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Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken

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This Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe is a quick and easy spin on traditional Chicken Saltimbocca. It’s served with a delicious buttery sage sauce, and tastes absolutely delicious!

LOVE this Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe. It's an easier version of traditional Italian Saltimbocca, and tastes absolutely delicious! | gimmesomeoven.com (Gluten-Free)

Hey friends! This is the time of year that we always start hearing more and more requests for next chicken recipes here on the blog. So today, I thought I’d share with you a super-simplified version of an Italian classic I’ve always loved…

…chicken saltimbocca!

Turns out that word saltimbocca literally means “jumps in the mouth” in Italian, which I’d say is pretty fitting for this dish filled with so many of my favorite flavors. ? The traditional version is usually made with veal, which is pounded thin and rolled up with prosciutto and sage, and cooked in a buttery white wine sauce. Since I’m not into veal, and didn’t feel like making some fancy-shmancy rolls, I went with a simplified version of this recipe with chicken and wrapped in prosciutto and cooked with a buttery white wine sage sauce. Same great flavors, and so much easier to make.

I served mine with roasted veggies (which I baked side-by-side with the pan of chicken) and a big green salad and some crusty bread and a chilly sauvignon blanc. And oh my goodness, this simple meal tasted like a downright Italian feast.

Here’s how to make it!

LOVE this Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe. It's an easier version of traditional Italian Saltimbocca, and tastes absolutely delicious! | gimmesomeoven.com (Gluten-Free)

To begin, I highly recommend taking the extra 15 minutes (if you have the time) to brine your chicken, as I recommend in my post on How To Bake Perfect Chicken Breasts. It’s a small step that will go a long way in helping your chicken stay extra moist and juicy, and not dry out. (If your chicken is sold pre-brined, though, just skip this step!)

LOVE this Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe. It's an easier version of traditional Italian Saltimbocca, and tastes absolutely delicious! | gimmesomeoven.com (Gluten-Free)

Once your chicken breasts are ready to go, simply wrap each one with a few pieces of prosciutto. Then brush each side of the chicken with some melted butter (or olive oil), season with salt and pepper, and place them in a single layer in a large baking dish or on a sheet pan. Bake until cooked through.

Then meanwhile, make that heavenly buttery-sage sauce. Just melt some butter and sauté some garlic, sage and crushed red pepper flakes. Add in a good splash of white wine.

LOVE this Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe. It's an easier version of traditional Italian Saltimbocca, and tastes absolutely delicious! | gimmesomeoven.com (Gluten-Free)

Then once your chicken is ready to go, sauce it up!

LOVE this Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe. It's an easier version of traditional Italian Saltimbocca, and tastes absolutely delicious! | gimmesomeoven.com (Gluten-Free)

As probably comes as no surprise with these ingredients, the result is a decadent, savory, delicious pan of chicken ready to be served.

LOVE this Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe. It's an easier version of traditional Italian Saltimbocca, and tastes absolutely delicious! | gimmesomeoven.com (Gluten-Free)

Hope you all enjoy this one!

(This post contains affiliate links.)

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Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.7 from 46 reviews
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Total Time: 35 minutes
  • Yield: 4 servings 1x

Description

This Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken recipe is a simplified version of traditional “saltimbocca”, made with a heavenly buttery-garlic-sage-white-wine sauce.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts
  • Kosher salt and freshly-cracked black pepper
  • 812 slices prosciutto
  • 4 tablespoons melted butter, divided
  • 1 clove garlic, pressed or minced
  • 1 tablespoon finely-chopped fresh sage*
  • pinch of crushed red pepper flakes
  • 1/4 cup dry white wine
  • fresh lemon wedges
  • (optional garnishes: chopped fresh chives, grated Parmesan cheese, and/or extra crushed red pepper flakes)

Instructions

  1. To brine the chicken: Simply fill a large bowl with 1 quart of warm water and 1/4 cup kosher salt.  Stir to combine until most of the salt is absorbed.  Add the chicken breasts and let them sit in the mixture to brine for 15 minutes.  Or you can also also cover the bowl and refrigerate for up to 6 hours.  Remove the chicken breasts from the brine, rinse them with cold water, then pat them dry with some paper towels.  (Again, though, if your chicken breasts are sold pre-brined in a sodium solution, skip this step.)
  2. To cook the chicken: Heat oven to 450°F.
  3. Wrap each chicken breast with 2-3 slices of prosciutto, so that the prosciutto covers most of the chicken.
  4. Place the chicken breasts in a single layer in a large baking dish.  Brush the chicken breasts evenly with 1 tablespoon of the melted butter.  Then season both sides of the chicken breasts with a quick pinch of salt and pepper, then lay the chicken back in a single layer in the baking dish.
  5. Bake for 18-20* minutes, or until the chicken is cooked through and no longer pink.  If you use a cooking thermometer to measure the temperature thickest part of the breast, it should be between 160-170°F.  (The FDA recommends 165°F.)
  6. Once the chicken is cooked, remove the pan from the oven and loosely cover the pan with aluminum foil.  Let the chicken rest for at least 5-10 minutes.
  7. Meanwhile, as the chicken is cooking, add the remaining 3 tablespoons butter to a small sauté pan, along with the garlic, sage and crushed red pepper flakes.  Sauté over medium-low for 6-8 minutes, or until the sage starts to get slightly crispy.  Slowly add in the white wine, and simmer for 5 more minutes.  Remove from heat.
  8. Once the chicken and sauce are ready to go, spoon the sage-butter sauce evenly over the baked chicken breasts.  Then serve immediately with fresh lemon wedges, sprinkled with optional garnishes if you’d like.  (Feel free to make your serving as lemony as you’d like!)

Notes

*Feel free to substitute any of your favorite Italian fresh herbs here.

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65 comments on “Prosciutto-Wrapped Baked Chicken”

  1. all good ingredients but brining (and even rinsing and oatting) dry couldn’t save this dinner. Plus the prosciotto and salt directions called for made it inedible. Way too salty and wasted chicken. advice: don’t salt and don’t brine. i will say the garluc butter safe wine sauce good, but alas nothing to put it on.
    Thankfully i made delicata squash and salad. No chicken.






    • Think that comment bit dramatic, was beautiful but did not brine, also made a creamy mushroom sauce, gave bit more moisture as served with duchesse potatoes, broccoli and green beans

  2. Good recipe! I did not brine my chicken for fear of being too salty. I marinated the chicken for 30 minutes in bottled Italian dressing which worked out well. I did not add any other salt to the dish. We added a small spoonful of the pan drippings in addition to the sauce to each piece of chicken once plated and it was perfect. Will make this one again!






  3. I love the idea of prosciutto wrapped chicken but found this recipe too salty for me. I will try again and skip the brine step.






  4. Turned out ok. I wouldn’t cook at such a high temp next time.

  5. My kids all liked it. I think I overcooked it but that has more to do with my oven than the recipe. Overall I think it was fun, I like making a separate sauce from the meat. I was in a time crunch and did not brine.






  6. Simple and delicious! I roasted broccoli and red peppers along side. Perfect!






  7. I tried tbis recjpe last night. OM goodness! It was awesome. But I did change it up a bit. I used chicken strips instead of breast. I did not brine it but did rinse and pat dry. I adjusted the salt because of the prosciutto. I still used one garlic clove and minced it very well and the same amount of butter for the sauce. I jad to ise dry Sage so I reduced that a bit. This was such an easy recipe and I plan on making this many more times in the future.






  8. Some type-o I thought I corrected. I tried this recipe last night. I had to use dried Sage instead of fresh.

  9. Brining chicken in warm water? Sounds like a good way to get sick.

  10. I’ve been making this dish almost monthly for over a year, and it’s a family favorite! I only brine for 30 minutes, with 1/2 tbsp salt, and it’s perfect. I also add a thin layer of smoked mozzarella under the prosciutto which adds a lot of great flavor. Also, only cook 18 minutes, then broil for 2 minutes which makes the prosciutto crispy. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️