Chicken Casserole

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Golden, bubbly chicken casserole is the kind of comfort food that disappears fast once it hits the table. The creamy filling stays spoonable and rich without turning soupy, and the Ritz-and-cheddar topping bakes into a crisp, salty crust that cracks under the spoon. It’s the contrast that makes this version worth keeping around: soft rice, tender chicken, a little sweetness from the peas and carrots, and that buttery crunch on top.

The trick is building a filling that’s thick before it goes into the oven. The soups and sour cream give the casserole body, while the broth loosens everything just enough so the rice can finish soaking up flavor without the whole dish drying out. Mixing the chicken mixture well before it bakes keeps the rice from clumping and helps every bite hold together when you scoop it out.

Below, I’ve included the small details that keep the casserole creamy instead of loose, plus a few swaps that work when you need to use what’s already in the fridge.

The topping got perfectly crisp and the filling stayed creamy all the way through. I used rotisserie chicken and it came together in minutes, then baked up like a real Sunday supper.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this chicken casserole for the nights when you want creamy rice, tender chicken, and a crackly Ritz-cheddar topping.

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The Creamy Filling Only Works If You Respect the Rice

This casserole looks like a dump-and-bake situation, but the rice changes everything. Cooked rice needs enough moisture to stay tender in the oven, yet too much liquid turns the whole dish loose and heavy. The goal is a filling that settles into the pan like thick stew, not a soup that happens to have chicken in it.

The other place people run into trouble is the topping. If the cracker layer goes on too early or gets buried under too much cheese, it turns soft instead of crisp. The cheese belongs under the crackers so it melts into the casserole, while the buttered crumbs toast on top and stay crunchy longer.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in This Casserole

Chicken casserole creamy cheesy cracker crust
  • Cooked chicken — Rotisserie chicken is the fastest path here, but any cooked chicken works as long as it’s shredded into bite-size pieces. Smaller shreds blend into the sauce better, while large chunks can make the casserole feel patchy.
  • Cooked long-grain rice — Long-grain rice holds its shape better than instant rice or short-grain rice, which can turn soft and sticky. If you’re using leftover rice, break up clumps before mixing so it distributes evenly through the casserole.
  • Cream of chicken and cream of mushroom soups — These build the base and give the casserole its classic creamy texture. You can swap one for a second can of cream of chicken if you don’t want mushroom flavor, but the dish will taste a little less savory and earthy.
  • Sour cream and chicken broth — Sour cream adds tang and richness, while broth loosens the mixture enough for the rice to finish heating through. If you skip the broth, the casserole can bake up thick and pasty.
  • Cheddar cheese — Sharp cheddar gives the topping enough flavor to stand up to the creamy filling. Mild cheddar works, but the result is flatter.
  • Ritz crackers and butter — This is the crunch factor. The butter helps the crumbs brown evenly, and the buttery crackers make a topping that stays crisp longer than plain breadcrumbs.

How to Build the Casserole So It Stays Creamy and Catches Under the Crust

Mix the Filling Until It’s Fully Even

Combine the chicken, rice, soups, sour cream, broth, vegetables, and seasonings in a large bowl until every grain of rice is coated. If you see dry pockets of rice now, they’ll still be dry after baking. The mixture should look thick and spoonable, with no pooling liquid at the bottom of the bowl.

Spread It Into the Dish Without Packing It Down

Spoon the mixture into a greased 9×13 dish and level it lightly. Don’t press it down hard or the casserole turns dense in the center. A gentle spread leaves enough air for heat to move through the pan and keeps the final texture creamy instead of compressed.

Layer the Cheese Before the Crumbs

Scatter the cheddar over the filling first so it melts into the top layer of the casserole. Then mix the crushed Ritz crackers with the melted butter and sprinkle them over the cheese. That order matters: cheese beneath the crumbs helps anchor the topping, while the buttered crackers brown instead of disappearing into the filling.

Bake Until the Edges Bubble and the Top Turns Deep Gold

Pull the casserole when the edges are actively bubbling and the topping is golden brown across the surface. If the crumbs start darkening too quickly, the oven is too hot for your pan position, and you should move it to a lower rack next time. Let it rest for about 10 minutes before serving so the filling tightens slightly and scoops cleanly.

How to Adapt This Chicken Casserole for What You Have on Hand

Gluten-Free Version

Use certified gluten-free cream soups and swap the Ritz crackers for a gluten-free buttery cracker or crushed gluten-free breadcrumbs tossed with the same melted butter. The texture stays close, though the topping may bake a little less shatteringly crisp.

Dairy-Free Adaptation

Use dairy-free sour cream, dairy-free cheddar-style shreds, and a butter substitute for the cracker topping. The casserole will still be creamy, but the flavor leans a little less rich, so keep the seasoning on the generous side.

Use Leftover Turkey Instead of Chicken

Shredded turkey works almost exactly the same way and is a good use for holiday leftovers. Since turkey can taste leaner than chicken, an extra pinch of salt or a little more cheddar helps round out the flavor.

Make It Ahead for a Busy Night

Assemble the casserole without the cracker topping, cover it, and refrigerate it for up to 24 hours. Add the buttered crackers right before baking so they stay crisp instead of absorbing moisture from the filling.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The topping softens, but the filling stays creamy.
  • Freezer: Freeze the baked casserole without the cracker topping for up to 2 months. Thaw in the refrigerator, then add fresh buttered crackers before reheating for the best texture.
  • Reheating: Warm covered at 325°F until hot in the center. If you reheat it uncovered the whole time, the edges dry out before the middle catches up.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use uncooked rice in this chicken casserole?+

No, not with this formula. The liquid level and bake time are written for cooked rice, so uncooked rice would stay hard in the center while the top overbakes. If you want to start with raw rice, you’d need a different casserole method with more liquid and a longer covered bake.

How do I keep my chicken casserole from turning soupy?+

Use fully cooked rice and don’t add extra broth beyond what’s listed. If your chicken is very juicy, blot it lightly before mixing it in, because excess moisture is the fastest way to end up with a loose casserole. The casserole should look thick before it bakes; the oven isn’t there to reduce it down.

Can I make chicken casserole ahead of time?+

Yes. Assemble the filling and cheese layer up to a day ahead, then keep the cracker topping separate until baking. That keeps the crust from going soft in the fridge and gives you a fresher, more crackly top when it comes out of the oven.

How do I know when the casserole is done baking?+

Look for bubbling around the edges and a deeply golden topping. The center should be hot and set, not sloshy when you shake the pan. If the top is browned before the edges bubble, cover it loosely with foil for the last part of the bake.

Can I freeze leftover chicken casserole?+

Yes, but the cracker topping softens after freezing. For the best result, freeze portions without the top layer if you know you’ll be reheating them later, then add fresh crushed crackers or breadcrumbs after warming. That gives you back the texture the freezer tends to take away.

Chicken Casserole

Chicken casserole with creamy chicken, vegetables, and rice baked under a golden, bubbly Ritz cracker and cheddar crust. This easy chicken casserole bakes until the topping turns crisp and crunch-crackled over every inch.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 40 minutes
Total Time 55 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 410

Ingredients
  

Chicken casserole filling
  • 3 cooked chicken
  • 1.5 cups long-grain white rice (cooked)
  • 1 can (10.5 oz) cream of chicken soup
  • 1 can (10.5 oz) cream of mushroom soup
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • 1 cup frozen peas and carrots
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 1 salt to taste
  • 1 black pepper to taste
Cheddar Ritz topping
  • 1.5 cups shredded cheddar cheese
  • 1 sleeve Ritz crackers (crushed)
  • 3 tbsp butter (melted)

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Preheat and mix
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the shredded cooked chicken, cooked long-grain white rice, cream of chicken soup, cream of mushroom soup, sour cream, chicken broth, frozen peas and carrots, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper until well mixed.
Assemble
  1. Spread the chicken mixture evenly into the greased baking dish.
  2. Top with the shredded cheddar cheese in an even layer.
  3. Mix the crushed Ritz crackers with the melted butter, then sprinkle over the cheddar so it covers the top.
Bake
  1. Bake for 35–40 minutes at 350°F until bubbly throughout and the cracker topping is golden brown.

Notes

For the creamiest texture, use fully cooked rice that’s not freshly undercooked. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container for up to 3 days; reheat in the oven at 325°F until warmed through. Freezing is not recommended because the crackers can soften after thawing. Dietary swap: for a lighter option, use reduced-fat sour cream and half the cheese, keeping the same baking time.

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