We haven’t done food on R&K in a while. Chicken’s big around here, because I generally avoid eating red meat; when we do meat, it’s usually fish or poultry. So we go through chicken like crazy.
When Kristi and I first got together, we had menu problems. We were both used to fast food, frozen dinner diets that had to stop: they were lousy for us, expensive, and just didn’t taste all that good. Problem was, neither of us came to the table with many easy dinner recipes – especially hearty ones that keep you going on a cold December NorCal night. So we went out looking and came up with a chicken casserole recipe that we gradually adapted over time and is now a regular weekly staple.
It’s good stuff. Takes a while to cook, but isn’t hard to make – you mainly just throw the parts together and put it in the oven.
Monday Night Chicken Casserole:
4 raw chicken breasts, cut into 3/4 inch (or so) cubes
1 6 oz box of salad croutons
1 10.5 oz can of Cream of Chicken soup
1 10.5 oz can of Cream of Mushroom soup
1 whole zucchini, sliced
1 head of broccoli, cut up in salad-sized chunks
1 small onion or 1/2 a large one, chopped
Mushrooms (optional and to taste, but I like it), chopped or sliced
Don’t get fancy with any of the ingredients – just get the cheapest, store-brand stuff.
Start by spraying a 9×13″ glass pan with no-stick spray. Lay the cubed chicken along the bottom of the pan; it should pretty much fill the bottom. Then pour the whole box of croutons over the chicken and evenly spread it out.
Next, put all the chopped-up veg (again, a good chopper makes this speedy and easy) into a large skillet and then turn on the stove; pour the two cups of soup into the skillet and mix in some water. Not much water – just enough to start the soup liquifying. Use one of the empty soup cans; about a third of a can, maybe half of water should be enough. Cook the soup/veg mixture on the stove only long enough to evenly liquify the soup and to mix it into the vegetables. The mission right now isn’t to cook the vegetables – that’ll happen in the oven – but to evenly distribute the soup.
IMPORTANT: Be conservative about adding water to this mix. When it cooks down, the veg is going to add a lot of water on its own. Too much water and the casserole will be soup, and will boil and overflow into a messy oven. You don’t want that, so take it easy on the water.
Season the mix to taste. Basil, oregano, pepper, any classic veg seasoning like that will do.
Next, pour the soup/veg mixture over the croutons and chicken. Again, evenly spread it out.
Cover the pan with aluminum foil and put it on the oven at about 400F 375F for an hour. Then take the foil off and put it back for another half hour. You might also want to put something – an old cookie sheet maybe – underneath the tray in the oven to catch anything that might drip in overflow.
It’s a short prep time but a long cook time. It’s worth it. When you pull the casserole and let it cool a bit, the whole thing will be cooked through and through, slightly crisp up top while down below it’s all nice and thickened up. We usually end up with enough for dinner and then at least lunch the next day.
Not necessarily a summer dish, but it’s a great dinner for a cold night. Enjoy.
By the way, Wendy: we tried zucchini in our quesadillas and you were right, they’re great! Now we’re sure always to drop a whole chopped zucchini into the mix – thanks for the idea!

Temp should be 375F for 1.5 hours. 🙂 At 400F, it’ll burn!
Fixed. 🙂
Glad you like the zucchini quesadilla! 🙂
Here is one of my quick recipes…
Philly cheese steak sandwhiches:
Buy 1 package of carne asada meat…it is usually round steak or some type of steak cut thinly. Freeze it, as the meat is easier to cut frozen. If you aren’t into red meat, you can easily substitute this with chicken.
1 red or green bell pepper
1 yellow onion
Cut meat into cubes and throw in pan on med/high heat. I don’t oil the pain, usually there is enough meat juices so it won’t stick. When meat is almost brown go to veggies.
Cut up bell pepper and onion, add to pan.
Season with usual steak seasoning, pepper, and salt (if you want to.)
Toast hoagie rolls (or any type of french roll) in oven.
Add mozzarella cheese (can also use jack) then add meat mixture…
Eat with side of veggies (we buy the frozen kind you put in the microwave and they steam for 5 minutes.)
We also like to buy a chicken that is already rotisere’d and a bag of cesear salad mix…pull off all the chicken meat, throw it into the salad..toss and walla…Chicken Cesear Salad!