This 3-Ingredient Oven 1980s Firecracker Chicken is the kind of easy family supper that feels like a little bit of retro magic: simple pantry ingredients, almost no prep, and big sweet-spicy flavor after a hands-off bake. It’s a wonderful recipe for busy nights because the raw whole chicken breasts go straight into the casserole dish, get coated in sauce, and come out tender and glossy with that classic old-fashioned baked chicken appeal that made these shortcut dinners so popular.
Serve this chicken with fluffy white rice, buttered egg noodles, or mashed potatoes to soak up the sauce. For vegetables, simple green beans, steamed broccoli, or a crisp garden salad balance the rich, sticky glaze nicely, and if you’re feeding hungry folks, warm dinner rolls on the side make it feel like a full Sunday-style supper even on a weeknight.
3-Ingredient Oven 1980s Firecracker Chicken
Servings: 4
Ingredients
4 raw whole boneless skinless chicken breasts
Directions
1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and lightly grease a 9x13-inch glass casserole dish if desired for easier cleanup.
2. Arrange the raw whole chicken breasts in a single layer in the casserole dish.
3. Spoon the Russian dressing evenly over the chicken, then sprinkle the dry onion soup mix all across the top.
4. Bake uncovered for 45 to 55 minutes, or until the chicken is fully cooked and reaches an internal temperature of 165°F in the thickest part.
5. Let the chicken rest for 5 minutes before serving, then spoon the sauce from the pan over each piece.
Variations & Tips
For extra heat: If your family likes a spicier supper, add a pinch of red pepper flakes or a little dash of hot sauce to the dressing before pouring it over the chicken. It gives the sauce a bolder firecracker flavor without adding extra work.
For picky eaters: If anyone at your table is sensitive to strong flavors, use slightly less onion soup mix or serve the chicken sliced over rice so the sauce gets spread out more gently in each bite.
For juicier chicken: Very large whole chicken breasts can take a bit longer to cook, so start checking the temperature around the 45-minute mark and avoid overbaking. If your pieces are especially thick, you can cover the dish loosely with foil for the first 25 minutes to help them stay tender.
Make it a fuller meal: You can tuck simple vegetables like baby carrots or chunks of onion around the chicken before baking. They’ll cook in the sauce and help stretch dinner a little further for a hungry family.