From baking cookies to roasting veggies to toasting nuts, the sheet pan is a kitchen workhorse. It’s incredibly easy to use and, assuming you’ve invested a few dollars in a sturdy, good quality version, it never lets you down. But sheet pans can be used for so much more than cooking part of dinner or baking your famous snickerdoodles. With the right recipe, a sheet pan is all you need to get a complete and satisfying supper on the table with very little prep and next to no cleanup. Now that’s a formula for successful weeknight eating.

For inspiration, we asked a few of our favorite food pros, including Giada De Laurentiis, Cassy Joy Garcia, Serena Wolf, Sara Lynn Cauchon, Marge Perry and David Bonom to share their best ideas for cooking dinner using just a sheet pan and a hot oven. So, the next time you need a fuss-free meal — maybe even tonight —pick a recipe and put your trusty sheet pan to work.

Italian Sheet Plan Chicken Aubrie Pick for Giadzy

“This chicken turns out flavorful and juicy every time!” says TV personality, cookbook author and restaurateur Giada De Laurentiis. The marinade is inspired by classic chicken cacciatore and features garlic, onion powder, fennel seed and oregano, plus smoked hot paprika for an extra boost. Plan ahead, recommends Giada, so the chicken has time to marinate, then roast it for about 45 minutes. By adding bread cubes for the last 15 minutes and then combining the chicken and toasted bread with tomato, fennel, basil, lemon juice and Parmigiano-Reggiano, you have a complete, well-rounded feast. “Tossing the salad with any pan juices amps up the flavor even more, making this chicken dinner a real winner!”

Shrimp Fajita Sheet Pan Dinner Cassy Joy Garcia

“As a native Texan, I LOVE fajitas, but I don’t necessarily love the hours it takes to marinate them, or smoking up my kitchen by searing them on a hot griddle,” says Cassy Joy Garcia, the blogger behind Fed + Fit and author of the new book, "Cook Once, Eat All Week: 26 Weeks of Gluten-Free, Affordable Meal Prep to Preserve Your Time & Sanity." This sheet pan version delivers “all the flavor without the mess and it’s done in no time,” says Garcia. If you follow her instructions to cook the veggies first then add the shrimp, you get tender, perfectly cooked shrimp, but for an even easier option, everything can go in the oven at the same time. The onions and peppers are slightly sweet, while the lime juice marinade adds tanginess, reports Garcia. “It’s great on its own or as a taco!”

Curried Chicken Sheet Pan Dinner Cassy Joy Garcia

Garcia also makes a sheet pan supper with curried chicken and carrots. “This recipe is one of my favorites, because you get so much flavor with so little effort,” insists Garcia. “It takes two basic ingredients — chicken and carrots — and makes them amazing.” Boneless, skinless chicken thighs are ideal for sheet pan meals, as they cook more quickly than bone-in thighs and have more flavor than breasts. Using coconut cream in the marinade creates a bit of a crust on the chicken, while curry powder, lime juice and garlic powder are a taste explosion. The carrots caramelize in the oven, so they are tender but slightly crisp, says Garcia, while a garnish of chopped salted peanuts and fresh cilantro adds “a little something extra!”

Sheet Pan Salmon with Charred Broccoli, Oranges, and Asian Dressing Serena Wolf

“I love that this sheet pan meal is light yet satisfying, packed with flavor and nutrients and comes together in a flash with next to no cleanup,” says Serena Wolf, the blogger behind Domesticate Me and author of "The Dude Diet: Clean(ish) Food for People Who Like to Eat Dirty" and the upcoming "The Dude Diet Dinnertime: 125 Clean(ish) Recipes for Weeknight Winners and Fancypants Dinners." Cooking salmon in the oven yields tender, flaky fish every time, explains Wolf. “Salmon, crispy broccoli and tart-sweet oranges are a winning combination, but the mustard-spiked, Asian-inspired dressing takes things to the next level by adding unexpected umami flavors into the mix.” Feel free to sub your favorite white fish for the salmon and note that this recipe can easily be halved to serve one or doubled to feed a family or guests.

Gochujang Skirt Steak with Scallion, Polenta and Broccoli Marge Perry

Korean-inspired skirt steak with polenta and broccoli is “a surprising combination, but one that works incredibly well,” explains Marge Perry, co-author with David Bonom, of "Hero Dinners: Complete One-Pan Meals That Save the Day." Though they originate from different parts of the world, “the mildly nutty creaminess of the polenta balances really well against the slightly spicy, pungent fermented flavor of the gochujang and the chewy meatiness of the steak.” Best of all, the process is equal parts easy and genius. The polenta and broccoli are cooked directly on a sheet pan, while the steak sits on a rack above. This clever technique allows the meat to brown on the outside yet stay medium rare inside. Plus, it protects the polenta and veggies from the oven’s high heat and lets them absorb some of the meat’s yummy juices.

Sheet Pan Clam Bake Marge Perry

Clambakes typically require digging a hole at the beach and tending a fire for hours, but with Perry and Bonom’s sheet pan version, you can enjoy the clambake experience without ever leaving the kitchen—and with very few dishes to clean up afterwards. Perry and Bonom’s recipe combines clambake essentials — clams, shrimp, corn and potatoes — with zucchini and red onion, plus a sprinkle of Old Bay. “We ensure every ingredient is at its best by adding them in stages, so they all end up cooking to the ideal degree,” explains Perry. The shrimp and clams steam with the vegetables and pick up some of their sweetness, while the veggies “are seasoned with the flavors of the sea.” The recipe takes about 30 minutes from start to finish and since it’s cooked in the oven, it’s truly a year-round meal.

Halibut with Green Beans, Tomatoes & Olives Halibut with Green Beans, Tomatoes & Olives

“This dish is hearty and satisfying but still tastes light and fresh,” says Sara Lynn Cauchon, the YouTube star known as The Domestic Geek and author of the brand new cookbook "The Domestic Geek’s Meals Made Easy: A Fresh, Fuss-Free Approach to Healthy Cooking". “Baking halibut is so simple but results in such a lovely texture and maintains its delicate flavor,” explains Cauchon. In addition to firm, meaty halibut, Cauchon recommends making this recipe with sea bass, snapper or cod. Whichever you choose, giving the potatoes a 20-minute head start is the secret to ensuring the fish doesn’t overcook. The final dish is “packed with protein and lots of good-for-you veggies but adding high-impact ingredients like olives and capers makes it really flavorful,” says Cauchon. “It’s the perfect Mediterranean-inspired weeknight meal.”

More recipes and tips from food pros

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