Marry Me Chicken Tacos

Category: Dinner Recipes

Tender chicken, a silky pink tomato-cream sauce, and warm tortillas make these Marry Me Chicken Tacos the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The sauce clings to every piece of chicken instead of pooling on the plate, and the sun-dried tomatoes bring a deep, savory punch that keeps the filling from tasting flat. Wrapped in a soft tortilla, it lands somewhere between cozy comfort food and something you’d order at a nicer little bistro.

The key is building the sauce in the same skillet you used for the chicken. Those browned bits at the bottom carry a lot of flavor, and the broth loosens them just enough to turn them into part of the sauce. Heavy cream goes in after the heat comes down, which keeps the sauce smooth instead of greasy or broken. Fresh basil at the end keeps the whole thing bright, and a little Parmesan on top sharpens the richness without overpowering it.

If you’ve made creamy chicken before and had the sauce turn thin or grainy, the process below will help. There’s also a note on how to keep the tortillas from getting soggy if you’re serving these for a crowd.

The sauce coated the chicken perfectly and stayed creamy even after I spooned it into tortillas. I loved that the sun-dried tomatoes gave it enough depth that it didn’t taste like a basic cream sauce.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save these Marry Me Chicken Tacos for the night you want creamy chicken, fresh basil, and a sauce that clings to every tortilla.

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The Trick to Keeping the Sauce Creamy Instead of Broken

The biggest mistake with a tomato-cream skillet sauce is cranking the heat and rushing the dairy. Heavy cream thickens from reduction and gentle simmering, not from a hard boil. Once the broth and sun-dried tomatoes have had a chance to loosen the browned bits from the pan, the heat needs to come down before the cream goes in. That keeps the sauce smooth and glossy instead of greasy or separated.

Another thing that matters here is timing the chicken return. If it goes back into the skillet too early and simmers hard for too long, the meat tightens up and the sauce can reduce too far. You want a soft simmer just long enough for the chicken to finish cooking and the sauce to coat the back of a spoon.

  • Sun-dried tomatoes — These bring concentrated sweetness and acidity that plain fresh tomatoes can’t match. Oil-packed tomatoes work best because they’re softer and easier to chop, but dry-packed tomatoes can work if you soak them in hot water first.
  • Chicken broth — This is the bridge between the browned chicken bits and the cream. Use a good broth here; water won’t give the sauce enough depth.
  • Fresh basil — Basil at the end keeps the filling from tasting heavy. Dried basil won’t give you the same bright finish, so only swap it in if you’re stuck, and use much less.
  • Heavy cream — This is what makes the sauce cling. Half-and-half can work, but the sauce will be thinner and a little less stable.

Building the Filling So Every Taco Stays Saucy, Not Soggy

Golden Chicken First

Season the sliced chicken before it hits the pan, then cook it in a single layer until it takes on color and is nearly done. Thin slices cook fast, which is exactly what you want here, but overcrowding the skillet will make them steam instead of brown. That browning matters because it gives the sauce its savory backbone. Pull the chicken out when it’s just short of cooked through; it finishes in the sauce and stays tender.

Garlic, Tomatoes, and the Pan Scrapings

Add the garlic only after the chicken comes out, and keep it moving for about 30 seconds. If it starts to brown, the sauce will taste bitter. Stir in the sun-dried tomatoes and broth, then scrape the pan well. That fond is where the deep flavor lives, and the broth should lift it cleanly without reducing too fast.

Finishing the Cream Sauce

Lower the heat before adding the cream and red pepper flakes. The sauce should bubble gently, not boil hard. Return the chicken and simmer just until the sauce thickens slightly and coats the meat. If it gets too thick, a splash of broth loosens it again without dulling the flavor.

Assembly That Holds Together

Warm the tortillas before filling them so they fold instead of cracking. Spoon in the chicken first, then add a little extra sauce on top rather than soaking the tortilla from edge to edge. Basil and Parmesan go on last so they stay fresh and sharp against the creamy filling. If you’re serving these later, keep the tortillas and filling separate until the last minute.

How to Adapt These Tacos Without Losing the Creamy Finish

Dairy-Free Version

Use full-fat coconut cream in place of heavy cream. The sauce will still turn silky, but it will pick up a light coconut note, so keep the basil generous and use a little extra Parmesan only if dairy is not the issue. If you want a more neutral result, unsweetened oat cream is the better swap.

Gluten-Free Serving Option

Serve the filling in corn tortillas instead of flour tortillas. Warm them well so they stay flexible, because corn tortillas crack if they’re cold or underheated. The filling itself is naturally gluten-free as long as your broth is certified gluten-free.

Spicier, More Assertive Tacos

Add another pinch of red pepper flakes or a spoonful of chopped calabrian chiles with the tomatoes. That gives the sauce more heat without changing the texture. Don’t add raw hot sauce to the cream sauce unless you know it’s stable, since some vinegary sauces can thin the finish.

Make-Ahead for Easier Serving

Cook the chicken and sauce up to a day ahead, then cool and refrigerate it. Reheat gently on the stove with a splash of broth to bring the sauce back to a loose, creamy consistency before assembling. Warm tortillas separately so they don’t turn soft and gummy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the chicken and sauce for up to 3 days. The sauce will thicken as it chills.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the cream sauce can turn a little grainy after thawing. For the best texture, freeze the chicken and sauce only if you’re okay with a slightly less silky finish.
  • Reheating: Warm gently in a skillet over low heat with a splash of broth or water. High heat is what makes cream sauces split, so keep it slow and stir often until the sauce loosens and the chicken is hot.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use chicken thighs instead of chicken breast?+

Yes. Boneless, skinless thighs stay a little juicier and can handle a few extra minutes in the sauce without drying out. Slice them into similar-size strips so they cook at the same rate as the breast meat.

How do I keep the sauce from getting too thick?+

Pull it off the heat as soon as it coats the chicken lightly. It will thicken a little more as it sits, especially once it hits the warm tortillas. If it goes past where you want it, stir in a splash of broth until it loosens again.

Can I make Marry Me Chicken Tacos ahead of time?+

Yes, but keep the filling and tortillas separate until serving. The chicken and sauce hold up well in the fridge, and the flavor gets even deeper by the next day. Reheat gently so the cream stays smooth.

How do I stop the tortillas from getting soggy?+

Warm them first, then add the filling right before serving. Don’t drown the tortilla in sauce; spoon most of it onto the chicken and let a little drizzle over the top. That keeps the center soft without turning the whole taco floppy.

Can I use milk instead of heavy cream?+

I wouldn’t. Milk is much more likely to break or turn thin once it hits the tomato and the heat in the pan. If you want a lighter sauce, use half-and-half and keep the simmer very gentle, but expect a looser result.

Marry Me Chicken Tacos

Marry me chicken tacos with a creamy pink tomato-cream sauce and tender, golden chicken. Sautéed chicken and garlic are simmered with sun-dried tomatoes, then spooned into warm flour tortillas and finished with basil and Parmesan.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Mexican-Italian Fusion

Ingredients
  

Chicken breast
  • 1.5 lb chicken breast Sliced thin for quick, even browning.
Olive oil
  • 2 tbsp olive oil For browning the chicken and sautéing aromatics.
Garlic
  • 4 garlic cloves Minced.
Sun-dried tomatoes
  • 1 cup sun-dried tomatoes Chopped.
Chicken broth
  • 1 cup chicken broth Half cup used for sauce; measure precisely.
Heavy cream
  • 0.5 cup heavy cream Use for the silky, creamy sauce.
Fresh basil
  • 0.25 cup fresh basil Torn for finishing; plus extra for serving if desired.
Red pepper flakes
  • 0.25 tsp red pepper flakes Adjust to taste.
Salt and pepper
  • 1 salt and pepper To taste; season chicken and sauce.
Flour tortillas
  • 8 flour tortillas Warm for assembling tacos.
For serving
  • 1 fresh basil and Parmesan cheese Top tacos with torn basil and shaved Parmesan before serving.

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Season and brown the chicken
  1. Season the sliced chicken breast with salt and pepper. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat and cook the chicken until golden and nearly cooked through, about 8-10 minutes, then set aside.
Build the creamy tomato-cream sauce
  1. Add the minced garlic to the skillet and cook for 30 seconds until fragrant. Stir in the chopped sun-dried tomatoes and chicken broth, scraping up any browned bits.
  2. Reduce heat to medium and stir in the heavy cream and red pepper flakes. Return the chicken to the skillet and simmer gently for 3-4 minutes until the sauce thickens slightly.
Finish with basil and assemble
  1. Remove from heat and stir in the torn fresh basil. Warm the flour tortillas and fill each with chicken and sauce.
  2. Top with fresh basil and shaved Parmesan cheese before serving. Serve immediately while the tortillas are warm and the sauce is glossy.

Notes

Pro tip: slice the chicken thin so it browns quickly and stays juicy after the short simmer. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days; rewarm gently in a skillet with a splash of broth if needed. Freezing is not recommended because the cream sauce can separate after thawing. For a lighter option, use half-and-half instead of heavy cream for a thinner but still creamy sauce.

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