Chicken Pot Pie Recipe in the Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven

Chicken Pot Pie Recipe in the Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven

Chicken Pot Pie Recipe Cooked in a Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven

I love this recipe. It’s easy to prepare at home and have many of the ingredients ready for cooking in camp. This recipe has three parts: 1) Preparing and cooking the chicken, 2), cooking the pot pie mixture with all the veggies and potatoes, and 3) the biscuit part that goes on top. 

And, we are going to use HOMEMADE BISCUITS. You can use canned biscuits and that’s A-OK. But, this recipe goes from great to awesome with those biscuits on top. Not to mention that the left overs (if there are any) will be great for breakfast in the morning. 

Three parts!? Yeah! I know. Right? No worries. It ain’t near the work you think it’s going to be. It’s a super easy recipe that can be created in camp.

History tells us that the pot pie was prepared with the crust under the “stuff” and not on top like I show in the video. A pot pie dish was originally a way to take a bunch of leftovers and turn them into a brand new meal. But, before the pot pie became popular in England in the 1500’s and later in America in the 1700’s, the Romans may have made the pot pie with living birds as a gag to play on dinner guest.

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A 12-inch deep cast iron camp Dutch oven should do the trick. We’ll be baking this recipe in the camp cast iron Dutch oven and need some depth for the biscuits we’re going to use on the top (affiliate)

Lodge Cast Iron Camp Dutch Oven – 12 Inch / 6 quart: https://amzn.to/3Y1A3Tl
Lodge Cast Iron Deep Camp Dutch Oven – 12 Inch / 8 quart: https://amzn.to/3NYjTWa
 
You can create this recipe in any Dutch oven may it be in camp or at home. The only thing to keep in mind is the biscuit topping; we need both some room for the biscuits to rise and some air space between the top of the biscuits and the lid of the Dutch oven.
 
Some cast iron Dutch oven manufacturers have created pots with lids that second as a skillet. The lid will offer the additional room. Here’s an example: https://amzn.to/3K2pUzU 

Supplies You May Need (Affiliate Links)

  1. Cutting Board for tenderizing and cutting the chicken and to cut the vegetables. I suggest using a separate cutting board. We use a red one for meat and another color for vegetables.
    Meat: https://amzn.to/3NVPibP
    Vegetables: https://amzn.to/3DeNYvB 
  2. Tenderizing Mallet (optional): https://amzn.to/46OrKye 
  3. Needle Tenderizer (optional): https://amzn.to/44Jaqc8 
  4. Zipper Bag – We use the zipper bag to brine the chicken before we cut the pieces and then to store the pieces until we are ready to cook: https://amzn.to/3OgcBhV 
  5. Knife to cut the chicken, potatoes, onions, and garlic.
  6. Measuring Cups
  7. Measuring Spoons
  8. Can Opener
  9. Wooden Spatula or Sauté Paddle: https://amzn.to/3K1g1Cu 
  10. Pastry Cutter: https://amzn.to/43uQqsP 
  11. Biscuit Cutter: https://amzn.to/3rrJdw9 
  12. Rubber / Silicone Spatula to Stir the Biscuits with and to get the Biscuit Dough out of the bowl.
  13. Basting Brush (to add the egg glaze/coating to the top of the biscuits).

Mixture Ingredients

  • 3-4 Large Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts (brined, tenderized, and cut into bite-sized pieces).
  • 1/2 Cup of Flour (separate and apart from the biscuit flour).
  • 2 Cans of Cream of Chicken Soup
  • A Few Pieces of Fatty Bacon
  • 1 Large Onion, Chopped or Diced
  • 3-6 Cloves of Garlic, Diced or Minced
  • 3 Russet Potatoes
  • 2 Bags of Frozen Mixed Vegetables
  • 1/2 cup evaporated milk
  • Worcestershire sauce to taste (1-3 Tablespoons [give or take])
  • Pepper to Taste
  • Salt to Taste
  • A Bit of Beer on Reserve. Hold on to the beer; we’ll add it if we need to.

Note on Salt: I brine my chicken meat before I cook this recipe. Brined chicken has salt already. Worcestershire sauce has salt and so does the Cream of Chicken Soup. Just sayin’ 

Biscuit Ingredients

  • 2 Cups of All Purpose White Flour
  • 1 Teaspoon Baking Soda
  • 1 Tablespoon Baking Powder
  • 1 Teaspoon Salt
  • 8 Tablespoons of Cold Butter
  • 1+ Cup of Buttermilk (or 1/2 Cup of Buttermilk and 1/2 Cup of Beer [Mild Lager or Wheat Beer])
  • 1 Scramble, Raw Egg for Coating the Biscuits

Note: You could use a full cup of buttermilk. But, you may need a bit more buttermilk to get the right consistency. Or, if you only have milk, just use a cup of milk. It’s all good!

Ready to Cook

There are a couple of ways to do this. You can pre-prepare your ingredients at home or prepare the whole meal in camp. It’s totally up to you. If you are pre-preparing at home, don’t cut your potatoes until you get to camp.

You could set your charcoal briquettes or wood to fire and get your coals ready for the Dutch oven. Or, you could get everything chopped up and ready before setting the fire. It’s up to you.

We’ll be frying our bacon and sautéing our chicken, onions, and garlic first. Set your Dutch oven up for frying. For our 12-inch Dutch oven, we’ll need 24 briquettes or the equivalent in wood embers. 

Later, we’ll be baking the dish. Considering the 12-inch Dutch oven and the baking method, when the time comes, we’ll place 16 briquettes on the top and 8 briquettes on the bottom. 

Learn how to heat a camp cast iron Dutch oven here: https://beerandiron.com/how-to-heat-camp-cast-iron-dutch-oven/ 

This recipe will cook in two parts. You will need a second batch of briquettes when it comes time to cook the top biscuits.

Step 1:  Tenderize 3-4 Large Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts. Brine them in a beer/salt brine for about 1 hour then pat dry. You could pre-prepare the chicken at home and carry it to camp in a doubled zipper bag or other container. 

Here’s the link on how to make a beer brine: https://beerandiron.com/2023/02/simple-roasted-chicken (This recipe shows how to brine a whole chicken but the brine recipe is the very same). 

Step 2: Pull out the frozen veggies and let them start warming up to “room” temperature. Or, rather, “the great outdoor’s” temperature.

Step 3: Cut the chicken breast meat into larger bite-sized pieces. Pat dry the chicken breast meat. Place the cut, pat-dried chicken meat into the 1/2 cup of flour and coat the pieces. They will eventually stick together and the flour will be a bit sticky; that’s A-OK. Set the floured chicken aside. 

Step 3: Cut up the onion and the garlic. Set aside.

Step 4: With the cast iron camp Dutch oven over 30-briquettes (or more), render the fat from some of the fatty bacon (cut or not cut). 

Step 5: While the bacon fat is rendering, wash and cut the potatoes into bite-sized chunks. Skin on or skin off; it’s up to you. I just leave it on.  You could place the cut potatoes in a bowl of water (optional).

Step 6: Brown the chicken pieces up until they are no longer pink…and just before they are safe to eat. Chicken is considered “done” at 165°F / 74°C. I will cook a bit more when we put this all together. NOTE: Don’t overwhelm your pot with the chicken. Sear/brown in batches. Add more bacon if you need more fat.

Step 7: Once the chicken is browned remove the chicken from the pot and then sauté the onions and garlic until the onions are clear…not so clear as to be able to read newsprint through them, but you get the point. NOTE: If you need more cooking fat, you can add more bacon before adding the onions and garlic.

Step 8: Here’s the easy step: After you’ve sautéed the onions and garlic, return the chicken to the pot. Then, mix in the veggies, evaporated milk, cans of soup, potatoes, poultry seasoning, and Worcestershire Sauce. Salt and Pepper to taste.

Step 9: Mix all the ingredients in the pot all about and smooth out the top. The mixture should not be too runny nor should it “set” like pudding either. If the mixture is too thick (more than likely), add some of the reserved beer.

NOTE: We’re not creating soup. And, the ingredients in the pot all have moisture to some degree. We want it thick but not too thick.

Step 10: Bring the mixture to a bubbling boil. Don’t let it stick to the bottom. If it’s sticking, add some beer to thin it out. Once the mixture is bubbling, set the camp Dutch oven to bake.

If your briquettes have burned down too much, you will need to use a fresh batch.

Place 16 briquettes on the top of the oven and 8 under the oven and let the mixture cook until the potatoes are soft and taste done (careful on sampling those potatoes…they are HOT!). 

Step 11: While the mixture is heating up to a “bubble,” prepare the dry ingredients for the biscuits. Mix together in a bowl: 

  • 2 Cups of All Purpose White Flour
  • 1 Teaspoon Baking Soda
  • 1 Tablespoon Baking Powder
  • 1 Teaspoon Salt

Blend all these ingredients together. Then, cut in the butter with the pastry cutter. You want a cornmeal consistency. 

Don’t add the buttermilk (or other liquids) yet. Store the dry biscuit ingredients in a cold place (like the ice chest) for now. 

Step 12: Once the potatoes are cooked (and the chicken is at least 165°F / 74°C), prepare the biscuits.

Note: How do your briquettes look? Do you need to start another set?

Biscuit Steps

A word on the biscuits. Homemade biscuits are my preference. However, a can of biscuits will work perfectly in this recipe. It’s up to you.

Biscuit Step 1: Add the buttermilk (or other liquid) to the dry biscuit ingredients. 

Biscuit Step 2: Using the rubber / silicone spatula, mix the biscuit ingredients until you have a sticky dough mixture. 

Biscuit Step 3: Remove the dough and set on a floured surface. Don’t knead the dough. Just flatten the dough and then fold over a few times. Dust with flour if it’s too sticky. Coat with a bit of flour so the dough does not stick to the surface nor your hands. 

You’ll want to flatten the dough a bit thinner than you would if you were making morning biscuits. We want these biscuits to be a bit thinner than normal. 

Biscuit Step 4: Cut the biscuits with a biscuit cutter. You could form them with your hands or cut them with a knife. No worries. Cutting with a biscuit cutter gives the best results. And, they all don’t have to be round either. Cut them “any which way but loose.” They may have half-moon shapes and that’s okay. We’ll piece these together in a bit.

Biscuit Step 5: Place the cut biscuits on the top of the cooked pot pie mixture. Just puzzle them in. If you run out of room, just shove the last one or two in sideways.

Biscuit Step 6: Scramble the raw egg. Using the basting brush, “paint” the top of the biscuits with the raw egg.

Return the lid to the pot.

Step 13: The hot pot pie mixture is our biscuit’s “bottom heat.” We need to heat the top of the Dutch oven. Place any of the remaining briquettes from the bottom of the Dutch oven to the top of the Dutch oven. Add the equivalent of about 20 briquettes to the top and let the biscuits bake. 

Step 14: After about 10 minutes, check on the biscuits. How do they look? Turn the lid 1/3rd turn. Let the biscuits cook until they are nice and golden brown. 

NOTE: If they look like they are done but are not browning up, add more briquettes to the top of the oven. 

Once the biscuits have brown up nicely, your meal is ready to eat!!

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Summary

And that’s it y’all. This is one of my all time favorite camp cast iron Dutch oven recipes. And, as easy as it is cooking this in camp, it’s easier to cook in the home stove. Use your 7 quart cast iron Dutch oven (or half the recipe for the 5 quart) and enjoy. NOTE: if you cook this inside, cook on the stove top until the potatoes are done (Step 12), then prep the biscuits and then bake at 400°F  / 205°C until the biscuits are golden brown.

My name is Sulae and I love to share the magic that comes from my black pots and pans. You all be sure to sign up for the news letter and I’ll keep my messages short-and-sweet as well as few and far between. You keep on cooking in those cast iron beauties and enjoying those frosted glasses of that fermented barley pop.

We’ll see you next time on beerandiron.com.

Chicken Pot Pie Recipe in a Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven

Beer-Brined & Tenderized Chicken Breast, Potatoes, Vegetables, with a Buttermilk Biscuit Crust all cooked in a Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven. We high-society now!
Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 1 hour
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Servings 8 Folks

Equipment

  • Cutting Board
  • Tenderizing Mallet
  • Needle Tenderizer
  • Zipper Bag
  • Knife
  • Measuring Cups
  • Measuring Spoons:
  • Can Opener
  • Wooden Spatula or Sauté Paddle
  • Pastry Cutter
  • Biscuit Cutter

Ingredients
  

  • 4 Boneless, skinless chicken breast halves Any chicken meat will work A-OK
  • ½ Pound Thick-Cut Bacon (or another cooking oil).  Or another cooking oil
  • 2 Cans Cream of Chicken Soup Two 10-Ounce Cans
  • 4  4-6 Cloves of Garlic (more if you’re like me) Or More
  • 1 Large Yellow or White Onion
  • 2 Bags 10-ounce Bags of Frozen Mixed Vegetables
  • Worcestershire Sauce to Taste
  • 1 Tablespoon Poultry Seasoning
  • ½ Cup Evaporated Milk 5 Ounce Can will Work Fine)
  • Any other Seasonings like rubbed sage, pepper, and the like (Optional) Like rubbed sage, pepper, and the like (Optional)
  • Flour to Dust the Cut Chicken Pieces with (Optional) Optional

Instructions
 

Searing and Browning the Chicken / Sauté the Onions and Garlic

  • Tenderize 3-4 Large Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts. Brine them in a beer/salt brine for about 1 hour then pat dry. You could pre-prepare the chicken at home and carry it to camp in a doubled-up zipper bag or other container.
  • Pull out the frozen veggies and let them start warming up to “room” temperature. Or, rather, “the great outdoor’s” temperature.
  • Cut the chicken breast meat into bite-sized pieces. Pat dry the chicken breast meat. Place the cut, pat-dried chicken meat into the 1/2 cup of flour and coat the pieces.
  • Cut up the onion and the garlic. Set aside.
  • With the cast iron camp Dutch oven over 30 (or more) briquettes, render the fat from some of the fatty bacon.
  • While the bacon fat is rendering, wash and cut the potatoes into bite-sized chunks.
  • Brown the chicken pieces up until they are no longer pink.
  • Once the chicken is browned, remove the chicken from the pot and then sauté the onions and garlic until the onions are clear.

Adding The Other Ingredients

  • After you've sautéed the onions and garlic, return the chicken to the pot. Then, mix in the veggies, evaporated milk, cans of soup, potatoes, Worcestershire Sauce, and Poultry Seasoning. Salt and Pepper to taste.
  • Mix all the ingredients in the pot all about and smooth out the top. The mixture should not be too runny nor should it “set” like pudding either. If the mixture is too thick (more than likely), add some of the reserved beer.
  • Bring the mixture to a bubbling boil. Don't let it stick to the bottom. If it's sticking, add some beer to thin it out. Once the mixture is bubbling, set the camp Dutch oven to bake.
  • While the mixture is heating up to a "bubble," prepare the dry ingredients for the biscuits.

Preparing the Biscuit Crust

  • Blend all the biscuit ingredients together. Then, cut in the butter with the pastry cutter. You want a cornmeal consistency. DON'T ADD THE BUTTERMILK YET.
  • Once the potatoes are cooked (and the chicken is at least 165°F / 74°C), prepare the biscuits by adding the Buttermilk
  • Using the rubber / silicone spatula, mix the biscuit ingredients until you have a sticky dough mixture.
  • Remove the dough and set on a floured surface. Don't knead the dough. Just flatten the dough and then fold over a few times. Dust with flour if it's too sticky. Coat with a bit of flour so the dough does not stick to the surface nor your hands.
  • Cut the biscuits with a biscuit cutter.
  • Place the cut biscuits on the top of the cooked pot pie mixture.
  • Scramble the raw egg. Using the basting brush, "paint" the top of the biscuits with the raw egg.

Finishing Up

  • The hot pot pie mixture is our biscuit's "bottom heat." We need to heat the top of the Dutch oven. Place any of the remaining briquettes from the bottom of the Dutch oven to the top of the Dutch oven. Add the equivalent of about 20-30 briquettes to the top and let the biscuits bake.
  •  After about 10 minutes, check on the biscuits. How do they look? Turn the lid 1/3rd turn. Let the biscuits cook until they are nice and golden brown.
  • Once the biscuits have brown up nicely, your meal is ready to eat!!

Notes

Take your time and create this recipe for the first time. The second time will be much easier. ENJOY!
Keyword Chicken Pot Pie, Pot Pie
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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