One Pot Chicken Alfredo Pasta (Creamy, No Stress, One Pan)

one pot chicken alfredo pasta served in pan with creamy sauce natural light

Some days you don’t want to cook. You just want something warm, creamy, and done fast.

This is exactly that. Everything goes into one pan, the pasta cooks right in the sauce, and somehow it turns into something that tastes like you tried harder than you did.

And the best part? No pile of dishes staring at you after.


Quick Info

Difficulty: Easy
Time: ~20 minutes
Servings: 3

ingredients for one pot chicken alfredo pasta on light wooden table bright natural light
Bright, simple, and ready to go—nothing complicated, just everything you need laid out in one place.

Ingredients

one pot chicken alfredo pasta served in pan with creamy sauce natural light
Slightly messy, still steaming, and exactly how it looks right before everyone starts eating.

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Chicken Cobb Salad Recipe – Fresh, Healthy & Easy to Make
Creamy One Pan “Marry Me” Chicken Pasta (Rich, Cozy, Actually Easy)

Instructions

  1. Season the chicken with salt and pepper, then cook it in a large pan with olive oil until golden on both sides. You don’t need to cook it all the way through—just get that color. Set it aside and don’t clean the pan.
  2. In the same pan, add garlic, then pour in milk and chicken broth. Bring it to a gentle simmer and add the pasta straight in. Yes, dry pasta. It feels wrong, but it works.
  3. Let it cook, stirring occasionally so it doesn’t stick. The liquid will slowly reduce and thicken as the pasta cooks. This is where it all starts coming together—don’t walk away too long here.
  4. Once the pasta is just about done, lower the heat and add cream and parmesan. Stir until it turns smooth and glossy. Adding dairy at the end is what keeps the sauce silky instead of heavy or gluey.
  5. Slice the chicken and add it back in, letting everything sit together for a minute so the flavors blend.
  6. If it looks too thick, add a splash of milk. Too thin? Let it sit for a minute—it thickens fast.

Tips

The trick here isn’t ingredients—it’s timing.
Cooking pasta in liquid first, then adding cream at the end keeps the sauce smooth instead of heavy and sticky.

That one detail changes everything.


FAQ

Does pasta really cook in milk + broth?
Yes—and it absorbs all that flavor instead of just water.

Can I use other pasta shapes?
Yep. Just keep an eye on liquid levels—some need more.

Is this authentic Alfredo?
Not really. But it’s faster, easier, and honestly… that’s the point.

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About Agnes

Hi, I’m Agnes, the creator of Quick Easy Home Recipes. I love sharing simple everyday meals, practical cooking tips, and quick recipes made with basic ingredients for busy home kitchens. My goal is to make cooking at home easier and more enjoyable.

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