Chicken Enchilada Rice Casserole

Loading…

By Reading time
Servings 4–6 people

Chicken enchilada rice casserole hits that sweet spot between comforting and practical: scooped from the pan, the rice stays fluffy, the chicken soaks up the enchilada sauce, and the top turns into a melty, golden lid that cracks a little when you spoon through it. It eats like a full meal, not a side dish stretched to look bigger than it is.

The key is balance. There’s enough sauce to season every bite, but not so much that the rice goes mushy. The beans and corn add body and little bursts of sweetness, while green chiles keep the whole thing from tasting flat. I like using cooked rice here because it holds its shape better than uncooked rice would in a fast-bake casserole, and mixing the filling before it hits the dish helps the seasoning spread evenly instead of pooling at the bottom.

Below, you’ll find the small details that keep the casserole from drying out, plus a few swaps that make it work with what’s already in your kitchen.

The rice stayed fluffy instead of turning gummy, and the cheese browned into the best crust on top. I used rotisserie chicken and had dinner on the table in under an hour.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Like this chicken enchilada rice casserole? Save it to Pinterest for a cheesy Tex-Mex bake with a golden crust and weeknight-friendly ingredients.

Save to Pinterest

The Trick to Keeping the Rice From Going Soft

The biggest mistake in a rice casserole like this is treating it like a baked one-pan soup. The filling already includes enchilada sauce, green chiles, and vegetables with moisture, so the rice needs to be cooked first and kept on the firmer side. If you start with undercooked rice, it can finish in the oven, but if it starts wet or overcooked, the casserole turns dense and pasty by the time the cheese browns.

The other thing that matters is how you mix it. Coat everything evenly before it goes into the baking dish so the sauce doesn’t settle in pockets. That keeps the top from drying out while the bottom stays soggy. A tight, even layer bakes better than a thick mound piled in the center.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Chicken Enchilada Rice Casserole cheesy Tex-Mex bake
  • Cooked chicken — Rotisserie chicken is the fastest path here, and it brings enough seasoning of its own to make the casserole taste complete. Shred it into bite-size pieces so it distributes through the rice instead of clumping in big chunks.
  • Cooked white or Mexican rice — This is the backbone of the casserole, so use rice that’s fully cooked but still separate and fluffy. Day-old rice works especially well because it’s drier and less likely to turn gummy in the oven.
  • Enchilada sauce — The sauce carries the Tex-Mex flavor through the whole pan, and canned red enchilada sauce is exactly where convenience works fine. If yours is very thick, loosen it with a splash of water so it coats the rice instead of sticking in streaks.
  • Black beans and corn — The beans add heartiness and the corn brings little pops of sweetness that keep the dish from tasting one-note. Drain the beans well so the casserole doesn’t get watery, and thaw the corn before mixing so it doesn’t drag the temperature down.
  • Green chiles, cumin, and chili powder — These are the seasoning layer that makes the casserole taste like enchiladas instead of just cheesy rice. Fresh spices matter here more than in some recipes because they’re working inside a mild, creamy base.
  • Mexican cheese blend — This gives you the stretchy, browned top you want from a casserole. Pre-shredded cheese is fine, but if you grate your own, it melts a little smoother and browns more evenly.

Building the Casserole So the Top Browns and the Center Stays Tender

Mix the filling until every grain is coated

Combine the chicken, rice, beans, enchilada sauce, corn, chiles, and spices in a large bowl before anything goes into the baking dish. You want every spoonful to look evenly seasoned and lightly sauced, not streaked with plain rice. If the mixture looks dry before it hits the pan, add a small splash more enchilada sauce, but stop before it turns loose and soupy.

Spread it flat before the cheese goes on

Transfer the filling to a greased 9×13 dish and press it into an even layer. An uneven surface causes the edges to overcook before the center heats through. The cheese should cover the top all the way to the corners so the surface bakes into one cohesive crust instead of patchy browned spots.

Bake uncovered until the edges bubble

Give the casserole 25 to 30 minutes at 375°F, uncovered, until the cheese is melted, golden, and bubbling at the edges. That bubbling tells you the center is hot, not just the top. If the cheese starts browning too quickly before the filling is hot, lay a loose piece of foil over the top for the last few minutes.

Finish with cool toppings after baking

Let the casserole sit for a few minutes, then add sour cream, cilantro, and sliced jalapeños. The short rest helps the casserole set so it serves cleanly instead of sliding apart. Add the toppings after baking, not before, or they’ll melt into the cheese and disappear.

Ways to Adapt This for the Pantry You Have

Make it gluten-free without changing the texture

This casserole is naturally gluten-free as long as your enchilada sauce and spices are certified gluten-free. That’s the only spot where hidden flour can sneak in. The texture stays exactly the same because rice carries the casserole the way pasta would in a baked dish.

Dairy-free with a little more finish on top

Use a good melting dairy-free Mexican-style shred and skip the sour cream, or top the baked casserole with a spoonful of dairy-free yogurt and cilantro instead. The cheese won’t brown quite the same way, but it still gives you a creamy, cohesive top that holds the filling together.

Use brown rice when you want a firmer bite

Brown rice works, but it needs to be fully cooked and a little on the dry side before it goes in. It brings a nuttier flavor and a chewier texture, which makes the casserole feel heartier. Don’t undercook it or it will stay firm even after baking.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The rice firms up a bit as it chills, but the flavor deepens.
  • Freezer: This freezes well in a tightly wrapped, baked or unbaked casserole for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating so the center warms evenly.
  • Reheating: Reheat covered in a 325°F oven until hot all the way through, or warm individual portions in the microwave with a damp paper towel over the top. The common mistake is blasting it uncovered, which dries out the rice before the middle is hot.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use uncooked rice in this chicken enchilada rice casserole?+

I don’t recommend it for this version. The bake time is built for fully cooked rice, and uncooked rice would need extra liquid and a much longer, more unpredictable bake. That usually leads to dry chicken on top and underdone rice in the center.

How do I keep the casserole from turning out dry?+

Use enough enchilada sauce to coat the rice well, and don’t overbake it once the cheese is melted and bubbling. If your rice was already a little dry before mixing, add a splash more sauce or a spoonful of water so the filling doesn’t bake up tight. The casserole should look moist underneath the cheese, not soupy.

Can I make this ahead of time?+

Yes. Assemble the casserole up to a day in advance, cover it, and refrigerate it without baking. Add a few extra minutes to the bake time if it goes into the oven cold from the fridge, and wait to add the fresh toppings until after it comes out.

How do I keep the cheese from getting greasy on top?+

Use a moderate amount of cheese and bake just until it melts and turns golden at the edges. Too much cheese or too much heat will cause the oils to separate and pool on the surface. If you’re using pre-shredded cheese, that anti-caking coating can help it hold a better melt in a casserole like this.

Can I use leftover rotisserie chicken for this?

Absolutely, and that’s one of the best ways to make it fast. Leftover rotisserie chicken already has flavor and moisture, so it blends right into the rice and sauce without getting stringy. Just shred it into smaller pieces so every bite gets a little chicken instead of a few large chunks.

Chicken Enchilada Rice Casserole

Chicken enchilada rice casserole is a one-dish Tex-Mex bake layered with enchilada-seasoned chicken, rice, and beans, then finished with a golden cheese crust. After baking, top it with sour cream, cilantro, and jalapeños for a bright, creamy finish.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Cuisine: Tex-Mex

Ingredients
  

Chicken and rice casserole base
  • 2 cooked chicken Shredded.
  • 3 cooked white or mexican rice Cooked and ready to use.
  • 1 can (15 oz) black beans Drained.
  • 1 can (10 oz) red enchilada sauce
  • 1 cup frozen corn Thawed.
  • 1 can (4 oz) diced green chiles
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp chili powder
  • 2 cup mexican cheese blend Shredded.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and mix
  1. Preheat oven to 375°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish.
  2. In a large bowl, combine cooked chicken, cooked rice, black beans, enchilada sauce, corn, green chiles, cumin, and chili powder; mix thoroughly.
Assemble and bake
  1. Transfer the mixture to the prepared dish and spread evenly.
  2. Cover the top completely with shredded Mexican cheese blend.
  3. Bake uncovered for 25–30 minutes, until the cheese is golden and the edges are bubbling, then let the casserole rest briefly before serving.
Serve
  1. Serve topped with sour cream, fresh cilantro, and sliced jalapeños.

Notes

For the cleanest slices, rest the casserole 5–10 minutes after baking so the cheese crust sets. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container for up to 4 days; freeze up to 2 months (best to freeze without toppings and add sour cream/cilantro after reheating). For a lower-fat option, choose a reduced-fat Mexican cheese blend while keeping the same baking time and temperature.

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating