Chicken Parmesan Meatballs

Servings: 4 Total Time: 50 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Baked Cheese-Covered Chicken Bites
chicken parmesan meatballs baked with marinara sauce and melted mozzarella and parmesan on top in a ceramic dish pinit

The best weeknight dinner I keep coming back to is chicken parmesan meatballs, a dish that takes the familiar flavors of the classic Italian-American plate and rolls them into tender, saucy bites. You get seasoned ground chicken shaped into balls, baked until just set, then simmered in marinara and finished under a blanket of melted mozzarella and parmesan. This recipe skips the frying step so you spend less time at the stove and still get a crisp-edged, cheesy result.

What makes these work is the panade—a soak of breadcrumbs and milk—that keeps the lean chicken from turning rubbery. The marinara does double duty as braising liquid and sauce, so every meatball stays moist while the cheese on top turns bubbly and brown. You’ll have a crowd-pleasing main on the table in about forty minutes with minimal cleanup. Making this chicken parmesan meatballs at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.

Why You’ll Love These Chicken Parmesan Meatballs

  • Baked instead of fried, so there’s no splatter and the meatballs hold their round shape.
  • Ground chicken stays juicy thanks to a simple breadcrumb-milk soak before mixing.
  • One baking dish moves from oven to table, cutting down on dishes.
  • Kids accept the familiar cheese-and-sauce combo without complaint.
  • Leftovers reheat well for lunch over pasta or inside a sub roll.
baked chicken parmesan meatballs with marinara and melted cheese

Ingredients You’ll Need

  • 1 lb (450 g) ground chicken—look for 93% lean so the balls aren’t too dry
  • 1/2 cup (30 g) plain breadcrumbs—binds the meat and holds moisture
  • 1/4 cup (60 ml) whole milk—softens the breadcrumbs into a panade
  • 1/2 cup (50 g) grated parmesan, divided—adds salt and savory depth
  • 1 large egg—helps the mixture set during baking
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced—raw aromatic that mellows in the oven
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh parsley—brightens the rich meat
  • 1 tsp salt—season the chicken directly since sauce is added later
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper—balances the cheese
  • 2 cups (480 ml) marinara sauce—store-bought or homemade
  • 1 cup (100 g) shredded mozzarella—low-moisture melts without greasing the top
  • 2 tbsp olive oil—for lightly coating the baking dish

Ingredient Substitutions

Ground chicken: Replace with an equal weight of ground turkey for a slightly firmer bite and milder taste. Turkey runs a touch drier, so add 1 extra tablespoon of milk to the panade before mixing. Expect the same bake time but a lighter color on the cooked surface. The chicken parmesan meatballs works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.

Plain breadcrumbs: Use an equal volume of crushed saltine crackers if you’re out of breadcrumbs. Crackers compact more, so reduce the amount to 1/3 cup and skip 1/4 tsp of the salt. The texture stays tender though the crumb is finer and less chewy. Storing leftover chicken parmesan meatballs correctly keeps it tasting good for days.

Whole milk: Swap in 2% or a unsweetened oat milk at the same 1/4 cup measure. Lower-fat liquids soften the crumb less, giving a slightly denser meatball. No change to oven temperature or timing is needed. For the best results with this chicken parmesan meatballs, read through all the steps before starting.

Marinara sauce: Substitute an equal amount of crushed tomatoes simmered with 1/2 tsp dried oregano and a pinch of sugar. This gives a brighter, less seasoned base, so taste and add salt before spooning over the meatballs. The braise time stays at 15 minutes.

Shredded mozzarella: Use 3/4 cup of torn fresh mozzarella for a creamier, looser melt. Fresh cheese releases more water, so broil 2 minutes longer to brown the top. The finished dish will look wetter but taste milky and rich.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Heat the oven to 200°C / 400°F and brush a 9×13 inch baking dish with olive oil so the meatballs release easily.
  2. Stir breadcrumbs and milk in a small bowl; let the mix sit 5 minutes until it forms a thick paste that coats a spoon.
  3. Add ground chicken, 1/4 cup parmesan, egg, garlic, parsley, salt, and pepper to the panade. Mix with your hands just until combined—do not overmix or the balls turn tight.
  4. Portion the mix into 16 equal scoops and roll between palms into smooth rounds; set them in the oiled dish with a finger-width gap.
  5. Bake at 200°C / 400°F for 15 minutes until the tops are golden and crispy and the centers read 70°C / 160°F on a thermometer.
  6. Pour marinara around the meatballs, spooning a little over each, then scatter mozzarella and remaining parmesan on top.
  7. Return the dish to the oven for 12 minutes, then broil 2 minutes until the cheese bubbles and browns at the edges.
  8. Rest the dish 5 minutes before serving so the sauce thickens and the meatballs firm up for cleaner scooping.

Pro Tips

Chill the shaped meatballs in the fridge for 10 minutes before baking if your kitchen is warm; cold balls hold their round shape and brown instead of slumping. For a deeper cheese crust, grate your own parmesan rather than using the sandy pre-shredded kind that contains anti-caking starch.

Use a meat thermometer to confirm the center hits a safe temperature instead of guessing by color. If the marinara looks thick straight from the fridge, loosen it with 2 tablespoons of water so it braises rather than scorches.

Switch to chicken goujons for a crunchy side if you want a texture contrast on the same plate. A light sprinkle of dried oregano over the cheese before broiling adds a classic pizzeria note without extra prep.

Broil only after the bake step is done; starting under direct heat risks a burnt top and raw center. Pull the dish the moment the cheese spots turn brown since it keeps cooking from residual heat.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Skipping the panade leads to crumbly meatballs because lean chicken has little fat to hold it together. Always soak the breadcrumbs in milk first so they swell and trap moisture inside the ball.

Overworking the mix with a spoon or mixer develops the protein and gives a bouncy, sausage-like texture. Stop mixing the second the streaks of bread disappear to keep the bite tender.

Crowding the dish blocks heat flow and steams the bottoms instead of baking them. Leave a gap between each ball or split between two pans so all sides brown.

Adding cold sauce straight from the fridge can drop the oven temperature and lengthen the braise. Bring marinara to room temp or warm it slightly before spooning over the meatballs.

Serving Suggestions

Spoon the meatballs over al dente spaghetti for the closest match to chicken parm, or try caesar chicken alongside if you’re feeding a bigger table. A simple green salad with lemon dressing cuts the cheese richness.

For a low-starch plate, serve on zucchini noodles warmed in the residual sauce. Crusty bread on the side soaks up the extra marinara without waste.

Storage and Reheating

Cool the dish to room temperature within 2 hours, then move leftovers to an airtight container; they keep refrigerated for up to 3 days. The cooked chicken and dairy sauce are safe that long when chilled promptly.

Freeze individual portions for freeze for up to 2 months in rigid containers; thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating. Warm in a 175°C / 350°F oven until the center reaches 74°C / 165°F, about 15 minutes covered with foil.

Microwave single servings on medium in 45-second bursts, stirring the sauce between, until steaming throughout. Avoid reheating more than once to keep the chicken from drying.

Recipe Variations

Spicy Version

Add 1/2 tsp crushed red pepper to the meat mix and use a arrabbiata sauce instead of plain marinara. The heat builds in both the ball and the braise, giving a warming finish that pairs with a cooling dollop of ricotta on top.

Low-Carb Option

Replace breadcrumbs with 1/3 cup almond flour and skip the milk to lower the starch. The balls turn more delicate, so bake them on parchment and handle gently; expect a slightly nutty background note and a softer crust.

Sheet Pan Subs

After the cheese browns, slide each meatball into a toasted hoagie roll with extra sauce for a baked pastry style lunch. The roll absorbs the marinara and the crisp edges hold up for about 10 minutes before softening.

Garlic Parmesan Bake

Swap the marinara for the garlic parmesan style cream sauce and add 1/4 cup cream to the dish before the final bake. You lose the tomato tang but gain a silky, bolder cheese coating that suits mashed potatoes.

Air Fryer Batch

Shape and air fry the raw balls at 190°C / 375°F for 10 minutes, then finish in sauce and cheese under the broiler. This cooking method crisps the exterior fastest though you lose the one-dish convenience of the oven route.

chicken parmesan meatballs baked with marinara sauce and melted mozzarella and parmesan on top in a ceramic dish pinit
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Chicken Parmesan Meatballs

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 30 mins Rest Time 5 mins Total Time 50 mins
Cooking Temp: 200  C Servings: 4 Estimated Cost: $ 10 Calories: 350 kcal

Description

Chicken parmesan meatballs roll the familiar flavors of the classic Italian-American plate into tender, saucy bites. They are baked instead of fried, then simmered in marinara and finished under melted mozzarella and parmesan for a cheesy, crowd-pleasing weeknight dinner.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Heat oven and oil dish

    Heat the oven to 200°C / 400°F and brush a 9x13 inch baking dish with the 2 tbsp olive oil so the meatballs release easily. Make sure the oil coats the bottom evenly to prevent sticking during baking.

  2. Make the panade

    Stir the 1/2 cup breadcrumbs and 1/4 cup milk in a small bowl and let the mix sit 5 minutes until it forms a thick paste that coats a spoon. This soak keeps the lean chicken from turning rubbery later.

  3. Mix meatball base

    Add the 1 lb ground chicken, 1/4 cup parmesan, 1 large egg, 2 cloves minced garlic, 2 tbsp parsley, 1 tsp salt, and 1/2 tsp pepper to the panade. Mix with your hands just until combined—do not overmix or the balls turn tight and bouncy.

  4. Shape meatballs

    Portion the mix into 16 equal scoops and roll between palms into smooth rounds, then set them in the oiled dish with a finger-width gap between each. The gap lets heat flow so all sides brown instead of steaming.

  5. Bake meatballs

    Bake at 200°C / 400°F for 15 minutes until the tops are golden and crisp-edged and the centers read 71°C / 160°F on a thermometer. Use a meat thermometer to confirm the safe internal temperature rather than judging by color alone.

  6. Add sauce and cheese

    Pour the 2 cups marinara around the meatballs, spooning a little over each, then scatter the 1 cup mozzarella and remaining 1/4 cup parmesan on top. The sauce braises the balls while the cheese begins to melt.

  7. Bake and broil top

    Return the dish to the oven for 12 minutes, then broil 2 minutes until the cheese bubbles and browns at the edges. Pull the dish the moment the cheese spots turn brown since it keeps cooking from residual heat.

  8. Rest before serving

    Rest the dish 5 minutes before serving so the sauce thickens and the meatballs firm up for cleaner scooping. This rest also lets the internal temperature settle for safe eating.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 4


Amount Per Serving
Calories 350kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 18g28%
Saturated Fat 8g40%
Cholesterol 120mg40%
Sodium 900mg38%
Total Carbohydrate 14g5%
Dietary Fiber 2g8%
Sugars 6g
Protein 30g60%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

  • Storage: Cool to room temperature within 2 hours, then refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days.
  • Reheating: Warm in a 175°C / 350°F oven until the center reaches 74°C / 165°F; avoid reheating the same portion more than once.
  • Pro tip: Chill shaped meatballs 10 minutes before baking if your kitchen is warm so they hold round shape and brown instead of slumping.
  • Serving idea: For a bigger table, try our baked caesar chicken alongside the meatballs.
Keywords: chicken parmesan, meatballs, baked, marinara, mozzarella, parmesan, weeknight dinner, one dish
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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I make this ahead of time?

You can shape the meatballs and chill them up to a day ahead; bake when ready to serve. For a crunchy side pairing, see our chicken goujons to prep alongside.

Can I freeze this recipe?

Freeze individual portions in rigid containers for up to 2 months; thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating. Warm in a 175°C / 350°F oven until the center reaches 74°C / 165°F, about 15 minutes covered with foil.

What can I substitute for ground chicken?

Replace with an equal weight of ground turkey for a slightly firmer bite; add 1 extra tablespoon of milk to the panade since turkey runs drier. Expect the same bake time but a lighter color on the cooked surface.

How do I know when it's done?

The meatballs are done when the center hits 71°C / 160°F on a thermometer and the cheese is bubbly and browned at the edges. Never rely on color alone for ground poultry—always confirm with a temperature check.

Anna Food and Lifestyle Blogger

Hi, I’m Anna — a wellness enthusiast, recipe creator, and founder of Cook Recipe. I love making healthy, easy, and feel-good meals that inspire others to live happier, more balanced lives. When I’m not in the kitchen, you’ll find me exploring new places or flowing through a yoga session! 🌿

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