Chicken and chorizo is the meal you make when you want one pan to taste like it worked harder than it did. The chorizo releases smoky paprika oil, the chicken browns in it, and the tomato-pepper mixture turns rich enough to spoon over rice, toss with pasta, mop up with bread, or finish with cream.
Start with the stovetop smoky tomato version below. Once the chicken is simmering, you can keep it rustic, make it creamy, add orzo, serve it over rice, or use the guide to move the same flavors toward pasta, paella, a tray bake, or the slow cooker.
This is the kind of recipe that helps when dinner feels undecided. You do not have to commit to pasta, rice, or cream at the start. Build the smoky tomato mixture first, then choose the version that fits the night. It feels bigger than a quick dinner, but it still behaves like one.
Quick Answer
The best easy chicken and chorizo recipe is a one-pan tomato dinner: render Spanish-style chorizo, brown chicken thighs in the smoky oil, then simmer with peppers, garlic, tomatoes, paprika, and stock until the mixture coats the chicken.
Chicken thighs give the juiciest result, and firm Spanish-style chorizo is the easiest to cook with. Breast works too, but it needs gentler simmering. Mexican chorizo can be used, but cook it fully first because it behaves like raw seasoned sausage, not sliced cured chorizo.
Add cream at the end for a softer, richer finish. For orzo, add more stock and simmer it into a one-pot meal. Toss the tomato-chorizo mixture with pasta if you want pasta night. Use a paella method from the start if rice is the main event.
Chicken and Chorizo at a Glance
| Start with | One-pan tomato chicken and chorizo |
| Total time | 35–40 minutes |
| Most forgiving chicken | Boneless skinless chicken thighs |
| Easiest chorizo | Firm Spanish-style cooking chorizo or cured chorizo |
| Main pan | Large deep skillet or sauté pan with lid, ideally 28–30cm / 11–12 inch |
| Chicken doneness | 165°F / 74°C in the thickest pieces |
| Watch for | Extra chorizo oil |
Before You Start
Before you start, decide only one thing: are you making the smoky tomato version, the creamy version, or the orzo version? The first steps stay the same, but the liquid changes later.
- Classic smoky tomato version: start with less stock and reduce until the mixture coats the chicken.
- Creamy chicken and chorizo: spoon off extra chorizo oil before adding cream, or the finish can feel heavy.
- Orzo version: use more stock and stir often because orzo thickens quickly.
- Rice version: serve over cooked rice unless you are following a dedicated paella-style method.
Make this stovetop smoky tomato version first if you are unsure; it is the base for almost every direction below.
Decided your version? Go to the recipe card, or compare the chicken and chorizo variations first.
Recipe Card: One-Pan Chicken and Chorizo
One-Pan Tomato Chicken and Chorizo
A smoky, saucy meal made with chicken, chorizo, tomatoes, peppers, garlic, smoked paprika, and an optional creamy finish.
| Prep Time | 10 minutes |
| Cook Time | 25–30 minutes |
| Total Time | 35–40 minutes |
| Servings | 4 |
| Equipment | Large deep skillet or sauté pan with lid, tongs, wooden spoon, sharp knife, chopping board, measuring jug |
Ingredients
- 600g / 1.3 lb boneless skinless chicken thighs, cut into large bite-size pieces
- 120–150g / 4–5 oz firm Spanish-style chorizo, sliced or diced
- 1 medium onion, finely chopped
- 1 large bell pepper or 2 small bell peppers, sliced
- 3–4 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 tbsp tomato paste
- 1–1½ tsp smoked paprika
- 1 tsp dried oregano or mixed herbs
- 400g / 14 oz canned chopped tomatoes or passata
- 150–250ml / ⅔–1 cup chicken stock
- 1 tbsp olive oil, only if the skillet needs it
- Salt and black pepper, to taste
- Small handful parsley or basil, chopped
- Squeeze of lemon juice, to finish
Optional Creamy Finish
- 100–180ml / ⅓–¾ cup cream
- 20–30g parmesan, finely grated
- 1–2 handfuls spinach
Instructions
- Render the chorizo. Heat a large deep skillet over medium heat. Add chorizo and cook for 2–3 minutes, until red oil appears and the edges start to crisp.
- Control the oil. Keep a glossy coating in the pan, but spoon off any shallow red pool before the dish turns heavy.
- Brown the chicken. Add the chicken pieces, season lightly, and brown for 4–5 minutes. They do not need to cook through yet.
- Soften the vegetables. Add onion and peppers. Cook for 4–5 minutes, then add garlic for 30 seconds.
- Build the smoky base. Stir in tomato paste, smoked paprika, and oregano. Cook for 1 minute so the paste darkens and the spices bloom.
- Simmer gently. Add tomatoes or passata and 150ml / ⅔ cup stock. Scrape the pan, cover loosely, and simmer for 10–12 minutes.
- Reduce until glossy. Uncover and simmer for 5–8 minutes, until the sauce coats the chicken and leaves a light spoon trail. Add stock if it gets too thick.
- Make it creamy, if you like. Lower the heat, then stir in cream, parmesan, and spinach. Simmer gently for 2–4 minutes without boiling hard.
- Finish fresh. Add parsley or basil and lemon juice. Taste before adding salt because chorizo and stock become stronger as they reduce.
- Check doneness. Chicken should reach 165°F / 74°C in the thickest pieces before serving.
Recipe Notes
- Pan size: a wide 28–30cm / 11–12 inch skillet helps the chicken brown and the tomatoes reduce. If yours is smaller, brown the chicken in batches.
- No lid? Use a sheet pan, large plate, or foil loosely over the skillet, or simmer uncovered with extra stock nearby. Watch the liquid and add a little more as needed.
- Stock amount: start with 150ml for a thicker result. Use up to 250ml if your skillet is wide, your tomatoes are thick, or you prefer a looser finish.
- Chorizo strength: if your chorizo is very salty, spicy, or oily, start closer to 120g.
- Buying cue: look for firm Spanish-style chorizo that can be sliced or diced. If it is soft and loose like sausage meat, cook it fully first.
- Tomato paste: 1 tbsp keeps the tomato flavor balanced. Use 2 tbsp if you want it deeper.
- Chicken breast: use about 500g / 1.1 lb and simmer more gently. Breast cooks faster than thighs.
- Mexican chorizo: cook it fully first, breaking it up like sausage meat, then continue with the recipe.
- Lighter plate: use 100–120g chorizo and add extra peppers, spinach, peas, beans, or greens.
- Thicker result: simmer uncovered for a few extra minutes.
- Looser result: thin with stock a little at a time.
This is the point where the recipe starts paying you back: the chicken is tender, the smoky tomato mixture is rich, and the side dish almost chooses itself.
Sauce Texture Cue
Before choosing a variation, check the sauce texture. It should look glossy and thick enough to coat the chicken, not like separate pieces sitting in liquid.

Need a different finish? Jump to creamy chicken and chorizo, rice, orzo, or pasta, or troubleshooting.
More Helpful Chicken and Chorizo Tips
Start Here
Cook It Right
Variations & Serving
Why This Chicken and Chorizo Recipe Works
The chorizo is not just an add-in. It is the flavor starter. As it fries, it releases paprika-rich oil that seasons the chicken, vegetables, and tomatoes. That is why the recipe begins with chorizo instead of plain oil.
The chicken is browned before it simmers, so the pieces taste savory instead of boiled. Tomato paste gets a short moment in the hot oil, which deepens the whole dish. Peppers add sweetness, stock gives the chicken enough moisture to finish cooking, and lemon or herbs at the end keep the richness in check.
By the time the tomatoes reduce, you are looking for a smoky, garlicky, slightly sweet mixture that clings to the chicken instead of sitting thin around it. That is when this stops feeling like chicken in tomato sauce and starts feeling like something you want to put in the middle of the table.
The smoky tomato mixture tastes good before you add cream, pasta, or rice, which is what makes it so flexible. Keep it rustic for a saucy skillet meal, add cream for comfort, stir in orzo for one-pot ease, or spoon it over rice when you want something simple.
What This Tastes Like
This is smoky, tomato-rich, and savory, with a little sweetness from the peppers and a salty paprika edge from the chorizo. The lemon and herbs at the end make the whole skillet taste brighter instead of heavy.
In its smoky tomato form, the skillet is bolder and brighter, especially with rice, potatoes, or a torn piece of bread. Cream makes it softer and richer, parmesan gives the finish more body, orzo turns it cozy and spoonable, pasta makes it glossy, and rice keeps it simple.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Chicken and Chorizo Ingredients at a Glance
The ingredient list is simple, but the order matters. Chorizo starts the flavor, chicken browns in that oil, and tomatoes, peppers, garlic, smoked paprika, and stock turn it into a flexible skillet sauce.

Chicken Thighs or Chicken Breast
Chicken thighs are the most forgiving choice because they stay juicy while the tomatoes simmer down. They also hold their own against the smoky, salty richness of chorizo.
Breast works for a leaner or quicker meal. Cut it into larger pieces, brown it lightly, and simmer gently. Smaller pieces can dry out quickly once the tomatoes start reducing.
If keeping breast juicy is usually the problem, this Baked Chicken Breast Recipe will help with timing and texture.
Best Chorizo to Buy
For this recipe, the easiest choice is firm Spanish-style cooking chorizo or cured chorizo that can be sliced or diced. It should release smoky red oil as it fries and leave little browned edges in the skillet.
Mild chorizo gives you more control, especially if you are cooking for family. Spicy chorizo works well, but taste before adding extra paprika or pepper. Diced chorizo is convenient, while sliced chorizo gives better browned edges and a more visible finished dish.
Avoid a very oily chorizo for the creamy version unless you are ready to spoon off extra fat before the cream goes in. Soft, raw, loose chorizo should be cooked fully first and treated like Mexican chorizo.
Spanish Chorizo vs Mexican Chorizo
Spanish-style cooking chorizo or cured chorizo slices cleanly, releases smoky paprika oil, and gives the tomatoes their deep red flavor.
Mexican chorizo is usually raw, soft, and crumbly. It can still taste excellent with chicken, but it changes the texture. Cook it fully first, breaking it up like sausage meat, then build the tomatoes around it. The finished dish will be looser and meatier, not dotted with neat slices of chorizo.

For more on the ingredient difference, see Food & Wine’s guide to Spanish and Mexican chorizo.
A good amount for 4 servings is 120–150g / 4–5 oz chorizo. More than that can push the final dish toward oily or salty unless you balance it with potatoes, beans, rice, or extra vegetables.
Tomatoes, Peppers, Garlic, and Paprika
Canned chopped tomatoes make the finish rustic and spoonable. Passata gives a smoother result. Tomato paste adds depth, especially when it cooks for a minute in the chorizo oil before the liquid goes in.
Bell peppers are a natural match for chorizo. Red, yellow, and orange peppers add sweetness; green pepper gives a sharper edge. Garlic should go in after the onion and peppers have softened so it does not burn.
Smoked paprika reinforces the chorizo flavor. Use it carefully if your chorizo is already very smoky. The goal is rounded smokiness, not a harsh finish.
Stock, Salt, and Cream
Stock loosens the tomatoes and helps the chicken finish cooking. Start with 150ml / ⅔ cup for a thicker result. Use closer to 250ml / 1 cup if you prefer a looser finish or plan to add orzo.
Taste at the end, not the beginning. Chorizo, stock, parmesan, and olives can all become more intense as they reduce, so early seasoning can turn too salty later.
Cream is optional. Use 100ml / about ⅓ cup for a lightly creamy finish, or up to 180ml / ¾ cup for a richer one. Add it at the end, over lower heat, and simmer gently. A hard boil can make dairy split or turn greasy.
How to Make Chicken and Chorizo
1. Render the Chorizo First
Start the chorizo in a dry or barely oiled skillet over medium heat. Within a few minutes, the bottom should turn glossy and red-orange. This is the smell that tells you the recipe is going somewhere: smoky, salty, and already halfway to dinner.

Control the Chorizo Oil
Keep a glossy coating in the skillet, but spoon off any shallow red pool before moving on. That small bit of control keeps the finished dish rich instead of heavy.

2. Brown the Chicken in the Chorizo Oil
Add the chicken pieces and let them take on color. They do not need to cook through yet. Browning creates a better base and helps the chicken taste seasoned from the start.

In a crowded skillet, brown the chicken in two batches. Crowded chicken steams, and steamed chicken does not give the same depth.
3. Build the Tomato-Pepper Base
Add onion and peppers and cook until they begin to soften. Garlic goes in next, followed by tomato paste, smoked paprika, and oregano. The cue is a smoky, savory smell before the tomatoes go in.
Cooking the tomato paste for even one minute makes the final flavor richer. It is a small step that keeps the tomatoes from tasting thin or raw.

4. Simmer Until It Coats the Chicken
Add tomatoes and stock, then simmer gently. Keep it at a quiet bubble. You want the chicken to finish gently while the tomatoes thicken around it. As the mixture reduces and the chorizo oil folds in, it will turn darker, glossier, and more spoonable.
At this point, the skillet should look like dinner, not separate pieces sitting in liquid: red oil folded in, chicken coated, peppers soft, and everything smelling smoky enough to make rice or bread feel obvious.
You’ll know it is ready when it coats the chicken and leaves a light trail as you drag a spoon through the skillet. At this stage, you should want bread nearby even if you planned rice.

If the chicken is cooked but the skillet still looks thin, simmer uncovered for a few more minutes. Oil pooling on top is your cue to spoon some off. If it gets too thick or tastes too rich, stock, lemon juice, and herbs will bring it back.
5. Finish Based on the Version You Want
For a brighter tomato finish, add herbs and lemon. To make it creamy, lower the heat before stirring in cream and parmesan. Orzo needs extra stock and direct simmering, while pasta works best when the mixture stays thicker and loosens later with pasta water.
Substitutions and Easy Swaps
Use what you have. This is not the kind of recipe that falls apart because you used one pepper instead of two or swapped thighs for breast. Keep the smoky tomato mixture, adjust the liquid, and you still have a good pan of food.
| Ingredient | Easy swap | What changes |
|---|---|---|
| Chicken thighs | Chicken breast or drumsticks | Breast cooks faster; drumsticks need longer. |
| Spanish chorizo | Mexican chorizo cooked fully first, or smoked sausage plus smoked paprika | The texture may become looser or less smoky. |
| Bell peppers | Courgette, mushrooms, peas, spinach, green beans, kale | Add delicate greens near the end. |
| Canned tomatoes | Passata, crushed tomatoes, fresh chopped tomatoes | Fresh tomatoes may need longer to reduce. |
| Chicken stock | Water plus bouillon, vegetable stock | Watch salt if using cubes or powder. |
| Cream | Crème fraîche, cream cheese, extra stock, pasta water | Add dairy over low heat to avoid splitting. |
| Parmesan | Cheddar, manchego, pecorino, or skip it | Saltiness changes, so taste before seasoning. |
| Parsley or basil | Coriander, chives, lemon zest | Use a fresh finish to cut the richness. |
If you are using smoked sausage instead of chorizo, the skillet logic is similar to this Kielbasa and Potatoes Recipe: brown the sausage first, then let its flavor carry the rest of the meal.
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Choose Your Chicken and Chorizo Variation
Start with the smoky tomato pan recipe first. From there, the table below helps you change the meal without turning the chicken dry, the finish greasy, or the rice mushy.
Already know what you want? Jump to creamy, rice, orzo, or pasta, or tray bake and slow cooker.
Chicken and Chorizo Variation Guide

Not sure which version to make? The smoky tomato version is the safest weeknight choice. Cream makes it softer and richer, orzo turns it into a full one-pot meal, and rice works best when it is cooked separately or handled with a paella-style method.
| You want… | Best way to make it | What to watch |
|---|---|---|
| Classic pan meal | Make the smoky tomato version as written. | Keep it rich, not oily. |
| Creamy chicken and chorizo | Add cream and parmesan at the end. | Lower the heat so the cream does not split. |
| Chicken and chorizo with rice | Serve over cooked rice or use a dedicated rice method. | Rice needs planned liquid, not guesswork. |
| Chicken and chorizo orzo | Add orzo and extra stock to the skillet. | Stir often because orzo sticks. |
| Chicken and chorizo pasta | Use the tomato-chorizo mixture as a coating for short pasta. | Loosen with pasta water, not too much stock. |
| Chicken and chorizo paella | Use the dedicated paella recipe. | Paella needs rice and liquid control from the start. |
| Chicken and chorizo jambalaya | Use Cajun seasoning and long-grain rice. | It needs a separate rice-pot method. |
| Chicken and chorizo tray bake | Use thighs, potatoes, peppers, tomatoes, and chorizo. | Do not crowd the tray. |
| Slow cooker chicken and chorizo | Use thighs or drumsticks with less stock. | Add cream, pasta, or orzo late. |
| Lighter chicken and chorizo | Use less chorizo and add greens, beans, or extra peppers. | Keep it tomato-based instead of creamy. |
Creamy Chicken and Chorizo
Creamy chicken and chorizo is the softer, richer version — the one to make when you want the smoky tomato skillet to feel a little more comforting. Cream rounds off the paprika heat, parmesan gives the finish body, and spinach or peas keep the plate from feeling too heavy.

Make the smoky tomato version first, let it reduce until the chicken is cooked, then lower the heat before adding cream. Use 100ml / about ⅓ cup cream for a lightly creamy finish, or up to 180ml / ¾ cup for a richer one. Add 20–30g parmesan, stir gently, and simmer for 2–4 minutes, just until everything turns silky.
Spinach, peas, mushrooms, and basil all work well here. Lemon juice is small but useful because it cuts through the chorizo and cream. A thick creamy finish can be loosened with stock, milk, or pasta water.
The same gentle-heat rule matters in this Cream of Mushroom Chicken Recipe too.
Creamy rule: remove excess chorizo oil before adding cream. Too much oil plus dairy can make the finish feel heavy or split-looking.
Lighter Chicken and Chorizo
A lighter plate is easy if you let a smaller amount of chorizo do the seasoning. Use 100–120g chorizo, chicken breast or trimmed thighs, extra peppers, spinach, courgette, beans, or greens, and keep the tomatoes bright instead of creamy.
Serve it with salad, cauliflower rice, steamed greens, or a smaller portion of rice rather than pasta or potatoes. Start with little or no added oil because the chorizo will season the skillet on its own.
Chicken and Chorizo with Rice, Orzo, or Pasta
Choose your starch: rice, orzo, or pasta.

Chicken and Chorizo with Rice
For the easiest chicken and chorizo with rice, serve the tomato-chorizo mixture over cooked rice. This keeps the chicken tender, the texture controlled, and the rice from turning mushy. White rice, brown rice, pilaf, and cauliflower rice all work.

If rice texture is where dinner usually goes wrong, this guide on How to Cook Rice will help with ratios, soaking, and cooking methods.
You can also stir cooked rice into the skillet at the end for a quick rice-bowl meal. Thin with stock if the rice absorbs too much of the pan juices.
If paella is what you want, take the rice-pan method from the beginning. Paella depends on rice depth, liquid timing, and resting, so it is better not to improvise it by stirring raw rice into this recipe. Use the Chicken and Chorizo Paella Recipe when you want the saffron rice-pan version.
Chicken and Chorizo Orzo
For chicken and chorizo orzo, add the orzo after the tomatoes and stock go in. Use 200g orzo and increase the total stock to about 500–600ml / 2–2½ cups.

Grams are more reliable than cups here. Orzo cup measures vary by brand and shape; 200g is usually around 1 to 1¼ cups.
Simmer for 9–12 minutes, stirring often. Orzo sticks as the mixture thickens, so keep extra stock nearby and stir in a little at a time if the skillet looks dry before the orzo is tender.
Finish orzo with spinach, peas, parmesan, parsley, or a little cream. Serve it while it is loose and saucy because orzo thickens as it sits.
Chicken and Chorizo Pasta
Pasta works best when the tomato-chorizo mixture starts slightly thicker, then loosens with pasta water. Cook 225–300g short pasta such as penne, rigatoni, fusilli, or orecchiette until just tender, then toss it through the skillet.
Creamy tomato pasta works best when the cream and parmesan go in before the pasta. For a pasta bake, mix the cooked pasta with the chicken and chorizo, top with cheese, and bake until bubbling.
The glossy finish uses the same pasta-water logic as this Broccoli Pasta Recipe.
Aim to finish pasta while the mixture still clings. Dry pasta needs pasta water, while soupy pasta needs another minute of simmering before serving.
Chicken and Chorizo Jambalaya
Jambalaya needs its own cooking plan before rice goes in. Instead of this tomato pan recipe, use long-grain rice, Cajun seasoning, peppers, tomatoes, stock, chicken, and chorizo, then simmer until the rice is tender.
Think of it as its own one-pot rice meal rather than a quick variation of this recipe. In this post, serve the skillet over cooked rice or use the paella link when you want saffron rice. Jambalaya needs its own seasoning, rice, and liquid plan from the start.
For another smoky rice-and-beans comfort meal, see this Red Beans and Rice Recipe.
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Tray Bake and Slow Cooker Versions
Chicken and Chorizo Tray Bake
The tray bake version is for the night when you want the oven to take over and the potatoes to catch all that smoky chorizo oil. Use chicken thighs, chorizo, potatoes, peppers, onion, tomatoes, garlic, smoked paprika, and a little olive oil.
Spread everything in a large tray so the ingredients roast instead of steam. Bake at 200°C / 400°F for about 45–50 minutes, turning the potatoes once or twice, until the chicken is cooked through and the potatoes are tender. Bone-in thighs may need a little longer.

Smaller pieces can brown faster at 220°C / 425°F if the tray is well spread out. For a general family tray bake, 200°C / 400°F is the safer starting point. Crowding is the fastest way to turn a tray bake watery, so use two trays if needed.
The same spread-it-out principle helps these Sheet Pan Chicken Fajitas brown instead of steam.
Slow Cooker Chicken and Chorizo
In the slow cooker, thighs or drumsticks are the safer choice because they stay juicier over longer cooking. Chicken breast can work, but check it earlier and avoid cooking it longer than needed.
If you are using breast in the slow cooker, these Crock Pot Chicken Breast Recipes are useful for keeping it tender.
The slow cooker traps liquid, so start with less stock than you think you need. For 4 servings, 400g / 14 oz tomatoes and about 100–150ml / ½ cup stock is usually enough. Cook for 3–4 hours on high or 6–8 hours on low, depending on your slow cooker and the size of the chicken pieces.
Brown the chorizo first when you have time. It is the difference between a slow cooker meal that tastes fine and one that still has that smoky skillet depth. Add cream, orzo, or pasta near the end so the texture stays right.
What to Serve with Chicken and Chorizo
Because the smoky tomato mixture is the best part, serve it with something that can catch it. A lighter plate works well with greens and bread, while a heartier family meal can take rice, potatoes, pasta, or orzo.
For a hearty plate
- Steamed rice or pilaf
- Crusty bread or garlic bread
- Mashed potatoes
- Roast potatoes
- Short pasta
- Orzo or couscous
For a lighter plate
- Green salad with lemony dressing
- Roasted broccoli
- Green beans
- Wilted spinach or kale
- Cauliflower rice
- Butter beans or chickpeas stirred into the skillet
Put the skillet in the middle of the table with rice or bread and it becomes the kind of meal people keep spooning from.
If bread is your plan for catching the smoky pan juices, this Homemade Garlic Bread Loaf is the kind of side that makes the plate feel complete.
Troubleshooting Chicken and Chorizo
Most problems come from the same few places: too much chorizo oil, overcooked chicken breast, over-reduced salty tomatoes, or the wrong liquid ratio for rice and orzo. The good news is that most of them are fixable while the skillet is still on the stove.
Common Chicken and Chorizo Fixes

| Problem | Why it happened | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| The dish is greasy | The chorizo released more fat than needed. | Spoon off extra oil after rendering the chorizo. Keep a glossy coating, not a shallow pool. |
| It tastes too salty | Chorizo, stock, parmesan, or olives reduced together. | Add tomatoes, unsalted stock, cream, beans, potatoes, or cooked rice. Salt later next time. |
| It is too spicy | The chorizo or paprika was hotter than expected. | Add cream, tomatoes, beans, rice, or potatoes to soften the heat. |
| The chicken is dry | Breast pieces cooked too long or too hard. | Use thighs, cut breast larger, and simmer gently. |
| The skillet is watery | It was covered too long or the vegetables released water. | Simmer uncovered until the tomatoes reduce. |
| It tastes flat | The tomato paste and spices were not cooked in the oil. | Cook tomato paste, paprika, and garlic briefly before adding liquid. |
| The cream split | The mixture boiled hard after cream was added. | Lower the heat and stir cream in at the end. |
| The orzo is sticking | Orzo thickens quickly and catches on the base. | Stir often and add stock a little at a time. |
| The rice is mushy | Rice was added without the right method or ratio. | Use cooked rice on the side, or follow a dedicated rice or paella method. |
| The plate tastes too rich | Too much chorizo oil or cream built up. | Add lemon juice, parsley, tomatoes, greens, or beans to balance it. |
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Storage, Freezing, Reheating, and Make-Ahead
Fridge
Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Creamy versions are best within 2–3 days.
If you added rice, pasta, or orzo, the dish will thicken as it sits because the starch keeps absorbing the juices. Thin it with a little liquid when reheating.
Freezer
The smoky tomato version freezes better than creamy, pasta, or orzo versions. Cool completely, pack into freezer-safe containers, and freeze for up to 2 months.
Creamy finishes can separate slightly after freezing, but gentle reheating and stirring usually brings them back together.
Make-Ahead
The tomato chicken and chorizo mixture is the best part to make ahead. Cook it without cream, pasta, or orzo, then cool and store it. Add cream, fresh greens, cooked pasta, or orzo when reheating so the texture stays smoother and the starch does not turn soft.
Leftovers are not an afterthought here. The tomatoes often taste deeper after a night in the fridge, especially if you reheat gently and finish with fresh herbs or lemon.
Reheating
Reheat gently on the stovetop or in the microwave until hot all the way through. Use stock, water, milk, or cream to loosen the texture. Avoid boiling creamy leftovers aggressively.
Once you understand the chorizo oil and tomato mixture, this becomes less of a fixed recipe and more of a weeknight formula you can actually trust.
FAQs
What chorizo is best for chicken and chorizo?
Firm Spanish-style cooking chorizo or cured chorizo is best because it slices cleanly and releases smoky paprika oil. Mexican chorizo can work, but cook it fully first because it behaves like raw sausage meat.
Is chicken breast or chicken thigh better?
Chicken thighs are better for a juicy skillet meal because they stay tender during simmering. Breast works for a leaner version, but it needs gentler heat and a shorter simmer.
How much chorizo should I use?
For 4 servings, use 120–150g / 4–5 oz chorizo. That gives enough smoky flavor without making the dish too oily or salty.
Why is my chicken and chorizo oily?
Chorizo naturally releases fat as it cooks. Fry it first, then spoon off extra oil before adding tomatoes, stock, or cream. A glossy coating is enough for flavor.
How do I make it creamy?
Add 100–180ml / ⅓–¾ cup cream near the end and simmer gently. Parmesan, spinach, and lemon juice all work well in the creamy version.
Can I make chicken and chorizo without cream?
Yes. Keep it tomato-based and finish with lemon juice, herbs, and a little stock if needed. For body without cream, add beans, pasta water, or parmesan.
Can this be made with orzo?
Yes. Add 200g orzo and 500–600ml stock, then simmer for 9–12 minutes, stirring often. Keep extra stock nearby in case the orzo thickens before it turns tender.
Can I use cooked chicken?
Yes. Render the chorizo, build the tomato mixture, then stir in cooked shredded or chopped chicken near the end just long enough to heat through.
Will this work in the slow cooker?
Yes, but use less stock because slow cookers trap liquid. Thighs or drumsticks work better than breast. Add cream, orzo, or pasta near the end.
Can I make it ahead?
Yes. Make the tomato chicken and chorizo mixture ahead, then add cream, pasta, or orzo when reheating so the texture stays smoother.
What pan works best?
Use a large deep skillet or sauté pan with a lid, ideally 28–30cm / 11–12 inch. A wider cooking surface helps the chicken brown and the tomatoes reduce.
What temperature should chicken be cooked to?
Chicken should reach 165°F / 74°C in the thickest part before serving. A small meat thermometer is the easiest way to check. You can also refer to the FoodSafety.gov safe minimum internal temperature chart for poultry guidance.
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Final Tip
The whole meal gets easier when you let the chorizo do its job first. Give it a few minutes to release that smoky red oil, keep only as much richness as the skillet needs, and the tomatoes will taste deeper before they have even simmered.
Keep it tomato-based for a saucy skillet meal, add cream for comfort, stir in orzo for one-pot ease, toss it with pasta, or serve it over rice. Use the paella method when you want the saffron rice-pan version.
Make the smoky tomato version once, and the next time you see chicken and chorizo in the fridge, you will know exactly what kind of meal it wants to become.




























































