Quick Butter Rice Recipe Infused with Parmesan

Written by Sarah Gardner

This is my go-to butter rice recipe when I want something that feels a little fancy but behaves like a weeknight side: fluffy long-grain rice, a glossy buttery finish, and a salty parmesan melt that clings to every grain instead of sinking to the bottom like a sad cheese puddle. The trick is simple: toast the rice in butter first (hello, nutty aroma), cook it in broth for instant flavor, then fold in parmesan off the heat so it stays creamy, not stringy. It tastes like the cozy middle ground between risotto and "plain rice," and it turns a random chicken breast, roasted vegetables, or a fried egg into an actual meal.

Quick Butter Rice Recipe Infused with Parmesan (Stovetop, Fluffy, and Ridiculously Good)

Fluffy stovetop butter rice finished with parmesan for a fast, savory side that tastes far richer than it is.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Course Side Dish
Cuisine American
Servings 6

Equipment

  • medium heavy-bottom pot with lid a 3 quart saucepan or small dutch oven is ideal for even heat and fewer hot spots; if your lid fits loosely, lay a piece of foil over the pot before adding the lid to trap steam
  • Fine mesh strainer for rinsing rice (optional but helpful for fluffier grains); if you do not have one, rinse in a bowl and carefully pour off the water
  • Microplane or fine grater for parmesan that melts smoothly; pre-grated cheese works in a pinch but will not melt as silky due to anti-caking agents
  • Wooden spoon or silicone spatula use it to stir without scraping up too much starch once the rice starts simmering; a fork is best for fluffing at the end
  • Instant-read thermometer (optional) not required, but handy if you add the optional chicken; you want 165°F in the thickest part

Ingredients
  

For the parmesan butter rice

  • cup long-grain white rice jasmine, basmati, or standard long-grain; avoid short-grain here unless you want a stickier texture
  • 6 tablespoon unsalted butter divided; use salted butter and reduce the added salt if needed
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil optional but helpful to keep butter from browning too fast; substitute avocado oil
  • 2 teaspoon garlic finely grated or minced; substitute ½ teaspoon garlic powder if you are in a hurry
  • cup low-sodium chicken broth or vegetable broth; water works but the flavor will be lighter
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt adjust to taste depending on broth and parmesan
  • ¼ teaspoon black pepper freshly ground is best
  • ½ cup parmesan cheese finely grated; pecorino romano is a sharper alternative
  • 1 teaspoon lemon zest optional but highly recommended for lift; skip if serving with a citrusy main
  • 2 tablespoon flat-leaf parsley finely chopped; substitute chives or thin-sliced scallion greens

Optional quick chicken add-on (turn it into dinner)

  • 1 pound boneless skinless chicken breast or boneless skinless chicken thigh; slice breasts horizontally into cutlets for faster cooking
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt for seasoning the chicken
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper for seasoning the chicken
  • 1 teaspoon italian seasoning or a mix of dried oregano and dried thyme
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil for searing; butter can burn at this heat
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice optional finishing splash

Instructions
 

Prep

  1. Rinse the rice (optional but recommended): add the rice to a fine-mesh strainer and rinse under cool water until the runoff looks mostly clear, about 30 seconds. This helps the grains stay distinct, which is what you want for fluffy parmesan butter rice instead of clumpy "mixed rice." Shake well to remove excess water.
  2. Grate the parmesan finely and chop the parsley now. Parmesan melts best when it is basically snow, and having it ready matters because the rice finishes fast once it comes off the heat.

Cook the parmesan butter rice (stovetop)

  1. In a medium heavy-bottom pot over medium heat, melt 4 tablespoon butter with 1 tablespoon olive oil. Once the butter is fully melted and looks foamy, stir in the garlic and cook until fragrant, 30 seconds. Do not let the garlic brown.
  2. Add the rice and stir to coat every grain in the butter. Keep stirring until the rice smells lightly toasty and the pot smells like buttered popcorn, 2 minutes. This quick toasting step is the difference between "simple rice recipes" that taste flat and rice that tastes like it came from a restaurant.
  3. Pour in the chicken broth, then stir in ½ teaspoon kosher salt and ¼ teaspoon black pepper. Turn the heat to high and bring to a boil.
  4. As soon as it boils, reduce the heat to low, cover with a tight-fitting lid, and simmer for 15 minutes. Try not to lift the lid. Steam is doing the work here.
  5. After 15 minutes, turn off the heat and let the rice rest, covered, for 10 minutes. This rest finishes the cook gently and keeps the bottom from getting gummy.
  6. Uncover and fluff with a fork, gently lifting and separating the grains. Add the remaining 2 tablespoon butter and fold until glossy. Then sprinkle in the parmesan a little at a time, folding after each addition. Off-heat folding is the best way to keep the cheese creamy and evenly distributed.
  7. Finish with lemon zest (if using) and parsley. Taste and adjust with a pinch more salt or pepper. Serve hot, while the butter and parmesan are at peak melt.

Optional: quick chicken add-on (cook while the rice rests)

  1. Pat the chicken dry. Season both sides with 1 teaspoon kosher salt, ½ teaspoon black pepper, and 1 teaspoon italian seasoning.
  2. Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat. Add the chicken in a single layer and sear until deeply golden, 4 minutes per side for cutlets (or 6 minutes per side for thicker pieces). Cook until the thickest part reaches 165°F.
  3. Rest the chicken for 5 minutes, then slice. Finish with 1 tablespoon lemon juice if you want a brighter, lighter bite next to the rich rice.

Baked option (if you want a hands-off version)

  1. This recipe is designed for the stovetop, but you can push it into the vibe of baked rice recipes oven style when you want truly hands-off cooking. Heat the oven to 350°F. In an oven-safe dish with a tight cover, stir together rinsed rice, broth, salt, pepper, garlic, and 4 tablespoon melted butter. Cover tightly and bake for 30 minutes. Rest 10 minutes covered, then fluff and fold in parmesan, remaining butter, lemon zest, and parsley. The texture is slightly less silky than stovetop, but still excellent.
  2. If you grew up on "one stick butter rice" casseroles or stick of butter baked rice, this version scratches that buttery itch but tastes cleaner and more balanced because the parmesan brings savory depth without needing extra canned soup.

If you are truly in a rush (instant rice note)

  1. Yes, you can adapt this butter rice recipe for instant rice recipes: cook instant rice according to the package using broth instead of water, then immediately fold in butter and finely grated parmesan off the heat. You will lose the toasted-rice flavor, but you still get the butter-parmesan finish, which is the whole point on hectic nights.

Pairings

How to serve it

  • With chicken: this parmesan butter rice loves anything simply seasoned. Try sliced seared chicken breast cutlets (from the optional add-on), roasted chicken thigh with crispy skin, or lemon-garlic grilled chicken. The rice is rich, so a little acid (lemon, vinegar, or a bright salsa verde) on the protein is a smart move.
  • With seafood: serve under pan-seared shrimp, scallops, or a quick garlic-butter salmon. Keep the seafood seasoning light and let the parmesan do the heavy lifting.
  • With vegetables (my favorite): pair with blistered green beans, charred broccoli, roasted asparagus, or a simple arugula salad with lemon vinaigrette. The bitterness and crunch make the rice taste even more buttery.
  • Saucy mains: this is a great base for meatballs and marinara, mushroom gravy, or a quick pan sauce from pork chops. Because the grains stay fluffy (not sticky), the sauce coats without turning it into mush.
  • Drinks: a crisp white wine like pinot grigio, sauvignon blanc, or an unoaked chardonnay works well. If you are doing chicken and herbs, a light lager or pilsner is perfect.
  • Leftover upgrade: cold rice can be turned into a fast fried-rice situation the next day. Add a little oil to a hot skillet, press the rice into an even layer, and let it crisp. Top with a fried egg and extra parmesan.

FAQs

What type of rice works best for this butter rice recipe?

Long-grain white rice is the sweet spot for fluffy, separate grains that still feel rich once the butter and parmesan go in. Jasmine gives a subtly floral aroma, basmati is a little drier and extra fluffy, and standard long-grain is neutral and dependable. Short-grain rice will turn creamier and stickier, which can be tasty, but it will feel more like a quick risotto than classic butter rice.

Can I make this with chicken breast or chicken thigh, and which is better?

Both work. Boneless skinless chicken breast is lean and clean-tasting, especially if you slice it into thin cutlets so it stays juicy. Boneless skinless chicken thigh is more forgiving and stays tender even if you cook it a minute too long. If you are serving this rice as the main event, thigh brings a little extra richness that matches the parmesan.

Do I really need to rinse the rice?

You do not have to, but rinsing helps prevent gummy clumps by washing off surface starch. Because parmesan and butter already add a creamy coating, starting with clean, fluffy grains keeps the final texture from feeling heavy. If you skip rinsing, just be extra gentle when fluffing so you do not mash the grains.

Can I turn this into a baked version like stick of butter baked rice?

Yes. Follow the "Baked option" step group: combine rice, broth, seasonings, garlic, and melted butter, cover tightly, and bake at 350°F. Then fold in parmesan and the remaining butter after resting. It scratches that nostalgic baked-rice-casserole vibe, but with fresher flavor and better control over salt.

How do I store and reheat leftovers without drying them out?

Cool the rice quickly, then store airtight in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Reheat in a covered bowl with a small splash of broth or water (about 1 tablespoon per cup of rice) and microwave until hot, then fluff and add a small knob of butter if it needs reviving. On the stovetop, warm over low heat with a splash of broth, stirring gently so you do not break the grains.

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