
If you have a couple of chicken breasts, 2 sleeves of Ritz Crackers and a stick of butter in the refrigerator, well then you have dinner baby!

This recipe for Ritz cracker chicken is like the easiest meal ever to prepare. Plus, HELLO it’s totally tasty too. The Handsome Husband, The Girl and Monkey Boy all loved it, and I’ll defiantly be putting this on my monthly dinner menu from now on.
~Mavis
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Easy Ritz Cracker Chicken
Ingredients
Ingredients
- 8 skinless chicken breasts , bone in
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter , melted
- {2} sleeves of Ritz Crackers , crushed
Instructions
Directions
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Preheat oven to 350
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Melt butter in a microwavable dish and set aside.
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Crush Ritz crackers {I crush mine in a zip baggie} and place crushed crackers on a dinner plate.

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Dip the chicken breasts in butter, then coat with Ritz Crackers, and place on a lined baking sheet {I use Silpats}.
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Bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes.
Recipe Notes
Serve with a side or rice or veggies.
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It was brutal giving up my garden as I’d just established another 10 blueberry bushes, my raspberries started mass producing, and my strawberries were finally acting out my vision of edible ground cover (I HATE mulching).
So I dug up a mini trailer-full of plants from my beautiful garden, and brought them with me – because honestly, I’m not leaving my plants. That’s not weird right?
Remember how I said “lite fixer-upper”? Well, it was dirty, really dirty. Both the yard and the inside of the house. We moved in at the end of July and went to work. I filled a dumpster with junk from the house and yard and we soon had the house spotless. I painted every corner. Every.Corner! It now looks light, airy, and a bit cottage’y with the white beams and vaulted ceilings. It’s wicked cute.
The outside is still a project but I started in the fall by removing an old fire pit (filled with nails, glass, rocks, bricks, and painted wood), pulled three overgrown rhododendrons, planted some perennials, a few raspberry canes, my lavender, and cleared 16 trees and ground 8 stumps within the rock wall space to make the yard look like a yard. With only a few fall months, one full season, and a few spring months to establish landscaping before we put it back on the market, I had to get going right away!
We are in the process of adding a forsythia living fence along the road, but it’s only half planted so I don’t have photos yet. Let me tell you about the beauty of a renting a towable-auger (from HD)…. worth.every.cent!!!
My son cut down a hickory tree for me near the driveway. If you’ve never had a nut tree, it is AMAZING how much it produces. I didn’t like it because it spit barrels and barrels of nuts all over the yard, driveway, and our cars. Instead, I turned it into this wicked cute plant hanger. Our driveway is shared by two houses and the UPS/FedEX/Mailman/delivery guy is forever confused on which house is which, so the numbers on the stump should help.
Lastly, we had a LOT of wood in the yard. Wood piles here there and everywhere from the previous owners. We cut down 16 trees and ground 8 stumps in the backyard when we moved in so we had the tree company save a few hardwoods for us. Also, we had 3 or 4 wicked storms this winter and had two trees topple over – one of which was a hardwood. Luckily I was able to borrow a splitter from a friend and the HH and I split a small hill of wood. Now to stack, stack, stack.











King Arthur Flour $62.84







