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Potato Sausage Casserole

Delight in the comforting flavors of our potato sausage casserole—a dish that effortlessly blends homey tastes with simple preparation. Perfect for cozy family dinners or casual gatherings, this recipe promises to satisfy with its hearty flavor.

In just over an hour, you’ll be savoring the harmonious layers of tender potatoes, savory sausage and melty cheese. This brunch-friendly dish delivers a taste of home-cooked goodness with every bite.

Ingredients for Potato Sausage Casserole

Ingredients for potato sausage casserole on kitchen counter.
Leticia Almeida for Taste of Home
  • Pork sausage: Pork sausage provides savory flavors for the casserole, complementing the creamy sauce and hearty potatoes. 
  • Cream of mushroom soup: Undiluted, condensed soup adds creaminess, binding the ingredients together while enhancing the overall richness. If you want to avoid dairy, use a canned creamy mushroom soup made with non-dairy milk, or a homemade mushroom gravy for a fresher alternative.
  • Milk: Milk adds richness to the sauce mixture, ensuring a creamy consistency. This recipe calls for 2% milk, but you can substitute almond or oat milk for a dairy-free version.
  • Chopped onion: Provides aromatic sweetness and texture to the layers of the casserole. Shallots or leeks can be used as alternatives for a milder onion flavor.
  • Potatoes: Peeled and sliced potatoes serve as the hearty base of the casserole, cooking to tender during baking. Substitute with sweet potatoes for a twist on the classic dish, adding a hint of sweetness.
  • Cheddar cheese: Shredded cheddar melts into a golden, gooey topping for the casserole. For a milder flavor, use Monterey Jack cheese, or vegan cheese for a dairy-free alternative.
  • Parsley (optional): Minced parsley offers a fresh garnish with visual appeal.  

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The 1950s Cake Recipes You Need to Make Today

Go grab your apron! These 1950s cake recipes are as delicious today as they were decades ago. Find ideas for coconut cake, angel food, pineapple upside-down cake and more.

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Poor Man’s Casserole

Poor man’s casserole got its name because it’s made with inexpensive ingredients—specifically refrigerator and pantry staples that you likely already have on hand. And yet, this dish is one of the tastiest ground beef recipes my family has tried. Seriously, we kept going back for more!

I’d describe this casserole as casual lasagna. It’s made with similar ingredients like noodles, tomato sauce and ground beef. But instead of making neat, intentional layers like you would in a regular lasagna recipe, you toss egg noodles with cream cheese and sour cream and then layer them roughly with seasoned tomato meat sauce and plenty of cheese. The casserole comes out of the oven just as bubbling and melty, but without all the work!

Add poor man’s casserole to your collection of tried-and-true 13×9 casseroles—and make an extra one as a potential freezer casserole for meals down the road.

Poor Man's Casserole in a bowl, ready to serve
SARAH TRAMONTE FOR TASTE OF HOME

Ingredients for Poor Man’s Casserole

  • Ground beef: For this and every other ground beef casserole, learn how to brown ground beef so it’s flavorful and tender. This includes letting the pan get hot before adding the raw meat.
  • Tomato sauce: Make this casserole quickly with store-bought canned tomato sauce. For a more rustic texture, use homemade tomato sauce you’ve prepped ahead.
  • Egg noodles: Look for packages of quick-cooking, extra-wide egg noodles to layer with the meat sauce.
  • Sour cream: The noodles are coated in creamy sauce that’s part tangy sour cream.
  • Cream cheese: Cream cheese teams up with sour cream to coat the noodles. Remember to soften the cream cheese ahead of time (you can do it quickly in a microwave oven if you forgot).
  • Onions: Diced onions are cooked with the ground beef. You can chop a fresh onion or use convenient, frozen diced onions.
  • Garlic: Freshly minced cloves of garlic give the meat sauce plenty of flavor.
  • Seasonings: Some salt, black pepper, red pepper flakes and an Italian seasoning blend are all you need for poor man’s casserole. Nothing too complicated here!
  • Shredded cheddar cheese: A blend of cheddar and Jack cheeses also works well here. Grate your own cheese (as opposed to buying bags of shredded cheese) and it will melt more smoothly on top of the casserole.
  • Parmesan: A little Parm on top adds a deliciously savory and nutty flavor to the casserole. You can use shaker Parmesan or grate it yourself.
  • Parsley: If you have it, a sprinkle of fresh, chopped parsley looks lovely as a finishing touch on the baked dish.

Taste of Home

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28 Cookie Recipes from Vintage Church Cookbooks

These vintage cookie recipes will bring up all the nostalgia—and all the compliments!

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Church Supper Hot Dish

Although I grew up in the Midwest, I didn’t hear the phrase “hot dish” until I moved to Northern Wisconsin. This Upper Midwest staple is commonly served at potlucks and church gatherings, where the usual instructions are “bring a hot dish to share.” This church supper hot dish recipe is a classic combination of ground beef, starchy potatoes, chopped vegetables and canned cream of mushroom soup. Crispy chow mein noodles ensure each bite has a toothsome crunch.

What is a church supper hot dish?

Midwesterners love a hot dish, but what’s not to love? It’s a classic budget-friendly potluck recipe that combines meat, potatoes, vegetables and canned soup. The casserole has endless variations: Some contain beef or chicken, the vegetables can be anything (green beans and peas are popular), and the topping is often Tater Tots.

Hot dishes have been around for generations—the first published recipe was in a 1930s-era cookbook—and today these recipes are still a great way to use up leftovers, inexpensive cuts of meat, frozen vegetables and pantry staples like condensed soup. Regardless of what’s on the inside or on top, hearty and filling hot dish recipes are always a popular sight at potluck gatherings.

Church Supper Hot Dish Ingredients

  • Ground beef: Use lean ground beef for this recipe; 80/20 or 90/10 blends are ideal for this hot dish.
  • Vegetables: This hot dish combines peeled and sliced potatoes with finely chopped celery, carrots, green peppers and onions.
  • Butter: Sauteing the veggies in butter adds a rich and buttery flavor to the hot dish.
  • Water: The veggies are simmered in water to help them soften.
  • Condensed cream of mushroom soup: Cream of mushroom soup is a pantry staple at the base of many casseroles and other comfort food recipes.
  • Chow mein noodles: Chow mein noodles are used as the base of the casserole and provide a crunchy topping. For this recipe, use the chow mein noodles in a can.
  • Shredded cheddar cheese: Adding cheese is always a good idea. For the best flavor and meltability, shred the cheese yourself. However, packaged shredded cheddar will totally work.

Taste of Home

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Our Most Popular Dinner Recipes of All Time

Meet our MVP dinners. These are the recipes our readers can’t stop making — the ones that have stood the test of time and earned a permanent place in weeknight dinner rotations. They’re the dishes people come back to again and again, whether for a busy Tuesday night or a special-occasion meal with friends. Each recipe has something that keeps it memorable: comfort, flavor, and a touch of everyday magic.

You’ll find the classics everyone loves, like hearty beef chili, creamy chicken Alfredo pasta, and what many call the most delicious lasagna of all time. We also have newer favorites that have quickly risen to the top: one-pan Tuscan chicken with its creamy sun-dried tomato sauce; cheesy French onion meatballs that turn a favorite soup into a cozy dinner; and a 4-ingredient kielbasa and sauerkraut skillet that’s pure deliciousness in a pan.

The Kitchn

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Carolina Pulled Pork

Each summer, my husband and I pasture-raise around a dozen hogs on our small family farm, so you could say I know a thing or two about pork recipes. Slow-cooked pulled pork is one of my all-time favorites because it uses pork shoulder, which is my favorite cut of pork. When cooked just right, this tasty cut of meat is tender, moist and shreds easily.

Since I make pulled pork so often, I love to try different recipe variations, but this Carolina pulled pork recipe is a constant. Not only is it easy to make thanks to the slow cooker, but it is tangy, spicy and full of delicious pork flavor. Use it on sandwiches, serve a heaping pile with your favorite coleslaw, or freeze it for another day. I’m sure it will become one of your favorite slow-cooker pork recipes.

What is Carolina pulled pork?

Carolina pulled pork starts with a pork shoulder that’s been rubbed with spices, and which is then slow-cooked or smoked and mopped with a tangy vinegar-based sauce while it cooks. That mop sauce sometimes includes tomato or ketchup, but true East Carolina-style barbecue does not.

When it comes to other meaty barbecue recipes, variations abound, from the different cuts of meat to the wood used in the smoker to the many regional barbecue sauces. As for the meat, the options include brisket, beef ribs, pork ribs, pulled pork or burnt ends—and that’s just the beginning! Sauces range from sweet and smoky Kansas City-style to thin and tangy Memphis-style.

Carolina Pulled Pork Ingredients

overhead shot; white textured background; Carolina-Style Pork Barbecue served over a tray with salad in small bowl, a small white over kitchen napkin; adding pork mixture over bun;
Taste of Home
  • Pork: This pulled pork recipe calls for a boneless pork shoulder or butt (sometimes called Boston butt) roast. (Psst: Both of these cuts refer to the front shoulder and leg of the pig, not the rear end!) The even marbling of this cut of pork makes it ideal for cooking low and slow.
  • Onions: You can use nearly any type of onion in this recipe, but we recommend using white or yellow onions.
  • Pork rub: Our sweet and savory spice rub made from brown sugar, salt, paprika and pepper gives the pork an extra hit of flavor.
  • Carolina barbecue sauce: Make this tangy sauce with cider vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, sugar, crushed red pepper flakes, garlic salt, ground mustard and cayenne pepper. It has a good balance of acid, umami, salt, spice and sweetness.
  • Hamburger buns and coleslaw: This is how you want to serve Carolina pulled pork: on a bun, piled with coleslaw, with a lot of napkins. You can buy premade coleslaw or make a creamy slaw yourself.

Taste of Home

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15 Lazy Fall Appetizers To Make on Repeat

Fall just wouldn’t be the same without all the cozy, crowd-pleasing bites we get to enjoy during the season’s gatherings. Whether you’re heading to a tailgate or hosting a dinner party, a spread of easy appetizers is the perfect way to get things started—without stealing the spotlight (or your time) from the main course. That’s why we’ve rounded up 15 lazy fall appetizers that keep it simple with minimal ingredients and quick prep. From warm dips to wings to roasted veggie snacks, these are the starters you’ll turn to again and again.

Allrecipes

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25 Slow Cooker Classics for Your Next Tailgate

Whether it is the final big game of the season or just a small gathering of devoted fans at your home, sports require a certain commitment to tailgating food. Tailgating is more of a style, really. It doesn’t require you to commit to actually entertaining in a parking lot. In fact, most “tailgating” happens in the comfort of people’s homes, gathered around a television instead of an open hatchback.

No single tool is more of a game-changer for tailgate-style cooking than the slow cooker. Whether you are using it to prepare dishes ahead, keep them warm on the buffet, or even transport them to the game attached to a small generator, these recipes are all just what you want for any big game. With these 25 slow cooker tailgating recipes, you’ll be prepared to serve up only the best food for any game.

Allrecipes

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Our Most-Saved Soup Recipe of All Time Has More Than 1,000 5-Star Reviews

Panera Bread has a devoted following of fans that love their menu. While I rarely find myself in a Panera, there are several menu items that stick out to me in memory and flavor—and their creamy Broccoli Cheddar soup is certainly one of them. 

It’s a cheesy, velvety recipe made with chicken stock, sweetened subtly with carrots and dotted with broccoli and onions. This fan-favorite soup is not only a top recipe at Panera Bread, but it’s our most-saved soup recipe of all time. 

That’s right. Our Copycat Panera Broccoli Cheddar Soup is one the Allrecipes community has saved more than any other soup recipe. This comfort meal has over 1,400 5-star reviews, which shows how true to the original this is and how delicious this soup turns out. See why the Allrecipes community comes back to this recipe again and again.

Why You Should Try This Copycat Soup

This recipe is pretty close to the real deal, according to countless reviewers. And while it’s technically based on a restaurant menu item, it’s not a difficult dish to make.

“When my kids were little, they were crazy for Panera Bread Broccoli Cheddar Soup. They would eat one bowl there and take another to have at home,” says reviewer Lou Rou. “Needless to say, this added up. I tried numerous versions but none were quite right. Until I made this recipe. Spot on!”

From start to finish, the recipe takes about 45 minutes, but much of that time is spent letting the soup simmer and thicken while whisking. Sharp Cheddar cheese is the key to getting the proper tangy, cheesy flavor—as is a nice, rich chicken stock. Fresh vegetables bring a mellow sweetness and milk fills out the recipe. 

Allrecipes