Yes, you can make Amish baked chicken at home – and it’s as simple as seasoning, coating, and baking until golden at 375°F for about 45 minutes. The result? Crispy skin, juicy meat, and zero guesswork. This recipe keeps the classic Amish style but gives you all the tips, fixes, and variations so yours comes out right every time.
Here’s the straight answer: Amish baked chicken is simple, no-fuss oven chicken that turns out golden, crispy, and juicy without deep-frying. It’s the dish you pull off on a weeknight but could serve at Sunday dinner without embarrassment.

I’ve tested every version under the sun – flour-only, breadcrumb crust, buttermilk-soaked, oil-drizzled – and this one just works. Let’s break it down so you don’t end up with rubbery meat or a soggy mess.
If this recipe has you craving more hearty flavors, check out our collection of Amish main dishes that are just as satisfying.
What You’ll Need in Your Kitchen?
Don’t overcomplicate it. The Amish didn’t. This is pantry-level stuff.
- Chicken pieces: Thighs and drumsticks are safest (juicy and forgiving). Breasts work, but you’ll need to babysit them.
- Seasoning: Salt, black pepper, garlic powder, paprika. If you can measure with your heart, do it.
- Coating: Flour for the classic feel, or breadcrumbs for crunch. Both work.
- Moisture: Buttermilk makes magic happen. Regular milk with a splash of vinegar is fine.
- Fat: Melted butter = rich flavor. Neutral oil (like canola) = extra crisp.
Translation: you probably already own 90% of this list.
The Quick-Glance Version (For Oven-Preheating Scrollers)
- Prep time: 15 minutes
- Cook time: 45–50 minutes at 375°F
- Oven temp: 375°F for juicy meat + crisp skin
- Doneness: Internal temp of 165°F (use a thermometer, trust me)
There, now you don’t have to panic-scroll.
Let’s Talk Prep (Where Most People Screw Up)
Rule #1: pat your chicken dry. Damp chicken = soggy coating. That’s not negotiable.
Season every piece like you’re auditioning for Salt Bae. Under-seasoned chicken is a tragedy, and Amish cooks never skimped on salt.
Dip each piece into buttermilk or milk-egg wash, then roll in your flour/seasoning mix. Shake off the clumps unless you like floury pockets.
Baking Without Regret
Line a metal baking sheet with parchment (glass pans work but don’t crisp as fast). Space your chicken like introverts at a party — too close, and it steams instead of crisps.
Bake at 375°F for 45 minutes. Flip halfway through for even browning. If the coating looks pale at 40 minutes, let it ride another 5.
Check with a thermometer. 165°F at the thickest point = safe and juicy. Don’t guess.
Shortcut vs. Flavor Bomb: Butter or Oil?
Here’s the trade-off:
Fat Choice | Result | Best When |
Butter | Rich, golden, slightly softer crust | You want flavor over crunch |
Oil | Crispier, lighter coating | You want shatter-crunch skin |
I usually drizzle with oil, then brush a little melted butter before serving. Best of both worlds.
Flavor Tweaks You’ll Actually Use
- Breadcrumb swap: More crunch, less “classic.” Great if kids want KFC vibes.
- Skinless chicken: Saves calories, loses flavor. Only do this if you really have to.
- Spice bump: Add cayenne or chili powder if you like heat. Amish recipes are mild, but you’re the boss.
- Garlic lovers: Toss in extra garlic powder. Nobody’s judging.
Kitchen Habits That Separate Dry from Juicy
- Preheat. Always. Cold ovens ruin crispy dreams.
- Don’t crowd the pan. Steam kills crunch.
- Let it rest. 5–10 minutes after baking keeps the juices in the meat, not on the plate.
If you remember nothing else: pat dry, don’t crowd, rest after.
Oops Moments (and How to Fix Them)
- Dry chicken: Add broth while reheating, or cover with foil in the oven. Microwave = worst idea.
- Undercooked centers: Pop back in at 350°F until it hits 165°F. Don’t crank the heat — you’ll scorch the outside.
- Soggy coating: You skipped drying or crowded the pan. Next time, spread out and crank the heat a touch.
Real Questions Cooks Google at Midnight
Can I use boneless chicken breasts? Yes, but reduce cook time by 10–15 minutes. Check at 30 minutes.
What if I don’t have buttermilk? Mix 1 cup milk + 1 tbsp vinegar or lemon juice. Wait 5 minutes. Instant fix.
Glass or metal pan?
Pan Type | What Happens | Why Use It |
Glass | Slower browning, even cooking | Saucy dishes, softer crust |
Metal | Faster crisp, hotter surface | Perfect for crispy baked chicken |
Do I need to marinate overnight? Helpful, yes. Required, no. Even 30 minutes in buttermilk makes a difference.
Can I make it ahead? Sure. Bake, cool, refrigerate. Reheat at 350°F, uncovered, for 15 minutes.
Serving Like the Amish (Or Just Hungry You)
Traditionally, this lands on the table with buttered noodles, mashed potatoes, or sweet corn.
If you’re modernizing:
- Serve with roasted veggies and a salad for balance.
- Leftovers shred beautifully for wraps or cold chicken sandwiches.
Leftovers Don’t Have to Suck
- Fridge life: Up to 3 days. Reheat in oven for crispness.
- Freezer life: 2 months max. Wrap tight. Reheat covered, then uncover to re-crisp.
- Microwave? Only if you like soggy regret.
Why This Recipe Actually Works?
It’s not fancy. That’s the point. Amish baked chicken relies on:
- Simple seasoning: no 12-spice blends you’ll never use again.
- Correct baking temp: 375°F hits the sweet spot between cooked-through and crispy.
- Moisture + fat balance: buttermilk tenderizes, flour crisps, fat adds richness.
The trick isn’t doing more. It’s doing the basics right.
Final Words
Amish baked chicken isn’t complicated – it’s about drying your chicken, seasoning it well, and baking at the right temp. Do those three things, and you’re 90% of the way to crispy, juicy perfection.
Want to tweak it? Swap flour for breadcrumbs, butter for oil, or kick it up with extra spice. The base recipe holds steady, so you can flex it without fear.
Bottom line: follow the basics, avoid the common mistakes, and you’ll have a chicken recipe worth saving – and actually making again.
Related Recipes:
Amish Baked Chicken – Crispy And Juicy Oven Baked
Course: Main CourseCuisine: American, AmishDifficulty: Easy4
servings15
minutes45
minutes360
kcal1
hourSimple, no-fuss oven chicken that delivers crispy skin and juicy meat using pantry staples. Packed with troubleshooting tips and flexible variations.
Ingredients
Chicken pieces (thighs and drumsticks recommended; breasts optional)
Salt, black pepper, garlic powder, paprika (to taste)
Flour (or breadcrumbs for extra crunch)
Buttermilk (or milk + 1 tbsp vinegar)
Melted butter or neutral oil
Directions
- Preheat oven to 375°F.
- Pat chicken dry, season generously.
- Dip in buttermilk (or milk mixture), then coat evenly with flour or breadcrumbs.
- Place on metal baking sheet (lined with parchment); space pieces well.
- Bake 45 minutes, flipping once halfway, until skin is golden and internal temp reads 165°F.
- Rest for 5–10 minutes before serving.
Recipe Video
Notes
- 01. Always pat chicken thoroughly dry - damp skin = soggy coating.
02. Don’t overcrowd the pan; air circulation is key to crispness.
03. Let chicken rest before serving to seal in juices and get maximum flavor.