Chicken with Strawberry Basil Sauce | 30-Minute, Vibrant & Easy

If your usual chicken routine needs a glow-up, this Chicken with Strawberry Basil Sauce brings the sparkle. Think juicy seared or grilled chicken cloaked in a glossy strawberry-balsamic reduction, finished with ribbons of fresh basil. It’s fast, versatile, and dramatically flavorful—the kind of dish that looks chef-y but cooks up with everyday ingredients you probably already have.

Why strawberry + basil + balsamic absolutely works

The magic here is balance: strawberries bring juicy brightness; balsamic concentrates to a sweet-tart lacquer; basil threads in a peppery-anise lift. When this trio hits the pan’s savory fond, you get a sauce that’s glossy, punchy, and layered—an ideal foil for chicken, whether you choose breasts for speed or thighs for succulence. A touch of butter at the end (totally optional) gives the sauce that restaurant sheen, while a flick of red pepper flakes can add a whisper of heat.

Ingredients for Chicken with Strawberry Basil Sauce

Chicken

  • Boneless, skinless breasts cook quickly and slice neatly.
  • Boneless skinless thighs stay ultra-juicy and are forgiving.
  • A quick pound to even thickness helps both cuts cook evenly and sear better.

Strawberries

  • Fresh berries yield a sparkling flavor and color.
  • Frozen berries work—thaw and drain, then reduce a bit longer.
  • Strawberry preserves are a great off-season, back-pocket swap that brings body and gloss.

Balsamic vinegar

  • A decent everyday balsamic is fine—reduce until syrupy.
  • For extra depth, start with a tablespoon more than you think you’ll need; it concentrates fast.
  • A drip of honey or maple balances acidity if your berries are very tart.

Aromatics & boosts

  • Shallot (or red onion) for sweetness; garlic for savoriness.
  • Red pepper flakes or a pinch of Aleppo pepper for a gentle, fruity heat.
  • A splash of stock or a glug of dry red wine builds dimension when deglazing.

Fats

  • Olive oil is your baseline; a pat of butter at the end (monter au beurre) makes the sauce silky.

Herbs

  • Basil is the signature; add off the heat to keep it vibrant.
  • Swaps and add-ons: mint, thyme, or a few leaves of tarragon for a subtle licorice note.

Equipment you actually need

  • A heavy stainless or cast-iron skillet (or a grill/pan-grill for the grilled variation)
  • Tongs and a good instant-read thermometer
  • A small saucepan if you prefer to reduce the balsamic separately
  • Microplane for garlic and citrus zest (optional, but lovely)

Method A: Skillet chicken with warm strawberry-balsamic pan sauce

This is the dramatic, glossy one-pan route where the sauce drinks up all that savory fond. It’s a 30-ish minute path to a plated dinner that looks like you fussed (you didn’t).

Ingredients (4 servings)

  • 4 chicken cutlets (or 2 large breasts halved horizontally) or 4 boneless thighs
  • 1 tsp kosher salt, ½ tsp black pepper
  • 1½–2 tbsp olive oil, divided
  • 1 shallot, minced (or ¼ cup very finely diced red onion)
  • 1 small garlic clove, microplaned (or very finely minced)
  • 1 cup strawberries, hulled and chopped (plus a few slices for garnish)
  • ¼–⅓ cup balsamic vinegar
  • 1–2 tsp honey (or maple), to taste
  • Pinch red pepper flakes (optional)
  • 1–2 tbsp unsalted butter (optional, for finishing)
  • ¼ cup stock or a splash of dry red wine (optional, for deglazing depth)
  • ½ cup fresh basil, cut into chiffonade (divided: some for the sauce, some for garnish)
  • Lemon zest (optional, a quick pass for sparkle)

Steps

  1. Season & sear
    Pat chicken dry. Season both sides with salt and pepper. Heat a large skillet over medium-high. Add 1 tbsp olive oil; when shimmering, add chicken. Sear until well browned, flip, and cook to 160–165°F (carryover will finish it). Transfer to a warm plate; tent loosely.
  2. Build flavor
    Lower to medium. Add remaining olive oil and shallot; sauté until tender and lightly golden. Stir in garlic for 20–30 seconds.
  3. Deglaze & reduce
    Add balsamic and the splash of stock or wine, scraping up browned bits. Simmer to reduce slightly, 1–2 minutes, then add strawberries, honey, and a pinch of red pepper flakes if using. Cook, stirring, until the strawberries soften and the liquids thicken to a spoon-coating gloss (think slow, syrupy bubbles).
  4. Finish
    Off the heat, swirl in butter (if using) for sheen. Fold in half the basil and a whisper of lemon zest. Taste and adjust: if too tart, add a tiny drip more honey; if too sweet, a drip of balsamic or a pinch of salt.
  5. Serve
    Slice chicken on the bias and shingle on warm plates. Spoon over the strawberry-balsamic sauce. Scatter remaining basil and a few fresh strawberry slices on top.

Pro tips for the skillet path

  • Don’t rush the reduction: watch for thick, lazy bubbles that leave a trail when you drag a spoon.
  • Add butter off heat only—keeps the sauce glossy rather than greasy.
  • Basil in two additions: a little in the sauce for flavor, more on top for aroma and vivid color.
Chicken with strawberry basil sauce on a plate

Method B: Grilled (or pan-grilled) chicken with fresh strawberry-basil salsa

Ingredients (4 servings)

For the chicken

  • 4 chicken cutlets or thighs
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • 1 small garlic clove, microplaned
  • 1 tsp kosher salt, ½ tsp black pepper

For the strawberry-basil salsa

  • 1½ cups strawberries, small-diced
  • ½ cup basil, chiffonade
  • 1–2 tsp balsamic vinegar
  • 1–2 tsp olive oil
  • Pinch kosher salt and black pepper
  • Optional: ¼ cup tiny mozzarella pearls (caprese vibe), ½ small jalapeño (minced) for heat, or 1 tsp honey if berries are very tart

Steps

  1. Marinate
    Whisk olive oil, balsamic, garlic, salt, and pepper. Coat chicken and marinate 20–60 minutes (or up to overnight).
  2. Grill or pan-grill
    Heat the grill to medium-high (or a grill pan until very hot). Pat chicken dry (better char). Grill 3–5 minutes per side, depending on thickness, to 165°F.
  3. Mix the salsa
    Toss strawberries, basil, balsamic, olive oil, and seasonings right before serving so the berries stay perky. Add optional mozzarella or jalapeño if you like.
  4. Serve
    Slice chicken, pile on salsa, and finish with extra basil.

Pro tips for the grilled path

  • Pat the chicken dry before it hits the heat—this equals better browning.
  • Season the salsa last minute: salt pulls liquid; you want juicy, not watery.
  • Keep balsamic in the salsa restrained; we’re brightening, not pickling.

Flavor variations & creative spins

  • Use thighs for extra juiciness
    Thighs retain moisture beautifully in both methods and reheat well.
  • Preserves shortcut
    Out of season? Replace part of the berries with 2–3 tbsp strawberry preserves in the skillet sauce for instant body and shine.
  • Herb play
    Swap in mint for a cooling finish; add thyme for a woodsy note; or blend basil + tarragon for a subtle, elegant complexity.
  • Turn up the heat
    Add red pepper flakes, Aleppo pepper, or a minced jalapeño to the salsa.
    Tip: spicy + sweet + tangy equals depth without heaviness.
  • Citrus sparkle
    A final lemon zest pass (or a micro-grate of orange) brightens the sauce without thinning it.
  • Chutney lane
    Simmer berries with a little shallot, balsamic, a dash of warm spice (tiny pinch of allspice or coriander), and a spoonful of preserves until thick. Spoon over grilled chicken like a savory “jam.”
Chicken with strawberry basil sauce on a plate

Make-ahead, storage & reheating

  • Make-ahead
    • Marinate chicken up to 24 hours.
    • Skillet sauce can be made 2–3 days ahead; rewarm gently and add basil at the end.
    • For the salsa version, dice berries in advance but toss with salt/acid right before serving.
  • Storage
    • Cool promptly and store in an airtight container for up to a few days.
    • The sauce freezes better than the salsa; stir in fresh basil after reheating.
  • Reheating
    • Skillet: low heat with a small splash of water to loosen the sauce.
    • Oven: covered, low temp until warmed through.
    • Finish with fresh basil to revive aroma and color.

Troubleshooting

  • Sauce too thin?
    Reduce longer over medium—look for slow, thick bubbles that hold a line. A cold-butter swirl at the end adds body and gloss.
  • Sauce too sweet?
    Counter with a drip of balsamic, a pinch of salt, and a breath of lemon zest.
  • Berries too pale in flavor?
    Salt early (just a whisper) to wake them up, especially for the salsa. A teaspoon of preserves can reinforce strawberry character without making it sugary.
  • Dry chicken?
    Try thighs, brine briefly (1 tbsp salt per cup water, quick 30 minutes for cutlets), or control carryover by pulling breasts from heat a shade early and resting.
  • Basil turned dark?
    Take off the heat and reserve some for the plate. Slice just before serving.

Serving ideas & plating cues

  • Slice chicken on the bias and shingle it in a fan for height.
  • Spoon the sauce strategically—enough to gloss, not drown—then add a small spoonful of fresh strawberry dice for texture contrast.
  • Finish with chiffonade basil and a micro-drizzle of balsamic.
  • For the grilled version, pile salsa high and add a pinch of flaky salt right before it hits the table.

FAQs

Can I use frozen strawberries?
Yes. Thaw and drain to remove excess water, then cook the sauce a little longer to reach that shiny, spoon-coating consistency. For the salsa, thawed berries can get soft—mix them gently and balance with a few fresh slices if possible.

Breasts or thighs—what’s better here?
Both work. Breasts are quick and slice neatly; thighs stay juicier and are more forgiving if you’re multitasking. Choose based on texture preference and cooking method (thighs shine in the skillet; breasts are fantastic grilled).

Do I have to cook the strawberries?
No. The grilled variation uses a fresh strawberry-basil salsa that’s vibrant and saucy without any simmering.

What herbs pair with strawberries besides basil?
Mint for cooling freshness, thyme for subtle woodsiness, and a little tarragon for a whisper of licorice.

How do I thicken strawberry sauce without cornstarch?
Reduce it patiently over medium heat until bubbles turn slow and glossy; finish with a small cold-butter swirl to emulsify.

Print
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Chicken with strawberry basil sauce on a plate

Chicken with Strawberry Basil Sauce


  • Author: Velma
  • Total Time: PT35M
  • Yield: 4 servings 1x
  • Diet: Gluten Free

Description

This Chicken with Strawberry Basil Sauce combines tender seared chicken breasts with a vibrant sauce made from fresh strawberries, balsamic vinegar, and fragrant basil. Sweet, tangy, and savory all at once, it’s a restaurant-worthy dish that’s surprisingly easy to make at home — perfect for summer dinners or special occasions.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 chicken cutlets or 4 boneless thighs
  • 1 tsp kosher salt, ½ tsp black pepper
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 shallot, minced; 1 small garlic clove, microplaned
  • 1 cup strawberries, chopped (plus extra slices to garnish)
  • ¼ cup balsamic vinegar
  • 12 tsp honey (or maple), to taste
  • Pinch red pepper flakes (optional)
  • 12 tbsp unsalted butter (optional)
  • ¼ cup stock or splash dry red wine (optional)
  • ½ cup basil, chiffonade (divided)
  • Lemon zest (optional)

Instructions

  1. Season & sear
    Pat chicken dry. Season both sides with salt and pepper. Heat a large skillet over medium-high. Add 1 tbsp olive oil; when shimmering, add chicken. Sear until well browned, flip, and cook to 160–165°F (carryover will finish it). Transfer to a warm plate; tent loosely.
  2. Build flavor
    Lower to medium. Add remaining olive oil and shallot; sauté until tender and lightly golden. Stir in garlic for 20–30 seconds.
  3. Deglaze & reduce
    Add balsamic and the splash of stock or wine, scraping up browned bits. Simmer to reduce slightly, 1–2 minutes, then add strawberries, honey, and a pinch of red pepper flakes if using. Cook, stirring, until the strawberries soften and the liquids thicken to a spoon-coating gloss (think slow, syrupy bubbles).
  4. Finish
    Off the heat, swirl in butter (if using) for sheen. Fold in half the basil and a whisper of lemon zest. Taste and adjust: if too tart, add a tiny drip more honey; if too sweet, a drip of balsamic or a pinch of salt.
  5. Serve
    Slice chicken on the bias and shingle on warm plates. Spoon over the strawberry-balsamic sauce. Scatter remaining basil and a few fresh strawberry slices on top.

Notes

  • Add contrast: Serve with arugula, spinach, or a side of garlic mashed potatoes.
  • Make it creamy: Stir in a tablespoon of butter or cream for a richer sauce.
  • Fruit variation: Try substituting strawberries with raspberries or peaches for a seasonal twist.
  • Prep Time: PT15M
  • Cook Time: PT20M
  • Category: Main Dish
  • Method: Pan-Seared / Skillet
  • Cuisine: American

Nutrition

  • Calories: 290kcal
  • Sugar: 10g
  • Sodium: 380mg
  • Fat: 12g
  • Saturated Fat: 2g
  • Unsaturated Fat: 8g
  • Trans Fat: 0g
  • Carbohydrates: 14g
  • Fiber: 2g
  • Protein: 32g
  • Cholesterol: 90mg

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