This recipe went viral on TikTok in 2022 and lives up to every bit of hype. Melt in your mouth chicken breast is the viral baked chicken everyone is obsessed with. Boneless chicken breasts smothered in a sour cream, parmesan, garlic, and paprika coating that bakes into a golden bubbly crust while keeping the chicken impossibly tender and juicy inside. 40 minutes, 5 main ingredients, foolproof. Goodbye dry chicken forever.
Fun fact: the science behind why this works is the sour cream — its lactic acid gently tenderizes the chicken proteins (similar to a buttermilk marinade) while the fat creates a moisture barrier that prevents the meat from drying out as it bakes. Adding parmesan creates a Maillard-reaction crust on top. This technique was actually published in 1970s church cookbooks as “Parmesan Chicken” — TikTok just rediscovered it.
Why this recipe works
- Sour cream tenderizes from outside. Lactic acid breaks down chicken proteins, then the fat seals in moisture as it bakes. Result: impossibly tender meat.
- Parmesan creates the crust. As parmesan bakes, it browns into a crispy bubbly golden crust that traps the chicken juices below it.
- High heat finish. Last 5 minutes at 425°F (or 2 min under broiler) gets the crust golden and dramatic without overcooking the chicken.
Nutrition information
- Calories: 420 kcal per chicken breast
- Protein: 48 g
- Carbohydrates: 4 g
- Fat: 23 g
- Calcium: 32% DV
- Iron: 8% DV
Pro tips for the juiciest chicken ever
- Use a meat thermometer. Pull at 160°F internal — carryover heat brings it to safe 165°F while resting. Overshooting = dry chicken.
- Generous coating layer. Don’t skimp — a thick 1/2-cup layer per breast creates the protective barrier that keeps chicken juicy.
- Full-fat sour cream only. Low-fat versions thin out and don’t form proper crust. Splurge on full-fat for this recipe.
- Resting is non-negotiable. Cut into chicken immediately and juices flood the plate. Rest 5 minutes and juices redistribute into the meat.
Frequently asked questions
Why did my coating slide off?
Chicken was wet when you applied the coating, or coating was too thin (used low-fat sour cream). Pat chicken bone dry first and use full-fat sour cream for proper consistency.
Can I use chicken thighs?
Yes — boneless skinless thighs work great. Reduce bake time to 25-28 minutes. Bone-in thighs need 40-45 minutes. Thighs are extra forgiving and stay juicy even if slightly overcooked.
How long do leftovers keep?
Refrigerator 4 days in airtight container. Reheat at 350°F for 10 min (or microwave 90 seconds on 50% power) to keep chicken moist. The coating gets even better day 2.
Can I make it ahead?
Yes — assemble in baking dish, cover with plastic wrap, refrigerate up to 24 hours. Bring to room temp 15 minutes before baking. Add 5 minutes to bake time.
What if I don’t have parmesan?
Pecorino Romano works perfectly (saltier, sharper). Or use grated asiago, aged gouda, or even sharp cheddar for different flavor profiles. Stick with hard aged cheeses for the crust to form properly.
What sides go best?
Mashed potatoes (drizzle the pan juices over them), buttered rice, roasted broccoli, steamed asparagus, or a crisp green salad. The coating drips create incredible pan sauce — don’t waste it.