healthy one pot chicken and spinach stew for nourishing weeknights

healthy one pot chicken and spinach stew for nourishing weeknights - healthy one pot chicken and spinach stew
healthy one pot chicken and spinach stew for nourishing weeknights
  • Focus: healthy one pot chicken and spinach stew
  • Category: Dinner
  • Prep Time: 1 min
  • Cook Time: 5 min
  • Servings: 32

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Healthy One-Pot Chicken & Spinach Stew for Nourishing Weeknights

After fifteen years of testing recipes for this blog, I’ve learned that the dinners we return to again and again are rarely the flashy ones. They’re the quiet workhorses: meals that ask for one pot, thirty minutes, and the kind of pantry staples you probably have on hand right now. This velvety chicken-and-spinach stew is exactly that. I started making it in the thick of last February, when the days were short, the flu was ricocheting through the house, and I needed something that felt like a safety net in bowl form. One taste and I was hooked—the silky broth, the gentle hum of smoked paprika, the way the spinach wilts into emerald ribbons and clings to every cube of tender chicken. My kids call it “green soup,” request it weekly, and somehow never notice they’re happily devouring an entire clamshell of spinach. I call it Tuesday-night insurance.

Why This Recipe Works

  • One pot, one lid, zero fuss: Everything simmers in the same Dutch oven, so you can tuck the dishes into the dishwasher and still have time for family game night.
  • Protein + greens in a single ladle: Each serving delivers 32 g of lean protein and two generous cups of spinach, so you can skip the side salad.
  • Ready in 32 minutes flat: While the stew bubbles, you can set the table, help with homework, or simply sit down.
  • Freezer-friendly & lunch-box safe: Portion into mason jars; it reheats like a dream and doesn’t separate.
  • naturally gluten-free & low-carb: No specialty flours or thickeners—just honest, whole-food goodness.
  • Adaptable to every season: Swap spinach for kale in winter, add zucchini in summer, or stir in white beans for extra heft.

Ingredients You'll Need

Ingredients

Great stew starts with great building blocks. Below are my non-negotiables, plus the swaps I’ve tested so you can cook from what you have.

Protein

1¼ lb (565 g) boneless skinless chicken thighs – Thighs stay succulent even if you accidentally over-simmer; if you only have breasts, cut them into 1-inch chunks and shorten the simmer by 3 minutes. Organic air-chilled chicken has the cleanest flavor.

Aromatics

1 medium yellow onion, diced – Look for an onion that feels heavy for its size; papery skin should be tight and flake-free. Shallots work in a pinch.

3 cloves garlic, smashed – Fresh garlic is key. The jarred stuff turns bitter when sautéed.

Vegetables

8 oz (225 g) baby spinach I buy the triple-washed tubs; if you’re using bunch spinach, remove tough stems and rinse well—grit sinks to the bottom of the bowl and ruins the velvety texture.

2 medium carrots, sliced into half-moons – Choose carrots with bright, moist tops; if the shoulders are pale green, they’re past prime.

Liquids & Seasonings

3 cups low-sodium chicken broth – Homemade is gold, but I’ve had excellent results with the organic boxed brand that comes in the aseptic carton. Avoid anything labeled “double strength”; it will bully the gentle herbs.

1 cup unsweetened almond milk – This is my secret for creaminess without heavy cream. Oat milk or light coconut milk are fine substitutes; skip soy—it curdles.

2 tsp smoked paprika – The Spanish variety (pimentón de la Vera) adds a whisper of campfire; regular sweet paprika works but won’t give that cozy depth.

½ tsp dried thyme + ½ tsp dried oregano – Both should smell vivid when you crack the jar; if the color is dusty, the herbs are dead.

Finishing Touches

Juice of ½ lemon – Add at the very end; the acid wakes up every other flavor.

2 Tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, divided – Save the good cold-pressed oil for drizzling; use everyday olive oil for sautéing.

How to Make Healthy One-Pot Chicken & Spinach Stew

1
Pat the chicken very dry

Moisture is the enemy of browning. Use a double layer of paper towels to blot each thigh, then season on both sides with 1 tsp kosher salt and ½ tsp black pepper. Let them rest while you prep the vegetables; ten minutes of salting makes the meat exponentially more flavorful.

2
Sear, don’t just cook

Heat 1 Tbsp olive oil in a heavy 4-quart Dutch oven over medium-high until shimmering. Lay the thighs in—don’t crowd—and sear 3 minutes per side until caramel edges appear. Transfer to a plate; don’t worry if they’re not cooked through—they’ll finish later.

3
Build the flavor base

Lower heat to medium, add the remaining oil, and scrape the brown bits with a wooden spoon. Add onion and carrots; cook 4 minutes until edges soften. Stir in garlic, paprika, thyme, and oregano; toast 60 seconds—this blooms the spices so they taste round, not raw.

4
Deglaze for depth

Pour in ½ cup of the broth and simmer briskly, scraping the pot’s bottom until the liquid reduces by half. This lifts the fond (the flavor-packed browned bits) and creates a built-in sauce.

5
Simmer the chicken

Return the thighs (and any juices) to the pot. Add the remaining broth, bring to a gentle boil, then reduce to low, cover, and simmer 12 minutes. The meat should read 160 °F (71 °C) on an instant-read thermometer.

6
Shred right in the pot

Transfer the thighs to a cutting board. Using two forks, shred into bite-size strands. Return the meat to the stew; discard any large fatty pieces.

7
Creaminess without cream

Stir in the almond milk. Keep the heat low—boiling will break the emulsion and leave speckles. The broth will turn silky and slightly opaque.

8
Wilt spinach in waves

Add spinach by the handful, stirring until each batch wilts before adding the next. This prevents a cold clump of leaves from dropping the stew’s temperature.

9
Brighten and balance

Finish with lemon juice, taste, and adjust salt. The stew should feel vibrant, not flat. If it tastes dull, add another pinch of salt; if it feels heavy, a few extra drops of lemon work miracles.

10
Rest 5 minutes before serving

Turn off the heat, cover, and let the flavors marry. Ladle into shallow bowls, drizzle with olive oil, and sprinkle with freshly cracked pepper.

Expert Tips

Keep the heat gentle

A rolling boil toughens chicken and curdles almond milk. If you see aggressive bubbles, crack the lid and lower the burner.

Save stems for stock

Spinach stems don’t have to be tossed; freeze them in a zip bag and add to your next vegetable broth for extra minerals.

Make it bedtime-friendly

Sensitive to spice? Use sweet paprika only; smoked can feel harsh for little palates or late-night meals.

Double the batch

The recipe scales perfectly—double everything and use a 6-quart pot. Leftovers freeze in silicone muffin trays for single-serve portions.

Shortcut aromatics

Pre-diced onion from the freezer aisle is fine; just add an extra minute to the sauté to evaporate the surface frost.

Color boost

Stir in a cup of frozen peas during the last 2 minutes for emerald polka dots and added sweetness kids love.

Variations to Try

  • Summer Garden Stew – Swap spinach for 2 cups diced zucchini and a handful of fresh basil. Add zucchini with the carrots; stir in basil off heat.
  • Winter White-Bean Version – Replace half the chicken with a 15-oz can of rinsed cannellini beans for extra fiber and a creamy bite.
  • Spicy Moroccan Twist – Add ¼ tsp cayenne, ½ tsp ground cumin, and a strip of orange peel during the simmer. Finish with chopped cilantro instead of lemon.
  • Seafood Makeover – Substitute peeled shrimp for the chicken: sear just 1 minute per side, remove, and add back with the almond milk for the final 3 minutes.
  • Vegan Weeknight Option – Trade chicken for 1 lb cubed extra-firm tofu and use vegetable broth; swap almond milk for coconut milk. Add 1 Tbsp white miso for umami richness.

Storage Tips

Refrigerator: Cool completely, transfer to airtight glass containers, and refrigerate up to 4 days. The flavors meld beautifully on day two.

Freezer: Ladle into quart-size freezer bags, press out excess air, and freeze flat up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge; reheat gently to prevent curdling.

Meal-Prep Bowls: Portion stew over cooked quinoa or cauliflower rice in microwave-safe containers. Keep lemon wedges in a separate mini-container; squeeze just before heating to preserve brightness.

Reheat: Warm on the stovetop over medium-low, stirring occasionally. If the stew thickened in storage, thin with a splash of broth or water. Microwave works in a pinch—use 50 % power and stir every 45 seconds.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Thaw 10 oz frozen chopped spinach, squeeze it bone-dry, and add it with the almond milk. It will look like too much, but it wilts perfectly.

Almost always under-salting. Add ¼ tsp kosher salt, stir, taste, and repeat. Acid is the second fix: a squeeze of lemon or a splash of white wine brightens everything.

Absolutely. Use Sauté mode for steps 1–4, then pressure-cook on High for 7 minutes with quick release. Stir in almond milk and spinach on Sauté-low afterward.

With 7 g net carbs per serving, it fits most keto plans. For stricter counts, omit carrots and use 1 cup diced celery instead.

You can, but add them in two stages—half during cooking and the rest when reheating—to keep that fresh, verdant flavor.

A crusty whole-grain sourdough or seeded rye is perfect for dunking. If you’re gluten-free, try warm millet flatbread or simple brown-rice tortillas toasted in a dry skillet.
healthy one pot chicken and spinach stew for nourishing weeknights
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Pin Recipe

Healthy One-Pot Chicken & Spinach Stew for Nourishing Weeknights

(4.9 from 127 reviews)
Prep
10 min
Cook
22 min
Servings
6

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Prep the chicken: Pat dry, season with 1 tsp salt and ½ tsp pepper.
  2. Sear: Heat 1 Tbsp oil in Dutch oven over medium-high. Sear chicken 3 min per side; set aside.
  3. Sauté aromatics: Add remaining oil, onion, and carrots; cook 4 min. Stir in garlic, paprika, thyme, oregano; toast 1 min.
  4. Deglaze: Add ½ cup broth; simmer 2 min, scraping bits.
  5. Simmer chicken: Return chicken and juices; add remaining broth. Cover, simmer 12 min.
  6. Shred & finish: Remove chicken, shred, return to pot. Stir in almond milk and spinach; wilt 2 min. Add lemon juice, adjust seasoning, rest 5 min, serve.

Recipe Notes

For ultra-silky texture, warm the almond milk separately before adding. Leftovers thicken; thin with broth when reheating.

Nutrition (per serving)

267
Calories
32g
Protein
7g
Carbs
11g
Fat

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