Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

Healthy Fact of the Day

Slow cooking chicken breast in liquid rather than roasting or frying preserves maximum moisture and produces a protein that is genuinely tender without any added fat beyond what's already in the sauce. Using chicken broth as part of the liquid base adds savory depth with a fraction of the sodium of additional cream, keeping this indulgent-tasting dish more balanced than it appears.

There is a category of recipe that exists at the intersection of genuine comfort and genuine ease—the kind that asks almost nothing of you and delivers something that feels deeply considered in return. Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta lives in that category, and it earns its place there emphatically. Chicken breast braised in a creamy, herb-seasoned chicken and cream sauce for hours until it falls apart and shreds effortlessly, then combined with cooked pasta and finished with Parmesan until the whole thing becomes rich, cohesive, and deeply satisfying. It is the definition of a set-it-and-forget-it dinner that doesn’t taste like one.

The cream of chicken soup is the ingredient that makes this recipe work so efficiently. Combined with heavy cream and chicken broth, it creates a sauce that has body, richness, and a quiet savory depth from the start—a foundation that the chicken spends hours seasoning further with its own rendered juices. By the time the chicken is shredded and returned to the pot, the sauce has absorbed the flavor of the chicken completely, producing something more unified and complex than a sauce made in twenty minutes could ever be. The Parmesan stirred in at the finish adds salt, nuttiness, and the slight grainy richness that elevates the whole dish into something that tastes genuinely restaurant-adjacent.

The dried basil, garlic powder, and onion powder in the sauce are the aromatic backbone that keeps this from tasting purely of cream and chicken—they add herbal warmth, a mellow garlic presence, and the sweet, savory onion note that grounds the richness and makes every bite taste layered rather than one-dimensional. This is slow cooker pasta that justifies the slow cooker.

The Inspiration Behind This Recipe

This recipe was inspired by the practical elegance of Italian-American cream pasta dishes—the creamy, Parmesan-enriched sauces that have defined American casual Italian cooking for decades—recast in a slow cooker format that makes them genuinely achievable on any weeknight without standing at the stove. The basil and Parmesan connect this clearly to that Italian-American tradition while the cream of chicken base and slow cooker method acknowledge that great comfort food and practical weeknight cooking are not mutually exclusive.

A Brief History of Slow Cooker Pasta Dishes

Slow cooker pasta dishes represent one of the most creative evolutions of the slow cooker’s original purpose. The slow cooker was designed for braises and stews—preparations where long, gentle heat was the point. Pasta, which cooks in minutes, seems at first like a poor fit. The resolution, discovered by home cooks across decades of experimentation, is to use the slow cooker for the sauce and the protein while cooking the pasta separately—then combining them in the final stage, where the pasta absorbs the fully developed sauce in a way that produces a more cohesive, deeply flavored finished dish than a stovetop pasta would achieve in a fraction of the time.

This recipe uses that method to its fullest advantage: six hours on low to develop the sauce and fully cook and flavor the chicken, then a final combination with pasta and Parmesan that takes advantage of every hour of flavor development that preceded it.

Why This Method Produces Such a Satisfying Sauce

The slow cooker’s value in this recipe is the time it gives the chicken to contribute to its own sauce. Chicken breast, cooked in liquid for six hours on low, breaks down its proteins gradually, releasing collagen and natural gelatin into the surrounding cream and broth. Those compounds enrich the sauce with body and a silkiness that the cream of chicken soup alone could not achieve—producing a finished sauce that coats the pasta with the kind of coating richness usually associated with restaurant preparations.

The shredding and return step is equally important: shredded chicken mixed back into a fully developed cream sauce absorbs far more of the sauce’s flavor than sliced or cubed chicken would, producing an integrated result where the chicken and sauce are inseparable rather than simply combined.

Flavor Profile: What to Expect

Every element of this dish contributes to a rich, cohesive, deeply comforting eating experience:

  • Rich, silky cream sauce built from cream of chicken, heavy cream, and broth that has been enriched by six hours of chicken juices
  • Tender, flavorful shredded chicken that has absorbed the surrounding sauce completely and distributes evenly through every serving
  • Herbal, aromatic basil that adds a warm, slightly sweet Italian-American character throughout
  • Mellow garlic and onion that provide the savory, rounded aromatic base beneath the richer flavors
  • Sharp, nutty Parmesan stirred in at the finish that adds salt, depth, and a slight granular richness that elevates the sauce
  • Perfectly cooked pasta that absorbs the cream sauce and carries the full flavor profile through every forkful

The overall effect is rich, creamy, savory, and deeply satisfying—slow cooker pasta that tastes like genuine effort.

Tips for Making the Best Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

These details will produce a consistently excellent result:

  • Use full-fat ingredients: Full-fat cream of chicken soup and heavy cream produce a noticeably richer, more cohesive sauce than reduced-fat alternatives, which can break during the long cook.
  • Cook pasta to al dente, not beyond: The pasta will continue absorbing sauce when mixed into the slow cooker. Pulling it slightly undercooked prevents mushiness in the finished dish.
  • Shred chicken while warm: Warm chicken pulls apart easily and evenly. Cold chicken resists shredding and can become stringy.
  • Stir Parmesan in off direct heat: Remove the slow cooker insert from heat before adding the Parmesan. Direct heat can cause the cheese to clump rather than melt smoothly into the sauce.
  • Taste before serving: The cream of chicken and broth both contribute salt. Taste the sauce after adding the Parmesan and adjust seasoning only if needed—it may not need any additional salt at all.

Serving Suggestions and Side Pairings

This pasta is a complete, hearty meal that pairs beautifully with simple sides:

  • Warm garlic bread or dinner rolls for scooping up the cream sauce
  • A crisp Caesar or arugula salad with lemon vinaigrette to cut through the richness
  • Roasted broccolini or steamed green beans for a fresh, simple vegetable contrast
  • Extra Parmesan and cracked black pepper at the table for finishing

Storage, Reheating, and Make-Ahead Tips

  • Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The sauce thickens considerably as it chills.
  • Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of chicken broth or cream to restore the sauce consistency. Stir frequently to prevent sticking.
  • This dish does not freeze well due to the cream sauce separating and the pasta texture changing after freezing.

Why This Recipe Deserves a Spot in Your Rotation

Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta earns its permanent rotation spot as the weeknight dinner that requires nothing from you and delivers something genuinely satisfying in return. It’s the recipe you start before work and come home to without having to think about anything else—a complete, crowd-pleasing dinner that is waiting for you, fully developed and deeply flavorful, the moment you walk in the door.

Recommended Drink Pairing

The rich, creamy Parmesan sauce calls for a wine with enough acidity to cut through cleanly. A Pinot Grigio or a lightly oaked Chardonnay is the natural companion—clean, slightly citrusy, and structured enough to balance the cream without overpowering the delicate basil and Parmesan. For cocktails, The Perfect French 75 brings sparkling citrus elegance that plays beautifully alongside any cream pasta.

For non-alcoholic options, sparkling water with lemon or a cold, lightly herbed Italian soda keeps the palate refreshed and complementary throughout the meal.

Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

Recipe by Benjamin Brown

Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta braises chicken in a rich cream of chicken, heavy cream, and herb sauce for hours until fall-apart tender, then combines it with pasta and Parmesan for a deeply satisfying, creamy weeknight dinner that practically makes itself.o your home oven.

Course: MainCuisine: ItalianDifficulty: Easy
0.0 from 0 votes
Servings

6

servings
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

4

hours 
Calories

450

kcal

4

hours 

15

minutes

    Ingredients

    • 1 pound chicken breast

    • 2 cups chicken broth

    • 1 can cream of chicken soup

    • 1 cup heavy cream

    • 1 teaspoon garlic powder

    • 1 teaspoon onion powder

    • 1 teaspoon dried basil

    • 0.5 teaspoon salt

    • 0.25 teaspoon black pepper

    • 1 package pasta

    • 1 cup Parmesan cheese

    Directions

    • Place chicken breast in the slow cooker.
    • Add chicken broth, cream of chicken soup, and heavy cream to the crock.
    • Stir in garlic powder, onion powder, dried basil, salt, and pepper.
    • Cover and cook on high for 3 hours or low for 6 hours.
    • Remove chicken, shred it, and return it to the slow cooker.
    • Cook pasta according to package instructions.
    • Mix pasta into the slow cooker mixture.
    • Stir in Parmesan cheese until melted and fully incorporated.
    • Serve hot, garnished with extra Parmesan if desired.

    Nutrition Facts

    • Total number of serves: 4
    • Calories: 450kcal
    • Cholesterol: 0mg
    • Sodium: 620mg
    • Potassium: 400mg
    • Sugar: 8g
    • Protein: 6g
    • Calcium: 60mg
    • Iron: 2mg

    About This Author

    Benjamin Brown

    Benjamin Brown

    Recipe Developer

    Benjamin is our flavor engineer. A classically trained chef turned recipe developer, he’s obsessed with balancing taste, texture, and creativity. He ensures that every recipe we publish is not only delicious but also reliable, approachable, and repeatable — even for beginners.

    Favorite dish: Slow-braised short ribs with red wine reduction.
    Kitchen motto: “Cooking is part science, part soul.”

    0.0 from 0 votes

    Recent Recipes

    The Summer Kitchen Without a Recipe: Learning

    • July 15, 2026
    • 10 min read

    Cheesy Garlic Butter Mushroom Stuffed Chicken

    • July 15, 2026
    • 12 min read

    Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

    • July 15, 2026
    • 7 min read

    McDonald’s Is Bringing Caesar Back — In

    • July 14, 2026
    • 3 min read

    Bang Bang Shrimp Tacos

    • July 14, 2026
    • 10 min read

    The Picnic Reimagined: Food Worth Eating Outside

    • July 14, 2026
    • 11 min read

    Grilled Southwest Burger with Chipotle Mayo

    • July 14, 2026
    • 8 min read

    Burger King Just Gave Its 47-Year-Old Chicken

    • July 13, 2026
    • 3 min read

    Margarita Dip with Salted Pretzels

    • July 13, 2026
    • 12 min read

    The Noodle Bowl and the Infinite Variations

    • July 13, 2026
    • 10 min read

    Tip of the Day

    “Always let your meat rest before slicing.”

    Whether you're roasting a chicken, grilling steak, or baking pork tenderloin, letting cooked meat rest for 5–10 minutes before slicing allows the juices to redistribute evenly. This simple step keeps your meat juicy and tender, ensuring every bite is flavorful and moist. Bonus: It gives you a moment to plate your sides or garnish for a perfect presentation!

    Our Latest Recipes

    Blog
    Daily Disher

    The Summer Kitchen Without a Recipe: Learning to Cook by Feel

    Research on cooking confidence and dietary behavior consistently shows that cooks who feel comfortable improvising in the kitchen — who can produce a meal without following a specific recipe — cook from scratch more frequently, use more whole ingredients, and consume more vegetables than those who cook only when they have a specific recipe to follow. The ability to cook by feel is, in nutritional terms, one of the most significant skills a home cook can develop — because it removes the barrier of recipe dependency and allows the cook to respond to whatever is fresh, seasonal, and available rather than planning around what a recipe specifies.

    Read More »
    Chicken Recipes
    Benjamin Brown

    Cheesy Garlic Butter Mushroom Stuffed Chicken

    Mushrooms are one of the richest plant sources of ergothioneine, a powerful antioxidant linked to cellular protection—use part-skim mozzarella or Swiss cheese and reduce butter slightly for a lighter version that maintains incredible flavor.

    Read More »
    Chicken Recipes
    Benjamin Brown

    Slow Cooker Chicken Pasta

    Slow cooking chicken breast in liquid rather than roasting or frying preserves maximum moisture and produces a protein that is genuinely tender without any added fat beyond what’s already in the sauce. Using chicken broth as part of the liquid base adds savory depth with a fraction of the sodium of additional cream, keeping this indulgent-tasting dish more balanced than it appears.

    Read More »

    Get your daily dose of delicious!

    Skip to content