Sheet-Pan Honey Mustard Chicken and Broccoli
Updated October 16, 2025
- Ready In
- 40 min
- Rating
- Comments
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Ingredients
½ cup/120 grams Dijon mustard
½ cup/165 grams honey
Salt and pepper
1½ pounds broccoli (about 2 broccoli heads)
2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs, each sliced into three even pieces
¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat the oven to 425 degrees. Place a large sheet pan in the oven.
- Step 2
In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the mustard and honey until combined. Season with salt and a few cracks of black pepper. Reserve ¼ cup of honey mustard for serving and 3 tablespoons for brushing.
- Step 3
Trim the broccoli florets into bite-size pieces. Using a vegetable peeler, peel the outer layer of the broccoli stalks, trim the ends, then cut the rest of the stalks into ½-inch-thick slices.
- Step 4
Add the broccoli florets, sliced broccoli stalks and chicken to the bowl of honey mustard. Stir until evenly coated.
- Step 5
Carefully remove the pan from the oven and evenly drizzle the oil on top. Arrange the broccoli and chicken in an even layer and drizzle any remaining honey mustard from the bowl on top. Lightly season the broccoli and chicken with salt. Cover tightly with aluminum foil and bake for 25 minutes.
- Step 6
Remove the aluminum foil and brush the 3 tablespoons of reserved marinade on top of the chicken and broccoli.
- Step 7
Place an oven rack underneath the broiler. Set the broiler to high. Place the chicken and broccoli back in the oven. Broil for 5 minutes, until the chicken and broccoli develop char marks on their surface and the chicken cooks through (a thermometer inserted into thickest part of a thigh should read 165 degrees).
- Step 8
Serve with reserved honey mustard on the side.
Private Notes
Comments
The pan was soupy. Agree with others that if I were going to try again, I’d take the foil off sooner. The chicken turned out well because it could only absorb so much marinade. The broccoli was gross
The honey mustard marinade is so simple and delicious, but I think the recipe needs a few tweaks. I’ll separate the broccoli and chicken next time so that the broccoli can have less marinade and the chicken can have more. I don’t think the aluminum foil is necessary, especially if the meat and veg are separated.
Drizzling excess/leftover marinade over chicken resulted in a shallow, boiling pond of liquid.
I agree with Ashley. The broccoli was mush. The chicken and sauce was tasty, but thin. I might make again, but add the broccoli after chicken has cooked until tender. Agree with Landry , foil is not needed at such a high cooking temperature.
I followed the directions, but 425 was just too hot. The chicken was dried out, the broccoli was way overcooked, and the whole thing was too sweet. I won't cook this again.
We made this as written and it was fine. There are lots of great recipes out there, and plenty more that we want to try, so we won’t be making this one again.

