This easy chicken alfredo recipe is creamy, restaurant-style comfort food that comes together in about 30 minutes. You’ll sear juicy chicken breast, cook fettuccine until it’s just right, and finish everything in a silky garlic-Parmesan sauce made from butter, heavy cream, and freshly grated Parmesan cheese. No jar of sauce, no grainy clumps. I’ll show you the exact heat level and the pasta-water trick that keeps the cream sauce smooth every single time.

I’ve been eating and making homemade chicken alfredo for YEARS, and the from-scratch version really is worlds better than anything that comes in a jar. As a supertaster, grainy or greasy sauce drives me a little crazy, so I fussed with this one until it turned out glossy and smooth without any fancy steps. The whole thing is just pasta, chicken, and a good cream sauce, but when you make it right, it tastes even better than anything you could order! Seriously… I love this dish so much I crave it. It’s my ultimate comfort food.

Want to Save This Recipe?
Enter your email below and we’ll send it straight to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes each week!
Key Ingredients and Substitutions
Alfredo is a short ingredient list, which means each one is doing real work. Here’s what I reach for and why, plus a few swaps for whatever you have in the kitchen.

- Parmesan cheese: Use a block of Parmesan and grate it yourself. I know you can probably buy it pre-grated, BUT, grating it yourself helps because pre-shredded cheese is coated with anti-caking agents that keep it from melting cleanly, and that’s the number one reason a sauce turns grainy. Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano melts into the cream like a dream.
- Heavy cream: Heavy whipping cream gives you that thick, luxurious texture. Half-and-half will work in a pinch, but your sauce will be noticeably thinner, so just know that going in. I don’t recommend milk on its own here… it tends to break.
- Butter: The cream and Parmesan already carry plenty of richness, so you don’t need to go crazy with too much butter. I use salted butter, the same as in my homemade alfredo sauce, then go easy on added salt later since Parmesan is already salty.
- Boneless skinless chicken breast: One large breast feeds about four people once it’s sliced. You can use chicken thighs if you prefer them, and they stay a little juicier.
- Fettuccine: Fettuccine is the classic pasta for alfredo because the wide ribbons hold all that sauce. Linguine or penne work too, so use whatever’s in your pantry.
- Garlic, salt, black pepper, basil, oregano: A few cloves of fresh garlic, plus salt and a good amount of black pepper to season the chicken and the sauce, and a pinch of basil and oregano.
- A “secret” ingredient: ground nutmeg! This is optional, but just a little will bring out the savory taste of Parmesan and balances the richness of the cream.
One trick that makes a real difference: slice a thick chicken breast horizontally (parallel to the cutting board) into thinner cutlets. If it’s a particularly thick one, go for three slices instead. This helps because thin cutlets cook fast and evenly, so you won’t end up with a dry outside and an undercooked middle. If you’d rather skip the cooking and just make the sauce, I’ve got a stand-alone homemade alfredo sauce recipe too.

How to Make Chicken Alfredo (Step-by-Step)
We’re really making this in two easy stages: searing the chicken and building the sauce, then bringing it all together with the pasta. I’ll walk you through it, and I promise it’s easier than you think.
One SKillet Does It All

You sear the chicken and make the sauce in the same pan, so this is really just two pots total, the skillet plus your pasta pot. A 12-inch stainless steel skillet is ideal. A 12-inch ceramic nonstick pan works beautifully too and makes the sauce almost foolproof, just keep it at medium heat to protect the coating. Cast iron gives the best sear, BUT it holds heat hard and can tint a cream sauce slightly gray, so if that’s your searing pan, you may want to finish the sauce in a different one.

Cook the pasta. Bring a big pot of salted water to a boil and cook the fettuccine until al dente (for me, that was 4-5 minutes). Before you drain it, scoop out 1 cup of the pasta water and set it aside. Don’t skip this… that starchy water is the secret to a smooth, clingy sauce later. Really!

Season and sear the chicken. Pat the chicken dry, season both sides with salt and black pepper, and sear in a little butter over medium heat until golden and cooked through, about 4 to 5 minutes per side for thin cutlets. Move it to a plate, let it rest a few minutes, then slice. Resting matters because it keeps the juices in the meat instead of on your cutting board.

Make the cream sauce. In the same skillet over medium-low heat, melt the butter and cook the garlic for about 30 seconds, just until it smells good. Pour in the heavy cream, oregano, basil, and optional nutmeg and let it warm through. Then take the pan off the heat and whisk in the grated Parmesan cheese a handful at a time. Pulling the pan off the burner before the cheese goes in is the whole ballgame here, so don’t rush it.

Toss it all together. Add the drained pasta to the sauce and toss to coat, loosening it with a splash of that reserved pasta water until it’s glossy and silky. I use most or all of the cup because I love saucy pasta. Add the sliced chicken back in, season with salt and pepper to taste, sprinkle with a little more grated Parmesan and maybe some fresh parsley if you have it, and serve right away while it’s hot.
Heat Matters

Keep the sauce below a simmer by taking it completely off the heat before the cheese goes in. Dairy is highly sensitive to heat. If your butter and cream are bubbling too vigorously, or if the cheese is added over an active burner, it can all seize up and turn grainy, so low and slow wins here.
Can I Fix a Broken Alfredo Sauce?
Yes, almost always, so don’t panic if your sauce looks off. Cream sauces are forgiving once you know which lever to pull. Here’s how I rescue mine.
- Grainy or clumpy: Take the pan off the heat, whisk in a splash of warm cream, and then add the cheese back gradually. The heat was almost certainly too high, and cooling it down lets everything come back together.
- Too thick: Whisk in hot reserved pasta water, 1 to 2 tablespoons at a time, until it loosens. This is exactly why we saved that cup.
- Too thin: Let the cream simmer gently for a minute or two before you add the cheese, or whisk in a little more grated Parmesan to thicken it up.
The easiest fix is the one you never need. To keep your sauce smooth in the first place, don’t let it boil, don’t pour in cold cream straight from the fridge, and skip the pre-shredded Parmesan. Those three things prevent most broken-sauce headaches (ask me how I know).

Variations and Add-Ins
Plain chicken alfredo is wonderful, but it also plays nicely with extras if you want to stretch it or sneak in some vegetables.
- Broccoli: Steam or roast it separately and stir it in at the very end. Cooking it on its own keeps it bright green and keeps extra water out of your sauce.
- Spinach: Stir a few handfuls into the hot sauce for 30 to 60 seconds, just until it wilts. It practically melts in.
- Cajun:Â Add 1 to 2 teaspoons of Cajun seasoning to the chicken before searing, and keep the sauce classic so it stays balanced. If you don’t have a blend on hand, stir together paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, oregano, thyme, and a pinch of cayenne. I personally go easy on the cayenne, so add it slowly and taste as you go.

What Goes with Chicken Alfredo?
Alfredo is rich, so I like to pair it with something green and something crunchy or a little acidic to cut through the cream. Here are the sides that land on our table most often:
- Caesar salad or a simple arugula-lemon salad
- Roasted broccoli or asparagus
- Garlic bread, or a slice of warm sourdough focaccia
- Sauteed green beans
- A tomato-cucumber salad
- Simple steamed peas
If you only remember one pairing rule, make it this: choose something green plus something crunchy or acidic, and the whole plate feels lighter. If a creamy pasta night sounds good to you, you might also love my creamy sausage pasta on a different evening.
Storage, Make-Ahead, and Reheating
Alfredo is best fresh, but leftovers reheat nicely if you’re gentle with them. Store it airtight in the fridge for up to 3 days. To reheat, warm it on low with a splash of milk, cream, or even a little water, stirring until it turns glossy again. Be careful not to crank the heat or let it boil after refrigerating, because that’s what splits the sauce and dries out the pasta.
I don’t recommend freezing this one. Cream sauces tend to separate once they thaw, so it’s really best enjoyed fresh or kept in the fridge for a few days. If you love a cozy make-ahead pasta, my beef and noodles and ground beef stroganoff both hold up better for planned leftovers.


Chicken Alfredo Recipe
Equipment
- 12" large skillet
- Large pot for pasta
- Tongs and a whisk
Ingredients
Pasta
- 12 oz fettuccine
- 1 tablespoon salt for the pasta water
- 1 cup reserved pasta water
Chicken
- 1 lb chicken breast (about 1 large) boneless skinless, sliced into thin cutlets
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 tablespoon butter for searing
Sauce
- 4 tablespoons butter salted
- 3 cloves garlic minced
- 1 1/2 cups heavy cream
- 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg optional
- 1 1/2 cups Parmesan cheese freshly grated
- pinch dried oregano
- pinch dried basil
- salt and black pepper to taste
Instructions
- Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the fettuccine until al dente. Before draining, reserve 1 cup of the pasta water.
- Pat the chicken dry and season both sides with salt and black pepper. Sear in 1 tablespoon butter over medium heat, about 4 to 5 minutes per side, until golden and cooked through. Rest a few minutes, then slice.
- In the same skillet over medium-low heat, melt 4 tablespoons butter and cook the garlic for about 30 seconds. Pour in the heavy cream, basil, oregano and optional ground nutmeg and warm it through.
- Take the pan off the heat and whisk in the grated Parmesan a handful at a time until smooth.
- Add the drained pasta and toss to coat, loosening with reserved pasta water until glossy. Return the sliced chicken, season to taste, and serve hot.
Notes
Nutrition (per serving, approximate)
| Calories | Protein | Fat | Carbs |
|---|---|---|---|
| ~780 | ~38 g | ~48 g | ~52 g |

FAQs
What’s the best way to store Parmesan cheese?
Wrap a block of Parmesan in parchment or wax paper, then loosely in foil, and keep it in the fridge. It lets the cheese breathe without drying out, and a good block will keep for weeks this way. Grate it fresh as you need it for the smoothest sauce.
Can I use fresh pasta for chicken alfredo?
You sure can, and it’s lovely. Fresh pasta cooks much faster, usually just 2 to 3 minutes, so keep an eye on it. Remember to still reserve some of that starchy cooking water before you drain, since the sauce loves it.
If you try this chicken alfredo, I’d love to hear how it turned out, so leave a rating and a comment below. Tell me what pasta shape you used and whether you added broccoli or spinach. I read every one.
Happy cooking!
Love,
Jennifer

Tried this recipe?
Tap the stars in the recipe card to leave a quick rating. Your rating helps other home cooks know this recipe works in a real kitchen, not just mine.

Meet Jennifer
Jennifer cooks and experiments in the kitchen at Maker Farm, where she focuses on simple pantry cooking, homemade staples, and practical recipes that make everyday meals easier. Over the years she has tested many ways to make cooking simpler and more dependable, and shares the methods that work best in her own kitchen, occasionally showing them on her Heart to Home at Maker Farm vlog.



