There are dishes that define comfort food in the most elemental, satisfying way—and Chicken Stroganoff is one of them. Tender, golden-seared chicken breast simmered in a rich, paprika-spiced mushroom and onion sauce, finished with a generous stir of sour cream that transforms everything into something silky, tangy, and deeply luxurious. It’s a dish that feels both familiar and a little bit special every single time it hits the table, and it comes together in one pan in about thirty minutes. That’s a combination that’s genuinely hard to beat on a weeknight.
From a recipe development standpoint, what I find most compelling about this dish is the technique packed into what appears to be a straightforward pan sauce. The flour-and-paprika roux built directly in the mushroom and onion fond is the step that gives the sauce its body and its characteristic warm, slightly smoky depth. The gradual addition of chicken broth while stirring continuously is the technique that produces a silky, lump-free gravy rather than a starchy, uneven sauce. And the sour cream, added only in the final five minutes off aggressive heat, is the finishing touch that transforms the whole thing from a good pan sauce into something genuinely extraordinary.
It’s the kind of cooking I find most satisfying to develop and teach—straightforward technique applied with intention, producing results that feel far more impressive than the process suggests.
The Inspiration Behind This Recipe
This recipe was inspired by the classic Beef Stroganoff—one of the great dishes of Russian culinary tradition and one of the most beloved comfort food classics in the international repertoire. The original, built on tender strips of beef in a mustard and sour cream sauce, has inspired countless variations across generations of home cooks worldwide. This chicken version takes the essential spirit of the original—the paprika-spiced sauce, the mushrooms, the signature sour cream finish—and translates it into a lighter, equally satisfying format built around chicken breast.
The choice of chicken over beef was driven by both accessibility and flavor. Chicken breast, when properly seared and then gently simmered in a flavorful broth, becomes incredibly tender and absorbs the surrounding sauce beautifully—producing a finished dish that’s rich, satisfying, and deeply flavored without the cost or preparation requirements of the beef original. The paprika adds that warm, slightly smoky character that defines the Stroganoff flavor profile regardless of the protein used.
It’s a recipe that honors the classic while making it genuinely its own—a weeknight version of a beloved dish that delivers all of the satisfaction of the original with a lighter, more accessible approach.
A Brief History of Stroganoff
Beef Stroganoff has one of the most celebrated origin stories in Russian culinary history, widely attributed to the household of Count Pavel Stroganov—a prominent nineteenth-century Russian aristocrat whose family name the dish bears. The original recipe, believed to have been created by the Count’s French chef, featured sautéed beef in a simple mustard and sour cream sauce that reflected the French culinary influence prevalent in aristocratic Russian kitchens of the era.
The dish gained international recognition through the twentieth century as Russian cuisine spread globally, appearing on restaurant menus and in home kitchens across Europe, America, and beyond. In the United States, Beef Stroganoff became a beloved dinner party and weeknight staple throughout the mid-twentieth century, often served over egg noodles and adapted with locally available ingredients and American pantry staples.
The countless variations that have evolved from the original—including this chicken version—reflect the dish’s fundamental adaptability and the universal appeal of its core flavor profile: a rich, creamy, slightly tangy sauce with mushrooms and warm spice that works beautifully with virtually any protein it accompanies.
Why This One-Pan Method Works
Building the entire dish in a single pan is both practical and fundamentally important to the finished flavor. Every step in this recipe adds a new layer to the same pan, and each layer picks up and builds on everything that came before it. The golden fond left behind after searing the chicken is the first flavor deposit—caramelized chicken proteins that season everything that follows. The butter, mushrooms, and onions cooked in that fond absorb and amplify those chicken flavors while adding their own earthy, sweet character.
The roux built directly in that same pan—flour and paprika cooked briefly in the rendered fats—is what gives the sauce its body and its characteristic warm color. Deglazing with chicken broth lifts every bit of the accumulated fond from the pan bottom, incorporating all of that concentrated flavor into the sauce in a single, satisfying step. Returning the chicken to this deeply developed sauce for a final simmer allows it to finish cooking while absorbing all of those surrounding flavors.
The sour cream, stirred in only after the heat is reduced significantly, melts smoothly into the sauce without curdling—producing the silky, tangy finish that defines great Stroganoff.
Flavor Profile: What to Expect
Every element of this dish contributes to a rich, layered, deeply satisfying flavor experience:
Golden, tender chicken breast with a lightly seared exterior that adds savory depth and absorbs the surrounding sauce beautifully throughout the simmer
Earthy, deeply flavored mushrooms that amplify the umami character of the dish and add a meaty, satisfying texture that carries through every bite
Sweet, softened onion and fragrant garlic that form the aromatic foundation of the sauce and provide a subtle depth woven through every element
Warm, slightly smoky paprika that adds a gentle heat and a characteristic color to the sauce that immediately signals the Stroganoff flavor profile
Rich, savory chicken broth that forms the backbone of the pan sauce and carries all of the above flavors in a full-bodied, deeply satisfying base
Silky, tangy sour cream that transforms the sauce in the final moments into something luxurious, creamy, and deeply comforting in every bite
The overall effect is warm, indulgent, and deeply satisfying—a dish that manages to feel both homey and genuinely impressive at the same time.
Tips for Making the Best Chicken Stroganoff
A few key techniques produce consistently outstanding results:
Sear the chicken properly: Don’t move the chicken during the first few minutes in the pan. A proper golden sear develops the fond that flavors the entire sauce—skipping or rushing this step produces a noticeably flatter result.
Slice the chicken before returning to the sauce: Rather than returning whole breasts to the pan, slicing or cutting the chicken into pieces before the final simmer allows the sauce to coat and flavor every surface of the meat more completely.
Cook the flour fully: The one-minute cook of the flour and paprika in the pan fat is essential for eliminating the raw flour taste. Don’t rush past this step.
Add broth gradually: Pouring all the broth in at once risks a lumpy sauce. A slow, steady pour while stirring continuously produces the smoothest, most cohesive result.
Reduce heat before adding sour cream: This is the most critical technique in the recipe. High heat causes sour cream to curdle and separate. Reducing to a gentle simmer before stirring it in ensures a perfectly smooth, silky finish every time.
Taste before serving: The sour cream adds a tangy dimension that can shift the seasoning balance slightly. Always taste and adjust salt and pepper after adding it.
Serving Suggestions and Side Pairings
This Stroganoff is rich and sauce-forward, making it ideal for pairing with sides that absorb and showcase that incredible creamy paprika sauce:
Egg noodles—wide, buttered, and slightly chewy—as the most classic and fitting accompaniment that carries the sauce beautifully in every forkful
Creamy mashed potatoes for a hearty, crowd-pleasing pairing that soaks up every drop of the mushroom cream sauce
Steamed white rice for a lighter, neutral base that lets the bold sauce take center stage
Roasted or steamed green beans, asparagus, or broccoli for a clean vegetable contrast to the richness of the cream sauce
Warm, crusty bread for scooping up every last drop of the sauce from the pan—highly recommended and entirely necessary
Storage, Reheating, and Make-Ahead Tips
This dish stores and reheats beautifully with a little care around the sour cream component.
Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 3 days—the sauce thickens as it chills and the flavors continue to deepen overnight.
Reheat gently on the stovetop over low heat with a splash of chicken broth to loosen the sauce. Avoid high heat, which can cause the sour cream to separate.
The mushroom and onion base can be made up to 2 days in advance and refrigerated, making weeknight assembly significantly faster.
Avoid freezing the finished dish with sour cream incorporated, as dairy-based sauces tend to separate upon thawing—though the base without sour cream freezes well for up to 2 months.
Why This Recipe Deserves a Spot in Your Rotation
Chicken Stroganoff earns its permanent place in the weeknight rotation by delivering one of the most deeply satisfying, one-pan comfort food experiences achievable in thirty minutes. It’s a dish that impresses without demanding anything technically challenging, that feels genuinely special without requiring special ingredients, and that produces the kind of warm, creamy, deeply flavorful result that makes people genuinely look forward to dinner. Elegant enough for guests, practical enough for any Tuesday, and delicious enough to request again and again—this is weeknight cooking at its most rewarding.
Once you’ve made it, it becomes the one-pan dinner you reach for every time you need something reliable, impressive, and deeply satisfying.
Recommended Drink Pairing
The rich, paprika-forward, sour cream-finished character of this dish calls for a wine with enough body and complementary depth to stand alongside its luxurious sauce. A medium-bodied Hungarian Furmint or an Austrian Grüner Veltliner is the most fitting and inspired choice—both wines have a natural affinity for paprika-spiced dishes and enough acidity to cut through the sour cream beautifully. A lightly oaked Chardonnay or a dry Alsatian Pinot Gris also works wonderfully for a more widely available option.
For non-alcoholic options, a sparkling water with lemon, a chilled white grape and elderflower spritzer, or a warm chamomile tea with honey all provide a clean, refreshing contrast to the warm, creamy richness of this deeply satisfying dish.
Chicken Stroganoff
Recipe by Benjamin BrownTender seared chicken and earthy mushrooms in a silky, paprika-spiced sour cream sauce—one pan, thirty minutes, pure comfort food.
4
servings15
minutes30
minutes450
kcal45
minutesIngredients
500 g chicken breast
2 tbsp olive oil
1 cup sliced mushrooms
1 onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup chicken broth
1 cup sour cream
2 tbsp flour
1 tbsp butter
1 tsp paprika
1 tsp salt
0.5 tsp pepper
Directions
- Heat olive oil in a large pan over medium heat. Add chicken breasts and cook until browned.
- Remove chicken from pan and set aside. In the same pan, add butter, mushrooms, and onions.
- Cook until mushrooms are tender and onions are translucent. Add garlic and cook for another minute.
- Stir in flour and paprika, cook for 1 minute. Gradually add chicken broth, stirring constantly.
- Return chicken to pan, simmer for 15 minutes or until chicken is fully cooked.
- Stir in sour cream, salt, and pepper. Simmer for an additional 5 minutes.
- Serve warm, garnished as 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
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.”













