Easy Chicken Florentine Pasta Recipe with Spinach and Parmesan
Some recipes quietly become family favorites, and Chicken Florentine Pasta is one of them. I still remember serving it during a casual weekend dinner with friends, expecting leftovers for the next day. There weren’t any. The creamy sauce, tender chicken, and vibrant spinach created a comforting meal that brought everyone back for seconds—and plenty of compliments. Whether you’re a fan of creamy pasta dishes or looking for a new way to enjoy chicken and spinach, Chicken Florentine Pasta is a satisfying meal everyone will love.

What is Chicken Florentine Pasta
“Florentine” simply means cooked in the style of Florence, and in Italian cuisine, that almost always means spinach is involved. Chicken Florentine Pasta takes that idea and turns it into a creamy noodle dinner: seared chicken, wilted spinach, garlic, and a Parmesan cream sauce, all wrapped around pasta. I think of it as Italian comfort food dressed in its Sunday best.
Explore our complete Chicken Pasta Recipes collection for more creamy, comforting, and family-friendly pasta dishes.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Fast. Done in about 35 minutes, start to finish — no babysitting the stove required, and no fancy equipment either.
- Restaurant-style sauce, pantry budget. Cream, garlic, and Parmesan do all the heavy lifting, so you skip the markup.
- Sneaks in greens. A full handful of spinach disappears into the sauce, and nobody at my table complains.
- Forgiving. Swap the pasta, the protein, even the greens, and it still turns out great — that’s a game-changer on busy weeks.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Ingredients List

- Chicken breasts (1 lb), sliced into thin cutlets — thighs work too, and honestly, they stay juicier under heat.
- Pasta (12 oz) — fettuccine is classic, though I’ll get into your other options shortly.
- Olive oil (2 tbsp), for searing.
- Garlic (3 cloves, minced) — don’t skimp here. Garlic is the backbone of this whole sauce.
- Baby spinach (5 oz), roughly chopped. This is the “Florentine” part of the name, and it wilts down fast.
- Heavy cream (1 cup) — half-and-half works for something lighter, though the sauce won’t cling quite as well.
- Chicken broth (1/2 cup), to loosen the cream and add savory depth.
- Parmesan, freshly grated (1/2 cup, plus more for serving).
- Sun-dried tomatoes, chopped (1/4 cup, optional) — I almost never skip these. They add a sweet, tangy punch.
- Salt, black pepper, and a pinch of red pepper flakes.
- Fresh basil or parsley, for garnish.
Key Ingredients, Explained
- Chicken anchors the whole plate. Breast cooks faster; thigh stays more forgiving if you walk away for a minute.
- Spinach gives the dish its color, its iron, and its name. Wilt it gently — it collapses in under a minute.
- Heavy cream builds the silky body of the sauce. Cream cheese or a splash of Greek yogurt can stand in if you want something lighter.
- Parmesan adds salty depth at the end. Pecorino Romano is a sharper, saltier substitute if that’s what’s in your fridge.
Timing
- Prep time: 15 minutes
- Cook time: 20 minutes
- Total time: roughly 35 minutes
How to Make Chicken Florentine Pasta
Follow these steps in order, and Chicken Florentine Pasta comes together with very little fuss.
1. Prep the Chicken

Pat the chicken dry, then season it generously with salt and pepper on both sides. Slice it into even cutlets so it cooks fast, stays tender, and finishes at the same time across every piece.
2. Sear Until Golden

Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until it shimmers. Sear the chicken four to 5 minutes per side, until deeply golden — and don’t crowd the pan!
Tip: a crowded skillet steams instead of sears, so work in batches if your pan runs small. Crowding traps moisture, and you lose that golden crust entirely.
3. Boil the Pasta

While the chicken rests on a plate, cook your pasta in well-salted water until just shy of al dente. Save a full cup of that starchy water before draining — you’ll need it later to loosen the sauce.
4. Build the Sauce

In the same skillet, scrape up any browned bits left behind, then sauté the garlic for thirty seconds, just until fragrant. Pour in the broth and cream, and let it bubble gently for 2 to 3 minutes.
5. Wilt the Spinach

Add the spinach handful by handful, stirring as it collapses into the sauce. It happens fast — blink and you’ll miss it — so keep the heat at a steady simmer, never a rolling boil.
6. Bring It All Together

Slice the rested chicken, then toss it back in with the pasta, Parmesan, and a splash of that reserved pasta water. Toss everything until it turns glossy and clings to every strand.
Tips for the Best Chicken Florentine Pasta
- Sear the chicken hot and fast; overcooking it now means a dry bite later, no matter how good the sauce is.
- Always save pasta water. It’s liquid gold for loosening a sauce that’s thickened too far.
- Add Parmesan gradually, off direct heat, or risk a grainy, broken sauce.
- Fresh garlic beats jarred, hands down, in a sauce built on so few ingredients.
- Season in layers: the pasta water, the chicken, and the sauce each need their own pass of salt.
How Long to Cook Chicken Florentine Pasta
Total cooking time runs about 20 minutes once the prep is done. The chicken needs roughly eight to 10 minutes total, depending on thickness — thin cutlets cook fastest. Pasta usually takes 9 to 11 minutes, though it depends entirely on the shape you choose. The sauce itself comes together in under 5 minutes; cream and broth heat fast, and spinach wilts almost instantly.
Best Seasonings for Chicken Florentine Pasta
Garlic and black pepper form the foundation, full stop. Beyond that, a pinch of red pepper flakes adds quiet warmth without turning the dish spicy. Nutmeg, oddly enough, is a classic addition to creamy spinach sauces in Italian cooking — just a whisper of it deepens everything in a way you can’t quite name. Lemon zest brightens the richness right at the end, and fresh basil or oregano adds an herbal lift that dried versions can’t quite match. Go easy on salt early, since Parmesan and broth both bring plenty on their own.
Make-Ahead, Storage & Reheating Tips
Can You Make It Ahead
You can cook the chicken and the sauce a full day in advance — just hold off on the pasta. Cooked noodles turn gummy waiting around in the fridge, and there’s no saving them once that happens. Store the sauce and chicken together, then boil pasta right before serving. It only adds 10 minutes.
How to Store
Leftovers keep well in an airtight container for three to four days. The sauce will thicken considerably as it chills — that’s completely normal, not a sign anything went wrong. A thin layer might separate on top; a good stir brings it right back together.
Way to Reheat
Reheat low and slow on the stovetop, with a splash of broth or milk stirred in to loosen things back up. The microwave works in a pinch, but stir it halfway through, or you’ll end up with cold centers ringed by rubbery edges.
Variations of Chicken Florentine Pasta
One-Pan Chicken Florentine Pasta
One-Pan Version: cook everything, pasta included, in a single skillet with extra broth, for a weeknight that leaves almost no dishes behind.
Chicken Florentine Pasta with Mushrooms
With Mushrooms: sauté sliced mushrooms alongside the garlic for an earthy, savory layer that pairs beautifully with the cream.
Spicy Chicken Florentine Pasta
Spicy Twist: double the red pepper flakes, then finish with a drizzle of chili oil for genuine heat.
Sun-Dried Tomato Chicken Florentine Pasta
Sun-Dried Tomato Version: lean harder into the tomatoes for sweetness and color against all that green spinach.
Healthy Chicken Florentine Pasta
Healthier Take: swap cream for Greek yogurt, and use whole-wheat or chickpea pasta for more fiber and protein.
Best Pasta for Chicken Florentine Pasta
- Fettuccine: the classic choice — wide, flat noodles that grab onto a cream sauce beautifully.
- Penne: the ridges and hollow center trap sauce in every bite, which makes it a favorite in my house.
- Linguine: thinner than fettuccine, slightly more delicate, and a nice change of pace.
- Rotini: the spirals hold sauce in every twist, and kids tend to love the shape.
Bottom line: any sturdy pasta shape works here, so use whatever’s already in your pantry.
What to Serve Chicken Florentine Pasta With
This dish is rich, so I like to balance the plate rather than pile on more cream:
- Garlic bread, for the inevitable sauce-mopping at the end of the meal.
- A crisp green salad with lemon vinaigrette, to cut through the richness.
- Sautéed green beans.
- Roasted asparagus or broccolini, if you want something green that isn’t drowning in sauce.
- Caesar salad with crisp romaine and Parmesan.
Nutritional Information
Approximate values per serving (recipe yields four servings):
- Calories: 580–620
- Protein: 38g
- Carbohydrates: 45g
- Fat: 26g
- Fiber: 3g
- Sodium: 480mg

Easy Chicken Florentine Pasta Recipe with Spinach and Parmesan
Ingredients
- Chicken breasts 1 lb
- Pasta 12 oz
- Olive oil 2 tbsp
- Garlic 3 cloves, minced
- Baby spinach 5 oz
- Heavy cream 1 cup
- Chicken broth 1/2 cup
- Parmesan freshly grated (1/2 cup
- Sun-dried tomatoes chopped (1/4 cup, optional)
- Salt black pepper,
- red pepper flakes.
- Fresh basil or parsley
Instructions
1. Prep the Chicken
- Pat the chicken dry, then season generously with salt and pepper on both sides. Cut it into evenly sized pieces so that it cooks quickly, stays tender, and all pieces are done at the same time.
2. Sear Until Golden
- Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until it shimmers. Sear the chicken for 4 to 5 minutes per side, until it turns a deep golden brown—and don’t overcrowd the skillet!
3. Boil the Pasta
- Boil the pasta in well-salted water until it’s al dente. Reserve a full cup of the starchy pasta water before draining it—you’ll need it later to thin the sauce.
4. Build the Sauce
- In the same skillet, scrape off any remaining browned bits, then sauté the garlic for 30 seconds, just until it becomes fragrant. Pour in the broth and cream, and let it simmer gently for 2 to 3 minutes.
5. Wilt the Spinach
- Add the spinach a handful at a time, stirring until it wilts and incorporates into the sauce. This happens quickly.
6. Bring It All Together
- Add the chicken—which you set aside to rest earlier—to the pan along with the pasta, Parmesan cheese, and a little of the pasta cooking water you set aside. Toss the ingredients together.
Notes
Nutritional Information
- Calories: 580–620
- Protein: 38g
- Carbohydrates: 45g
- Fat: 26g
- Fiber: 3g
- Sodium: 480mg
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Florentine style pasta?
It refers to dishes made in the style of Florence, almost always built around spinach as the defining ingredient. The term shows up across Italian cooking, well beyond just pasta.
What kind of sauce is on chicken florentine?
A cream-based sauce, typically made with garlic, broth, and Parmesan, with wilted spinach folded throughout for color and flavor.
What’s the difference between chicken alfredo and chicken florentine?
Alfredo relies purely on butter, cream, and Parmesan, while Florentine always includes spinach as a core ingredient — that’s really the whole distinction.
What is a Florentine made of?
In savory cooking, it usually means spinach combined with a rich sauce; in baking, oddly enough, it refers to a completely different lace-like cookie made with nuts and caramel.
More Chicken Pasta Recipes
- Enjoy another creamy pasta favorite with this Garlic Parmesan Chicken Pasta recipe loaded with rich garlic flavor and Parmesan cheese.
- This Chicken Bacon Ranch Pasta combines tender chicken, crispy bacon, and a creamy ranch sauce for a satisfying family meal.
- Try this Marry Me Chicken Pasta recipe featuring tender chicken and a rich creamy sauce that’s full of flavor.
- Looking for a chilled pasta dish? This Easy Chicken Bacon Ranch Pasta Salad Recipe is perfect for lunches, potlucks, and gatherings.
Conclusion
Chicken Florentine Pasta turns a handful of simple ingredients into something that feels far more special than the effort it actually takes. Creamy, garlicky, and packed with greens — it’s dinner that earns its spot on repeat. Give it a try this week, then drop a comment below and let me know how it turned out!
Leave a Comment
Your email address will not be published.
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write one.
