Some recipes feel like they were invented specifically for the kind of evening when comfort is the only thing on the menu—and Chicken Pot Pie Pasta is exactly that recipe. It takes everything warm, creamy, and deeply satisfying about a classic chicken pot pie and delivers it in a format that comes together in about twenty minutes without a single pie crust to roll or a baking dish to wait on. It’s the weeknight answer to one of the most beloved comfort food cravings in the American kitchen, and it never once feels like a compromise.
I’ve always believed that the best comfort food recipes are the ones that honor the spirit of a classic while making it genuinely achievable on any given night of the week. Chicken pot pie, as wonderful as it is, belongs to the weekend. This pasta belongs to Tuesday. The creamy, thyme-scented béchamel-style sauce coats every piece of penne and every tender piece of chicken and vegetable in a way that delivers that familiar, cozy pot pie flavor completely and satisfyingly—no pastry required.
What makes this recipe so special to me is how honestly it captures the essence of chicken pot pie. The thyme, the mixed vegetables, the creamy sauce built from butter, flour, broth, and milk—every element is there, just rearranged into a format that respects the reality of a busy weeknight schedule. Soul-warming, crowd-pleasing, and endlessly comforting.
The Inspiration Behind This Recipe
This recipe was inspired by a simple but powerful idea: what if you could have chicken pot pie on a Wednesday? The classic pot pie is one of the great American comfort food dishes—a golden, flaky pastry shell filled with creamy chicken and vegetable filling that has been warming people from the inside out for generations. But the reality of making a proper pot pie from scratch on a weeknight is rarely practical, and the frozen versions, while convenient, never quite capture the homemade quality that makes the dish so memorable.
Translating those beloved flavors into a pasta format felt like an obvious and exciting solution. Penne is the ideal shape here—its hollow tubes and ridged exterior capture the creamy sauce beautifully, delivering a concentrated hit of that pot pie flavor in every single forkful. The roux-based sauce is a direct nod to the classic pot pie filling, built from the same foundational technique but adapted to coat pasta rather than fill a pastry shell.
It’s a recipe born from a genuine love of comfort food and a practical commitment to making great cooking accessible every single night of the week.
A Brief History of Chicken Pot Pie
Chicken pot pie has deep roots in both European and American culinary history. Meat pies—savory fillings encased in pastry—have been a staple of English and French cooking for centuries, and early American colonists brought those traditions with them to the New World where they were adapted using locally available ingredients. By the nineteenth century, pot pies filled with chicken, vegetables, and a creamy gravy had become a beloved fixture of American home cooking across all regions.
The dish gained even wider popularity in the mid-twentieth century when frozen pot pies became one of the first commercially successful convenience foods, cementing the chicken pot pie’s place as one of the most iconic comfort food dishes in American culinary culture. The combination of tender chicken, mixed vegetables, and creamy, thyme-scented sauce under a golden pastry crust has remained essentially unchanged across generations—a testament to how perfectly the flavors work together.
This pasta version represents the latest chapter in that long, delicious evolution—the same beloved flavors adapted once again for the practical realities of modern home cooking.
Why This Cooking Method Works
The roux-based sauce at the heart of this recipe is the same foundational technique that makes classic pot pie filling so satisfying. Cooking butter and flour together before adding the liquid is a deliberate step that accomplishes two critical things: it eliminates the raw flour taste and creates a stable emulsion that thickens the broth and milk into a smooth, velvety sauce without lumps or separation. This one-minute cook of the roux is short but essential—skipping it produces a sauce that tastes starchy rather than creamy.
Adding the broth and milk gradually while whisking continuously is the technique that keeps the sauce perfectly smooth throughout the thickening process. Starting with just a small amount of liquid and whisking vigorously before adding more gives the roux time to fully incorporate before the sauce becomes too thin to control.
Folding in the chicken, vegetables, and pasta at the very end—rather than cooking them in the sauce—preserves their texture and ensures the sauce remains at the right consistency rather than being thinned out by the moisture released from prolonged cooking.
Flavor Profile: What to Expect
This pasta delivers the warm, familiar, deeply comforting flavor profile of classic chicken pot pie in every bite:
Rich, creamy sauce with the body and velvety texture of a classic pot pie filling that coats every piece of pasta beautifully
Savory, herby thyme that is the defining aromatic note of chicken pot pie and the flavor that ties every element of this dish together immediately
Mild garlic powder warmth that adds a quiet, savory depth woven through the entire sauce without competing with the thyme
Tender diced chicken that provides satisfying protein and soaks up the creamy sauce in every bite
Sweet mixed vegetables—carrots, peas, corn, and green beans—that add color, freshness, and that quintessential pot pie flavor combination
Hearty penne that carries the sauce beautifully and makes every forkful as satisfying and substantial as a proper comfort food dinner should be
The overall effect is warm, creamy, and deeply nostalgic—a bowl that tastes exactly like comfort feels.
Tips for Making the Best Chicken Pot Pie Pasta
A few small but important details elevate this simple recipe significantly:
Don’t rush the roux: The full one minute of cooking the butter and flour together before adding liquid is essential. This is what eliminates the raw flour taste and produces a sauce that’s creamy rather than starchy.
Add liquid gradually: Pouring all the broth and milk in at once risks a lumpy sauce. Add it in a slow, steady stream while whisking continuously for the smoothest possible result.
Use rotisserie chicken: Store-bought rotisserie chicken is the ultimate time-saving shortcut here and adds a deeper, more developed flavor than plain cooked chicken breast.
Don’t overcook the sauce: Once the sauce has thickened to a consistency that coats the back of a spoon, add the remaining ingredients. Prolonged cooking can cause the dairy to break or the sauce to become too thick.
Reserve pasta water: A splash of starchy pasta cooking water stirred in at the end is an excellent tool for loosening the sauce to the perfect consistency if it thickens too much after the pasta is added.
Season generously with thyme: Thyme is the flavor that makes this dish taste unmistakably like chicken pot pie. Don’t be shy with it—it’s the soul of this recipe.
Serving Suggestions and Side Pairings
This pasta is hearty and complete as a standalone meal, but a few simple accompaniments round it out beautifully:
Warm, crusty bread or buttered biscuits for the most authentic pot pie experience possible—something to soak up every drop of that creamy sauce
A simple green salad with a light vinaigrette to provide a fresh, bright counterpoint to the richness of the cream sauce
Roasted asparagus or steamed broccoli for an additional vegetable element that complements the pot pie flavors naturally
A light soup to start—something broth-based that sets the stage for the creamy main without competing with it
Storage, Reheating, and Make-Ahead Tips
This pasta stores well and reheats beautifully with the right approach.
Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 3 days—the sauce thickens considerably as it chills, which is normal and easily corrected during reheating.
Reheat gently on the stovetop over low heat, adding a generous splash of chicken broth or milk to loosen the sauce back to a creamy, pourable consistency.
The sauce can be made up to 2 days in advance and refrigerated separately, with pasta cooked fresh at serving time for the best texture.
Avoid freezing the assembled dish, as the cream-based sauce can separate upon thawing—though the sauce base without pasta freezes reasonably well for up to 1 month.
Why This Recipe Deserves a Spot in Your Rotation
Chicken Pot Pie Pasta earns its place in regular rotation by delivering one of the most universally comforting flavor experiences in American home cooking in a format that asks almost nothing of the cook. It’s fast, deeply satisfying, and produces the kind of warm, creamy, thyme-scented dinner that makes everyone at the table slow down and actually enjoy their food. It’s proof that comfort food classics don’t need to be complicated to be genuinely wonderful—sometimes all they need is a little reimagining and the right pasta shape.
Once it’s in your repertoire, it becomes the recipe you reach for every time the weather turns and comfort is the only thing on the menu.
Recommended Drink Pairing
The warm, creamy, thyme-forward flavors of this pasta call for a wine with enough body to complement the richness of the sauce without overwhelming its gentle, comforting character. A lightly oaked Chardonnay is the ideal choice—its buttery notes and soft acidity echo the cream sauce beautifully while providing just enough structure to keep the pairing feeling balanced. A Viognier or white Burgundy also works wonderfully, its floral and herbal notes complementing the thyme in a particularly pleasing way.
For non-alcoholic options, a warm apple cider, a lightly sweetened chamomile tea, or a sparkling water with a squeeze of lemon all pair naturally with the cozy, homestyle character of this dish.
Chicken Pot Pie Pasta
Recipe by Amelia GraceAll the creamy, thyme-scented comfort of chicken pot pie tossed with penne pasta—weeknight comfort food, no pastry required.
4
servings15
minutes30
minutes550
kcal45
minutesIngredients
2 cups chicken breast, cooked and diced
8 oz penne pasta
1 cup chicken broth
1 cup milk
1 cup mixed vegetables, frozen
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp all-purpose flour
1 tsp salt
0.5 tsp black pepper
0.5 tsp thyme
0.5 tsp garlic powder
Directions
- Cook penne pasta according to package instructions; drain and set aside.
- In a large saucepan, melt butter over medium heat.
- Whisk in flour and cook for 1 minute until smooth.
- Gradually stir in chicken broth and milk, cooking until thickened.
- Add salt, pepper, thyme, and garlic powder, stirring to combine.
- Fold in cooked chicken, mixed vegetables, and pasta, heating through.
- Adjust seasoning to taste and serve hot.
Nutrition Facts
- Total number of serves: 4
- Calories: 550kcal
- Cholesterol: 0mg
- Sodium: 620mg
- Potassium: 400mg
- Sugar: 8g
- Protein: 6g
- Calcium: 60mg
- Iron: 2mg
About This Author

Amelia Grace
Editor-in-Chief & Culinary Director
The heart and guiding voice of Daily Dish, Amelia leads our editorial vision and recipe development. With a background in food journalism and over a decade spent in professional kitchens, she has a knack for blending gourmet technique with real-world accessibility. Her goal? To make every reader feel like a confident cook, one dish at a time.
Favorite dish: Creamy lemon risotto with a sprinkle of fresh thyme.
Kitchen motto: “Good food doesn’t have to be complicated — it just has to be made with heart.”













