Golden-edged white chicken enchiladas come out of the oven with a creamy sauce that settles into every seam, and that melted Monterey Jack on top gives each bite a stretchy, slightly salty finish. The tortillas stay soft but not soggy, the chicken stays tucked inside, and the green chiles keep the whole dish from tasting heavy.
What makes this version work is the sauce. It starts like a simple white gravy, with butter, flour, and broth cooked long enough to lose that raw flour taste, then the heat comes off before the sour cream goes in. That keeps the sauce smooth instead of grainy or broken. The green chiles are folded into both the filling and the sauce, which gives the dish a steady background warmth instead of one loud bite after another.
Below, I’ve included the one step that keeps the sauce silky, the ingredient swaps that still hold the dish together, and the storage notes that matter if you want to bake these ahead.
The sauce was smooth and creamy, and it thickened just enough in the oven without turning pasty. I used leftover rotisserie chicken and the enchiladas still tasted like something I’d ordered at a good restaurant.
Save these creamy white chicken enchiladas for the nights when you want a bubbly Tex-Mex casserole with a silky sour cream sauce.
The Part That Keeps the White Sauce Smooth Instead of Grainy
The flour and butter need a full minute together before the broth goes in. That short cook gives the sauce body without leaving a starchy taste behind, and it helps the roux take on the broth evenly. If you rush that base, the sauce can taste flat or thicken unevenly in the oven.
The other critical point is the sour cream. It goes in after the pan comes off the heat because high heat can make it split, especially if the broth mixture is still actively bubbling. You want the sauce warm, not boiling, when the sour cream is stirred in. That keeps it glossy and pourable so it blankets the enchiladas instead of turning lumpy.
What the Chicken, Chiles, and Cheese Are Doing in This Dish

- Shredded chicken — Use cooked chicken that’s already seasoned well, because the filling itself doesn’t spend long in the oven. Rotisserie chicken is a smart shortcut here, and it stays moist in the creamy sauce. If your chicken is very plain, toss it with a pinch of salt before rolling the enchiladas.
- Flour tortillas — Flour tortillas hold up better than corn tortillas in this sauce. Corn tortillas can work, but they’ll need to be warmed first or they’ll crack when you roll them. The flour version gives you that soft, classic casserole-style texture after baking.
- Diced green chiles — These add gentle heat and a little tang without making the filling spicy. The canned version is the right call here because you want tenderness and even distribution, not extra moisture from fresh peppers. Drain them only if there’s a lot of liquid in the can.
- Monterey Jack cheese — This cheese melts smoothly and gives you that pale, stretchy top layer that belongs on white enchiladas. Pre-shredded cheese works, but freshly shredded melts cleaner. If you want a sharper finish, mix in a little pepper Jack, but don’t replace all of it or the sauce loses its mellow balance.
- Sour cream — Full-fat sour cream gives the sauce the best body and the most stable finish. Light sour cream can work, but it’s more likely to separate. Let it sit out briefly before adding it so it blends in without shocking the warm sauce.
Rolling, Saucing, and Baking Without a Soggy Bottom
Build the Filling First
Mix the chicken with the green chiles and a little cheese before you start rolling. That small amount of cheese helps the filling cling together, so it doesn’t slide out of the tortillas once the sauce goes on. Spoon the filling down the center of each tortilla and roll it snugly, but don’t pack it so tight that the tortilla tears. A seam-side-down finish is what keeps everything in place.
Cook the Sauce Until It Naps the Spoon
Whisk the butter, flour, and broth until the sauce thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon, usually in about 3 minutes. If it still looks thin on the stove, give it another minute; it should look smooth and slightly glossy, not paste-like. Pull the pan off the burner before stirring in the sour cream, green chiles, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. If the sauce looks grainy at this point, the heat was too high, and whisking in a spoonful of cold broth can help bring it back.
Bake Until the Edges Bubble and the Top Spots Color
Pour the sauce all the way to the edges of the dish so the tortillas don’t dry out. The cheese on top should melt first, then pick up light golden spots around the edges. Bake uncovered so steam can escape; covered enchiladas tend to go soft and lose that pleasant contrast between creamy sauce and lightly toasted cheese. Pull the dish when the center is hot and bubbling, not just when the top looks finished.
How to Adapt These White Chicken Enchiladas for Different Kitchens
Use rotisserie chicken for the fastest version
Rotisserie chicken is the easiest shortcut here, and it gives the enchiladas extra flavor without any extra work. Shred it while it’s still warm enough to pull apart easily, then season lightly if the bird was under-salted. This keeps the filling moist and sturdy.
Make it gluten-free with corn tortillas and a gluten-free flour blend
Corn tortillas and a good gluten-free all-purpose blend can work, but the texture changes. Warm the corn tortillas first so they don’t split, and expect a slightly more rustic casserole with a softer edge. The sauce still turns out creamy as long as your gluten-free flour blend thickens the roux properly.
Turn up the heat with pepper Jack and extra chiles
Swap part or all of the Monterey Jack for pepper Jack if you want a sharper, spicier finish. Add an extra small can of green chiles or a few sliced jalapeños on top for more bite. The sauce stays the same, but the final dish leans warmer and more savory.
Make it ahead and bake later
Assemble the enchiladas up to a day in advance, but hold back a little sauce if you want the tortillas to stay more structured. Cover tightly and refrigerate, then add the remaining sauce and cheese right before baking. Cold casserole dishes need a few extra minutes in the oven, so bake until the center is hot all the way through.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The tortillas soften a little more each day, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: These freeze well baked or unbaked. Wrap the dish tightly and freeze for up to 2 months; thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating or baking.
- Reheating: Reheat covered at 325°F until hot in the center. If you microwave single portions, add a splash of broth or water so the sauce loosens back up instead of drying out.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

White Chicken Enchiladas
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 375°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish.
- Mix shredded chicken with diced green chiles and 1/2 cup Monterey jack cheese, then divide the mixture among the tortillas and roll up tightly.
- Place the rolled enchiladas seam-side down in the prepared dish.
- Melt the butter in a saucepan over medium heat.
- Whisk in the flour and cook for 1 minute.
- Slowly add the chicken broth while whisking constantly until the sauce thickens, about 3 minutes.
- Remove from heat and stir in sour cream, diced green chiles, garlic powder, salt, and pepper until smooth.
- Pour the white sauce evenly over the enchiladas and top with the remaining Monterey jack cheese.
- Bake uncovered for 25–30 minutes until bubbly and golden, then garnish with fresh cilantro.