Golden tortellini, juicy chicken, and cold romaine hit the plate with enough crunch, creaminess, and salty Parmesan to keep this from feeling like just another pasta dinner. The Blackstone does a lot of the heavy lifting here: it gives the tortellini crisp edges, keeps the chicken moving fast, and makes the whole dish feel a little more alive than a bowl tossed in the kitchen ever could.
What makes this work is the contrast. The tortellini are cooked first, then kissed by the griddle so they pick up color without turning mushy. The Caesar dressing goes on at the end, after the heat has done its job, so it clings instead of breaking. That keeps the pasta rich, the chicken coated, and the romaine crisp underneath instead of wilted into the sauce.
Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: how to keep the tortellini from sticking, when to pull the chicken so it stays tender, and the easiest way to adjust the dish if you want it lighter, cheesier, or built for leftovers.
The tortellini got those crispy edges on the griddle, and the Caesar dressing coated everything without turning the romaine soggy. My husband kept going back for another forkful of the chicken and Parmesan.
Save this Blackstone Chicken Caesar Tortellini for the night you want crispy griddle pasta, juicy chicken, and Caesar dressing in one fast dinner.
The Trick to Crispy Tortellini Without Turning It Mushy
The biggest mistake with tortellini on a griddle is giving it too much time in one place. Once it’s cooked through, it only needs a short stay on the hot surface to pick up color and a little chew on the outside. If it sits too long, the filling can leak and the pasta gets soft instead of lightly crisped.
The other key move is treating the chicken and tortellini as separate jobs until the very end. Chicken needs direct heat and enough space to brown; tortellini needs just enough oil to crisp and coat. When you combine them too early, the pasta steams in the chicken juices and you lose the texture that makes this dish stand out.
- Space on the griddle — Crowding traps steam. Work in a loose layer so the tortellini can actually brown.
- Pre-cooked tortellini — The pasta should already be tender before it hits the griddle. Fresh-cooked tortellini gives you the best structure; overcooked pasta falls apart fast.
- Medium-high heat — Hot enough for color, not so hot that the dressing scorches when it goes on later.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

- Chicken breast — Thin slicing is what keeps it tender and fast-cooking. Thicker pieces take longer than the tortellini and dry out before the pasta is ready.
- Cheese tortellini — This is the base that makes the dish feel hearty. Frozen or refrigerated tortellini both work; cook it just to tender so it can still firm up on the griddle.
- Caesar dressing — Use a dressing you’d actually eat cold, because it’s finishing the dish rather than being cooked into it. A thick, creamy dressing clings better than a thin one.
- Parmesan — Freshly grated Parmesan melts into the warm pasta and chicken instead of staying dusty on top. The shelf-stable stuff works in a pinch, but the flavor is flatter.
- Romaine, tomatoes, and croutons — These are the crunch and freshness that keep the dish from eating heavy. Add them at the end so they stay bright and crisp.
- Lemon wedges — A squeeze at the table wakes up the dressing and cuts the richness. Skip it and the dish can taste a little one-note.
Building the Griddle in the Right Order
Season and Sear the Chicken
Heat the Blackstone to medium-high before anything touches it. Add the oil, then lay in the sliced chicken in a single layer so it browns instead of steaming. You want deep golden edges and no pink in the center; if the pan looks dry and the chicken starts sticking hard, it needs a little more oil, not more time. Pull it as soon as it’s cooked through so it doesn’t tighten up while the tortellini finishes.
Crisp the Tortellini
Add the cooked tortellini to the oiled griddle and let it sit long enough to pick up color before you start moving it around. A little sticking at first is normal; once the underside releases, it’s telling you the crust has formed. If the tortellini tears or smears, the heat is too low or the pasta was cooked too far ahead and sat wet for too long.
Coat With Caesar at the End
Move the chicken and tortellini together, then drizzle on the Caesar dressing off the hottest part of the griddle. Toss just until everything is coated and glossy. If the dressing goes on too early or over direct high heat, it can separate and turn oily instead of creamy. The goal is a light coating that clings to the pasta and chicken without drowning the texture you just built.
Finish the Plate Cold and Crisp
Layer the romaine first, then spoon the hot tortellini and chicken over it. Add Parmesan, tomatoes, croutons, and a squeeze of lemon right before serving. The heat from the pasta softens the edge of the lettuce just enough, but if you assemble it too far ahead, the romaine collapses and the croutons lose their crunch.
How to Adapt This for a Lighter Bowl or a Bigger Crowd
Make It Lighter Without Losing the Caesar Feel
Cut the dressing back a little and add extra romaine and tomatoes so the bowl still feels full. You’ll lose some of the richness, but the lemon and Parmesan keep the flavor sharp enough that it doesn’t taste like a diet version.
Go Gluten-Free With the Right Tortellini
Use gluten-free tortellini if you can find it, and watch the cook time closely because the dough can soften faster than wheat pasta. The texture won’t brown quite the same way, but a hot, lightly oiled griddle still gives it a nice edge.
Swap in Rotisserie Chicken for Faster Prep
Skip the chicken cook time and add shredded or chopped rotisserie chicken near the end, just long enough to warm through. You’ll lose the fresh sear from the griddle, but the dish becomes a true 10-minute assembly meal.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the chicken and tortellini separately from the romaine if you can. The pasta keeps for 3 days, but the dressing will soften the tortellini a bit as it sits.
- Freezer: Freeze the chicken and tortellini without the lettuce or croutons. The sauce texture changes after thawing, so add fresh Caesar dressing when you reheat.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken and tortellini in a skillet over medium heat with a splash of oil or water. Don’t blast it in the microwave too long or the tortellini turns gummy and the chicken dries out.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Blackstone Chicken Caesar Tortellini
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Heat the Blackstone griddle to medium-high and add 2 tablespoons olive oil.
- Season the chicken breast with salt and pepper, then cook for 6-7 minutes until golden and cooked through.
- Move the chicken to the side to make room on the griddle.
- Add the remaining oil to the griddle.
- Add the cooked tortellini and cook for 3-4 minutes until slightly crispy and golden.
- Toss the chicken and tortellini with the Caesar dressing on the griddle until coated.
- Serve the chicken Caesar tortellini over chopped romaine lettuce.
- Top with Parmesan cheese, cherry tomatoes, croutons, and lemon wedges, then serve immediately.


