Grilled Stuffed Chicken with Cream Sauce

Category: Dinner Recipes

Grilled stuffed chicken lands on the plate with a crisp-edged outside, a juicy center, and a creamy sauce that clings instead of running off. The filling melts into the chicken just enough that each slice holds together, and the sun-dried tomatoes cut through the richness with a little tang. It feels special without needing a long ingredient list or fussy steps.

The trick is starting with evenly butterflied chicken breasts so they cook at the same pace as the filling warms through. A little mozzarella gives you that stretchy, melty middle, while the spinach keeps the stuffing from turning heavy. The cream sauce is built after the chicken, using the same kind of low, steady heat that keeps dairy smooth instead of grainy.

Below, you’ll find the small details that matter most: how to keep the filling inside the chicken, when to pull the grill lid closed, and what to change if you want a lighter sauce or a different cheese blend.

The chicken stayed juicy on the grill and the filling didn’t leak out. The cream sauce thickened up nicely and made the whole dish taste restaurant-level.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this grilled stuffed chicken with cream sauce for the night you want juicy chicken, melty filling, and a sauce that tastes like it came from a steakhouse.

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The Part That Keeps the Filling Inside the Chicken

Stuffed chicken falls apart for one reason most of the time: the breast is uneven, and the filling gets shoved into a pocket that can’t close cleanly. Butterflying the chicken and pounding it to an even thickness gives you a flatter surface, which helps the fold seal more naturally and keeps the meat from overcooking at the thin edge while the center catches up. The grill then does the rest, as long as you don’t move the chicken too soon.

To keep the filling where it belongs, mound it on one side only and leave a clean border around the edges. Toothpicks aren’t decorative here; they’re structure. If the cheese mixture looks like it’s oozing out before it hits the grill, the chicken was overloaded, and the fix is simple: use less filling and press the edges together firmly before seasoning.

What the Spinach, Mozzarella, and Sun-Dried Tomatoes Are Really Doing

Grilled Stuffed Chicken with Cream Sauce stuffed chicken, creamy, herbaceous
  • Chicken breasts — Large, even breasts matter here because thin pieces dry out before the filling warms through. If yours are especially thick, pound them to an even 1/2 to 3/4 inch so the grill time stays predictable.
  • Fresh spinach — Fresh spinach wilts into the filling without watering it down. Frozen spinach can work in a pinch, but it needs to be thawed and squeezed very dry or the stuffing turns loose and leaks.
  • Mozzarella — Mozzarella gives the filling that soft, melty pull you want when the chicken is sliced. Part-skim works fine, but fresh mozzarella is too wet for this and can make the filling slippery.
  • Sun-dried tomatoes — These bring salt and tang, which keeps the filling from tasting flat under the cream sauce. Chop them small so they spread through the cheese instead of clumping in one bite.
  • Parmesan in the sauce — Parmesan thickens and seasons at the same time. Use the finely grated kind if you can; coarse shreds melt more slowly and can leave the sauce a little grainy if the heat is too high.

Grilling the Chicken So the Center Cooks Before the Outside Toughens

Building the Stuffed Breasts

Season the outside of the chicken only after the filling is in place and the breasts are folded. That keeps the surface dry enough to get some color on the grill instead of steaming from the salt sitting on the meat. Secure each breast with toothpicks so the seam stays closed, then press gently to help the fold hold together. If the filling seems bulky, stop and remove a little; a smaller packet cooks more evenly than a packed one that bursts open halfway through grilling.

Grilling Over Medium Heat

Set the grill to medium and let it preheat fully before the chicken goes on. You want steady heat, not a screaming hot grate that burns the outside before the center is safe. Grill for 8 to 10 minutes per side, turning once, and close the lid if the breasts are thick. If the outside is darkening too fast, move the chicken to a cooler spot on the grill and finish gently instead of forcing the heat.

Finishing the Cream Sauce

Melt the butter and cook the garlic just until fragrant, not browned. Add the cream over low heat, then stir in the Parmesan and Italian seasoning and let the sauce barely simmer until it coats a spoon. If it looks thin at first, keep the heat low and give it a minute; cream sauces thicken as they reduce. If the sauce starts to look grainy, the pan was too hot, and pulling it off the burner for a moment usually saves it.

How to Adapt This Grilled Stuffed Chicken for a Different Night

Dairy-Free with a Lighter Finish

Swap the mozzarella for a dairy-free melting cheese and replace the cream sauce with unsweetened coconut cream or a plain dairy-free cooking cream. You’ll lose a little of the classic Parmesan sharpness, but the chicken still stays rich and saucy without feeling dry.

Gluten-Free as Written

This recipe is naturally gluten-free as long as your Parmesan and sun-dried tomatoes don’t include additives. That makes it an easy main dish when you need something that feels complete without leaning on breading or pasta.

Oven Finish Instead of the Grill

If the weather isn’t cooperating, sear the stuffed chicken in a skillet for a couple of minutes per side, then finish it in a 400°F oven until the center reaches 165°F. You won’t get the same grill marks, but you do get a cleaner, more controlled cook and less risk of splitting the seam.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 3 days. The chicken stays tender, though the filling firms up a bit once chilled.
  • Freezer: The cooked chicken freezes well, but the cream sauce is better made fresh. Freeze the chicken without sauce, wrapped tightly, for up to 2 months.
  • Reheating: Warm the chicken covered in a 300°F oven until heated through. Reheat the sauce separately over low heat and add a splash of cream if it thickens too much; high heat is the quickest way to split it.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I bake this instead of grilling it?+

Yes. Bake it at 400°F after searing or placing it in a lightly oiled dish, and cook until the center reaches 165°F. Baking gives you a little more control if your chicken breasts are thick or uneven, and it lowers the chance of the filling leaking out.

How do I keep the cheese from leaking out?+

Use less filling than you think you need and keep it away from the edges. The seam has to be tightly folded and secured with toothpicks, and the chicken should stay over medium heat so the outside doesn’t split open before the center firms up.

Can I make the cream sauce ahead of time?+

You can, but it’s best fresh. The sauce will thicken as it sits, so rewarm it gently with a splash of cream or milk and stir over low heat. Don’t boil it, or the Parmesan can turn grainy.

How do I know when the chicken is done without cutting it open?+

Use an instant-read thermometer and check the thickest part of the breast, not the filling. You’re looking for 165°F, and that’s the only reliable way to avoid either dry chicken or an undercooked center.

Can I use a different cheese in the filling?+

Yes. Provolone, fontina, or a mild cheddar all melt well, though each changes the filling a little. Fontina gives the smoothest melt, cheddar adds more sharpness, and provolone keeps the flavor closest to the original without getting heavy.

Grilled Stuffed Chicken with Cream Sauce

Grilled stuffed chicken with cream sauce featuring butterflied chicken breasts filled with spinach, mozzarella, and sun-dried tomatoes. You’ll grill until juicy at 165°F, then simmer a rich Parmesan cream sauce to thick, drizzle-ready consistency.
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Rest time 5 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 780

Ingredients
  

Chicken and filling
  • 4 chicken breasts Butterflied and pounded to even thickness.
  • 2 cup fresh spinach Chopped or left as bite-size pieces.
  • 1 cup mozzarella cheese Shredded.
  • 0.25 cup sun-dried tomatoes Chopped.
  • salt To taste.
  • pepper To taste.
Cream sauce
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 cloves garlic Minced.
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 0.5 cup Parmesan cheese Grated.
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet
  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep the stuffed chicken
  1. Butterfly the chicken breasts and pound them to an even thickness so they cook uniformly on the grill.
  2. Mix the fresh spinach, shredded mozzarella, and chopped sun-dried tomatoes into a single filling.
  3. Place the filling on one side of each chicken breast, fold over, and secure with toothpicks so the filling stays inside.
  4. Season the outside of the chicken with salt and pepper for flavor on the grill.
Grill and rest
  1. Grill the chicken over medium heat for 8-10 minutes per side, until the internal temperature reaches 165°F.
  2. Remove the chicken from the grill and let it rest for 5 minutes so the juices settle before serving.
Make the cream sauce
  1. Melt the butter and sauté the minced garlic until fragrant, 30-60 seconds.
  2. Add the heavy cream, Parmesan cheese, and Italian seasoning, then simmer until thickened, about 3-5 minutes, stirring as it thickens.
  3. Remove the toothpicks from the chicken and serve drizzled with the thickened cream sauce.

Notes

Pro tip: If the filling feels too moist to hold together, drain spinach well before mixing so the chicken seals cleanly. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container for up to 3 days; reheat gently in a skillet or microwave until warmed through. Freezing isn’t recommended for the sauce texture, but you can freeze cooked chicken (sauce separately) up to 2 months. Dietary swap: use lactose-free heavy cream and lactose-free mozzarella/Parmesan to make it lactose-friendly.

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