Golden-seared chicken breasts piled high with smoky bacon, buttery mushrooms, and melted Colby Jack earn their place on the table fast. The honey mustard underneath keeps every bite tangy and a little sweet, while the broiler finish turns the cheese into that bubbling, browned blanket you want to crack into with a fork. It’s the kind of dinner that tastes like a restaurant copycat but eats like a real weeknight meal.
The part that makes this version work is restraint. The chicken gets a quick marinate, not an overnight soak that turns the texture soft, and the sauce is split so one half seasons the chicken while the other stays clean for serving. The mushrooms are cooked until their moisture is gone, which matters more than people think; if they’re still wet, they slide off the chicken and water down the whole dish.
Below, I’ll walk you through the small choices that keep the sauce smooth, the chicken juicy, and the topping layer neat enough to slice cleanly. There’s also a simple make-ahead note that helps when you want to get dinner moving without rushing the final bake.
The sauce had the right tang, and the mushrooms stayed browned instead of soggy. I used the broiler for the last minute and the cheese bubbled up perfectly without overcooking the chicken.
Save this Alice Springs Chicken for the nights when you want bubbling cheese, crispy bacon, and honey mustard all on one pan.
The Step That Keeps the Cheese Topping from Sliding Off
The biggest mistake with Alice Springs Chicken is piling on the toppings before the chicken has enough structure. If the chicken isn’t seared first, it stays pale and releases juices in the oven, which turns the bacon and mushrooms loose and makes the cheese layer slide around instead of melt into place. A quick sear gives you a firm surface and starts the browning that makes the finished dish taste deeper.
- Give the chicken a head start in the skillet. That first crust helps it hold the toppings and keeps the final texture juicy instead of watery.
- Cook the mushrooms until their pan is nearly dry. That concentration is what keeps them meaty and keeps excess liquid out of the cheese layer.
- Reserve part of the honey mustard. The sauce tastes brighter when some of it stays fresh and uncooked for serving.
- Don’t skip the rest after marinating. Thirty minutes is enough for the flavor to settle into the surface without softening the chicken too much.
What the Honey Mustard, Bacon, and Cheese Each Bring to the Pan

- Dijon mustard — This gives the sauce its sharp backbone. Yellow mustard won’t taste the same; Dijon has the punch and depth that stand up to bacon and cheese.
- Honey — It softens the mustard and helps the sauce glaze over the chicken. Use the full amount unless you want a much tangier finish.
- Mayonnaise — This is what makes the marinade cling instead of running off the chicken. Sour cream can work in a pinch, but it’s thinner and a little less silky when heated.
- Cremini mushrooms — They bring a deeper, meatier flavor than plain button mushrooms. Slice them evenly so they cook at the same pace and brown instead of steam.
- Colby Jack or Monterey Jack — Both melt well and stay creamy. Pre-shredded cheese works, but freshly shredded melts more smoothly because it doesn’t have the anti-caking coating.
Building the Layers Without Steaming the Chicken
Mixing the Sauce and Marinating the Chicken
Whisk the Dijon, honey, mayonnaise, and lemon juice until the sauce looks smooth and glossy. Half of it goes onto the chicken for the marinate, and the other half stays untouched for serving so the final plate tastes fresh, not cooked down. Thirty minutes is enough here; longer won’t help much and can make the chicken surface a little too soft. Season the chicken lightly with salt and pepper before it goes in so the flavor reaches beyond the sauce.
Searing for Color Before the Oven
Use an oven-safe skillet and get it hot enough that the chicken sizzles the moment it hits the pan. You’re looking for a deep golden crust on both sides, not a full cook-through. If the pan is crowded or the heat is too low, the chicken will pale and start releasing moisture instead of browning. That browning is part of the flavor, so don’t rush this stage.
Cooking the Mushrooms Until They’re Dry and Browned
Melt the butter in a separate pan and cook the sliced mushrooms until they give up their liquid and the pan looks dry again. That’s the moment they start browning properly. If you stop while they’re still wet, the topping turns muddy and the cheese won’t cling as neatly. Season them at the end so the salt doesn’t pull moisture out too early.
Finishing Under the Oven Heat
Spoon on the reserved honey mustard, then stack the mushrooms, bacon, and cheese in that order. Bake until the chicken reaches 165°F in the thickest part and the cheese has melted into bubbling ridges. If you want a more bronzed top, use the broiler for a minute at the end and stay close to the oven; cheese goes from browned to scorched fast. Let the chicken rest a few minutes before serving so the juices settle under the toppings.
How to Adapt Alice Springs Chicken Without Losing the Good Parts
Make it gluten-free without changing the texture
This recipe is naturally close to gluten-free as written, so the main job is checking your Dijon mustard and bacon labels. Keep the same method and you’ll get the same creamy, layered result without any real trade-off in flavor or texture.
Use chicken thighs for a richer, juicier version
Boneless skinless thighs stay juicier and give you a little more forgiveness in the oven. They do need a bit longer to reach temperature, so check the center carefully before pulling them out and expect a darker, more savory finish.
Swap the cheese for sharper flavor
Sharp cheddar brings more bite, while Swiss gives you a more classic steakhouse feel. Both melt well, but cheddar tastes bolder and Swiss leans nuttier, so choose based on whether you want the bacon and mustard to stay in the foreground or the cheese to take over a little more.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The bacon stays crispest if you reheat it separately, but it’ll still taste good mixed in.
- Freezer: It freezes best before the final cheese layer, though the texture of the mushrooms and sauce softens a bit after thawing. Wrap portions tightly and freeze for up to 2 months.
- Reheating: Warm covered in a 325°F oven until hot, then uncover for the last few minutes so the cheese loosens again without drying out the chicken. Microwaving works for a fast lunch, but it softens the topping and can make the chicken rubbery if you overdo it.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Alice Springs Chicken
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Whisk together Dijon mustard, honey, mayonnaise, and fresh lemon juice until smooth; reserve half for serving and set aside. Marinate the chicken in the other half for at least 30 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 400°F. Sear the marinated chicken in an oven-safe skillet over medium-high heat for 3-4 minutes per side until golden.
- Melt butter in a separate pan and sauté sliced cremini mushrooms until golden and moisture has evaporated. Season with salt and pepper.
- Top each seared chicken breast with a spoonful of honey mustard, then mushrooms, then crumbled bacon, then shredded Colby Jack (or Monterey Jack). Transfer the skillet to the oven and bake for 15-18 minutes until chicken reaches 165°F and cheese is melted and golden.
- Garnish with fresh parsley and serve with the reserved honey mustard on the side.