Scalloped Potatoes are an easy classic recipe, perfect for your Easter dinner, Christmas, Thanksgiving or even just for Sunday dinner.
In this side dish, thinly sliced potatoes and onions are layered in an easy homemade cream sauce and baked until tender, golden, and bubbly. Potato perfection!
An Easy Classic
Of all the potato side dishes from Oven Roasted Potatoes to Perfect Baked Potatoes, nothing says comfort food like creamy side of scalloped potatoes (except maybe creamy buttery mashed potatoes).
So exactly what are Scalloped Potatoes? Thought to have originated in England, the word ‘scallop’ is basically a definition for how the potato is sliced. Thin and uniformly cut potatoes are layered in a casserole dish and then covered with a seasoned onion cream sauce and baked. The result is this savory scalloped potato recipe!
Ingredients
Potatoes Yukon gold potatoes (or red potatoes) have tender skin and don’t require peeling (they hold their shape well). Russet potatoes or Idaho potatoes will work but tend to break apart more (but still taste good).
Onions Onions add a lot of flavor to this recipe and are a classic ingredient.
Cream Sauce A quick cream sauce made with flour, butter, milk and broth. If you’d like to add cheese, remove the sauce from the heat and stir in a handful or two of shredded cheese. It will melt from the heat of the sauce.
Seasonings Simple seasonings in this recipe include salt, pepper, onion, garlic. Add in your own favorites including thyme, rosemary, parsley.
Baked Salmon in Foil with Asparagus and Lemon Garlic Butter Sauce
Buttery Pecan Snowball Cookies
Pumpkin Pie Rice Krispies Treats
DIY Miracle Cleaner: Transform Your Kitchen with This Easy Grease-Busting Recipe
Banana, Honey, and Water Mix: A Natural Remedy to Relieve Cough and Bronchitis
Sonja Christopher: A Pioneer on Survivor
The trick to “effortless” oven cleaning. Even burnt grease disappears
Toss potatoes into slow cooker. Guests think that you’ve slaved over this meal all day
How to Remove a Broken Key from a Lock: 5 Tricks to Avoid Dismantling Everything