common and costly cooking mistakes in Italian-style pasta dishes.

04
Cooking pasta fully before adding to sauce

Fully cooked pasta won’t absorb the sauce — it sits on top instead of integrating. Undercooking by 1 minute and finishing in the sauce creates a unified dish where pasta and sauce are inseparable.

FAQs

Can I use chicken breast instead of thighs?

Yes — cut breast into strips and reduce sear time to 2–2.5 minutes per side. Pull at 74°C / 165°F internal and remove immediately. Breast dries out faster than thigh at high heat, so precision with temperature is more critical here.

What white wine should I use?

Dry whites with good acidity: Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, Vermentino. Avoid sweet wines (Riesling, Moscato) — their residual sugar creates a cloying sweetness in the sauce. The wine should be something you’d happily drink; cooking concentrates its character.

Why did my sauce break and turn greasy?

The two most common causes: butter added to a sauce that’s still at a rolling boil, or butter added all at once rather than gradually. If your sauce breaks, remove from heat, add 2 tbsp cold water or cold pasta water, and whisk vigorously — this often rescues the emulsification.

Is chicken scampi the same as shrimp scampi?

Scampi is a preparation style — garlic, butter, white wine, lemon — originally applied to langoustines in Italy. The American Italian-American tradition expanded it to shrimp, and chicken scampi follows the same sauce formula using chicken as the protein. The technique and sauce are identical; only the protein changes.

Weeknight Dinner Sorted

Pin this chicken scampi recipe for your next garlic butter pasta night — ready in 25 minutes, tastes like a restaurant.

📌 Save to Pinterest
Chicken Scampi Recipe — Garlic Butter Pasta Ready in 25 Minutes

Chicken Scampi Recipe — Garlic Butter Pasta Ready in 25 Minutes

A 25-minute Italian-American recipe for chicken scampi with garlic butter sauce, served with angel hair pasta.

Prep time8 mins
Cook time17 mins
Total25 mins
Servings 4 servings
Course Main Course
Cuisine Italian-American
Calories 640
Quantities:
  • 700g g boneless, skinless chicken thighs cut into 3cm strips
  • salt to season
  • coarse black pepper to season
  • 6 tbsp tbsp high-quality unsalted butter divided
  • 8 garlic cloves minced (approximately 3 tbsp)
  • 1/2 tsp tsp red pepper flakes
  • 180ml ml dry white wine (Pinot Grigio or Sauvignon Blanc)
  • 180ml ml low-sodium chicken broth
  • 2 tbsp tbsp fresh lemon juice
  • 1 tsp tsp lemon zest
  • 3 tbsp tbsp fresh flat-leaf parsley roughly chopped
  • salt to taste
  • white pepper to taste
  • 400g g angel hair pasta or linguine
  • heavily salted boiling water
  • 240ml ml reserved pasta water do not skip this

Start pasta water

1

Bring a large pot of water to boil. Salt heavily. While water heats, prep all other components.

Sear chicken strips

2

Pat chicken dry. Season generously with salt and pepper. Heat olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a large skillet over medium-high until butter foam subsides. Add chicken in a single layer — do not crowd. Sear 3 minutes per side until golden and cooked through. Internal temp: 74°C / 165°F. Remove and tent loosely with foil.

Toast the garlic

3

Reduce heat to medium. Add 2 tbsp butter. Add minced garlic and red pepper flakes. Cook, stirring constantly, 60–90 seconds until fragrant and just golden at the edges — never brown.

Deglaze with wine

4

Pour in white wine. Use a wooden spoon to scrape all browned bits from the pan bottom — that's flavor. Simmer 2 minutes until wine reduces by half and the sharp alcohol smell softens into something sweet and mellow.

Build the sauce

5

Add chicken broth, lemon juice, and zest. Simmer 3 minutes until slightly reduced. Drop pasta into boiling water simultaneously — angel hair cooks in 3–4 minutes, making this timing ideal.

Butter finish

6

Reduce heat to low. Add remaining 3 tbsp cold butter one piece at a time, swirling the pan constantly. The cold butter emulsifies into the sauce — it will visibly thicken and turn glossy.

Finish pasta in sauce

7

Reserve pasta water, drain pasta 1 minute early. Add pasta directly to the sauce. Toss vigorously for 60 seconds — the pasta releases starch that completes the sauce's consistency. Add pasta water 60ml at a time if sauce is too thick. Return chicken strips to pan. Toss to coat. Finish with fresh parsley. Serve immediately — scampi sauce breaks down if left to sit.

  • large pot
  • large skillet
Serving300g plated portion with pasta and chicken
Calories640 kcal
Carbohydrates58g
Protein42g
Fat28g
Saturated Fat13g
Sodium720mg
Fiber2g
Sugar2g

This recipe uses generous amounts of good butter, properly browned garlic, and dry white wine deglazed into a glossy, silky pan sauce.

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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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February 20, 2026

One skillet. A handful of simple ingredients. Thirty minutes on the clock. And somehow… I ended up with the crispiest, most comforting cornbeef hash recipe I’ve made in years.

I wasn’t expecting much—just a quick, no-fuss meal. But that first bite? Crispy edges, tender potatoes, smoky corned beef, a little kick of pepper. It tasted like something straight off a cozy diner griddle.

Honestly, it caught me off guard—in the best way. Here’s why this simple skillet completely won me over.

Georgiana

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.

Read full bio →

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