

Ana
Ana is a Southern stay-at-home mom of three who bakes the way most people breathe — constantly, naturally, without making a fuss about it. She shows up at new neighbors’ doors with a tin of cookies before the boxes are even unpacked, and she has never once come home from a potluck with anything left in her dish. She Brings Food is where she puts the recipes her family counts on and her neighbors keep asking for.
10 Chicken Recipes We Make on Repeat in This House
Chicken is the workhorse of this kitchen. Not because it’s exciting — plain chicken breast is the beige of the meat world — but because it takes on whatever flavor you throw at it and feeds a family of six without requiring a second mortgage. I buy thighs in bulk, breasts when they’re on sale, and my freezer is 40% chicken at any given time.
What makes these different from “just another chicken dinner” is that every one has been requested by name. Not “can we have chicken” — that’s too vague. “Mama, can we have THAT chicken? The one with the cream cheese?” When a seven-year-old remembers a recipe by its sauce, you know it’s good.
The Chicken
Chicken Casserole
Chicken, rice, cream of mushroom, and frozen veggies that disappear into the creaminess. Comfort food that hides vegetables so well my kids have no idea they’re eating broccoli. One dish, one oven, zero negotiations at the dinner table.
Chicken Spaghetti
Velveeta, Rotel, cream of mushroom, and spaghetti — church supper food that is the first dish to empty at every potluck. Is it gourmet? Lord, no. Does everyone beg for the recipe? Every. Single. Time. The crockpot version is even easier.
Chicken Enchilada Casserole
Layers of tortillas, chicken, enchilada sauce, beans, and an irresponsible amount of cheese. Like enchiladas but without the rolling — a lazy lasagna, Tex-Mex style. My husband requests this every Taco Tuesday without fail.
Chicken and Dumplings
Southern comfort in a bowl. Tender chicken in creamy broth with pillowy biscuit dumplings that soak up everything. This is the recipe I make when somebody in this house has a bad day — it fixes things that words can’t.
Chicken Pot Pie
Flaky golden crust, creamy filling loaded with chicken, peas, carrots, and celery. That first crack of the fork through the top crust is pure satisfaction. More effort than most recipes here but the reward makes grown men misty-eyed.
Southern Fried Chicken
Buttermilk-brined, double-dredged, fried until the crust shatters when you bite in. Sunday dinner chicken that my mama made and her mama made before her. Some traditions you don’t mess with. The buttermilk brine is the step that separates good from legendary.
Baked Chicken Thighs
Honey, garlic, soy sauce — the sauce gets thick and sticky and my kids literally lick their plates. Thighs over breasts because they’re juicier, cheaper, and almost impossible to overcook. Serve over rice and call it a win. Total weeknight hero.
White Chicken Chili
The lighter, creamier cousin of regular chili. Chicken, white beans, green chiles, corn, cream cheese, and broth — thick, hearty, and restaurant-quality. Top with sour cream and crushed Fritos. I’m not sorry about the Fritos.
Stuffed Bell Peppers
Colorful peppers stuffed with seasoned chicken and rice, baked with a cheese cap that melts into golden bubbles. My kids eat around the pepper itself — I’ve accepted this. The filling is what matters and it’s absolutely delicious.
Tomato Soup
Homemade with roasted garlic and a heavy pour of cream at the end. Paired with grilled cheese, it’s the dinner that fixes everything — bad days, cold weather, existential crises. Leagues ahead of anything from a can, and ready in 30 minutes.
Ana’s Chicken Tips
Thighs over breasts for slow cooking. Breasts dry out after 4+ hours. Thighs stay juicy no matter what you do to them. They’re cheaper too.
Pound your breasts flat. Even thickness = even cooking. No more dry edges with a raw middle.
Brine everything. Even 30 minutes in salted water makes a difference. An hour makes it incredible. Overnight makes it transcendent.
Buy a meat thermometer. 165°F internal. Stop guessing. Stop cutting it open to check. The $12 thermometer pays for itself in one unsacrificed chicken breast.
Frequently Asked Questions
Best chicken cut for meal prep?
Thighs. They reheat better because the fat keeps them moist. Baked chicken thighs are my go-to meal prep protein — cook Sunday, eat all week.
Can I use rotisserie chicken?
For the casserole, chicken spaghetti, enchilada casserole, and white chicken chili — absolutely. Shred a store-bought rotisserie and save yourself 30 minutes.
Best chicken recipe for picky kids?
Chicken casserole wins every time — creamy, mild, no weird textures. Even my pickiest eater cleans the plate. Chicken spaghetti is a close second.
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Ana
Ana is a Southern stay-at-home mom of three who bakes the way most people breathe — constantly, naturally, without making a fuss about it. She shows up at new neighbors’ doors with a tin of cookies before the boxes are even unpacked, and she has never once come home from a potluck with anything left in her dish. She Brings Food is where she puts the recipes her family counts on and her neighbors keep asking for.















