Meat and Potato Skillet Gratin
Updated April 13, 2023

- Total Time
- 2½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4garlic cloves
- 1cup heavy cream
- 2thyme branches
- 2tablespoons finely chopped fresh sage
- 1tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, more as needed
- 1pound ground lean beef
- ¾teaspoon kosher salt, more as needed
- Black pepper, as needed
- 1cup thinly sliced onion
- 3ounces baby spinach (3 packed cups)
- 2teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
- ½pound rutabaga
- ½pound russet potatoes
- 4ounces Gruyère, grated (1 cup)
Preparation
- Step 1
Crush and peel 2 garlic cloves. In a small pot over medium heat, combine cream, the crushed garlic, the thyme and ½ tablespoon sage. Bring to a simmer; cook until reduced to ½ cup, about 30 minutes. Strain and cool.
- Step 2
While cream cools, heat oil in an ovenproof 10-inch skillet (preferably cast iron) over medium-high heat. Add half the beef and brown well, crumbling with a fork as it cooks. Season with ¼ teaspoon salt and a few grinds of pepper; transfer meat to a paper-towel-lined plate. Repeat with remaining meat, ¼ teaspoon salt and the pepper.
- Step 3
Add onion to pan drippings (drizzle with oil if pan seems dry). Cook, stirring occasionally, until onions are tender and golden, about 10 minutes. Peel and chop remaining 2 garlic cloves; add to pan with remaining sage. Return meat to skillet. Toss in spinach, a handful at a time, until wilted. Season with ¼ teaspoon salt, the Worcestershire and pepper to taste.
- Step 4
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Peel rutabaga and cut in half. Slice each half crosswise into ⅛-inch-thick slices. Peel potatoes and cut into ¼-inch-thick rounds. Layer half the rutabaga and potato slices over meat, alternating between rutabaga and potato, with slices overlapping one another. Season lightly with salt and pepper; top with half the cheese. Repeat with remaining vegetables and cheese. Spoon reduced cream evenly over top.
- Step 5
Cover pan tightly with foil and bake until vegetables are very tender, 60 to 75 minutes. Uncover and cook until golden brown, about 10 minutes more. Cool 10 minutes before serving.
Private Notes
Comments
I've made this twice. The first time I followed the recipe exactly, but the second time I replaced the beef with chopped crimini mushrooms. My family thought it was, if anything, marginally better as a vegetarian dish.
This recipie is glorious. I do it in a dutch oven and add a few mushrooms with the onion. It has become a favorite and is not too much trouble.
This recipe is less fussy than Shepherd's Pie and really quite tasty. I've omitted the rutabaga and used cheddar when I was too lazy to go to the market.
Melissa Clark, this is why I love you. This recipe is just outstanding. Made it for Christmas and it was a huge hit. Might become a tradition. It’s forgiving (as you can see from everyone’s substitutions!) and easy. My only tweaks were to deglaze the pan to get all the bits incorporated, to use a Dutch oven (that way there’s a tight-fitting lid and you don’t have to worry about foil), and to use turkey instead of beef. Can’t wait to make this again.
Very tasty and the rutabaga was nice since it had a firmer texture than the potato along with the extra flavoring. I used a mandolin and could get 1/8 slices rather than 1/4. So I was able to cut down the covered time to 50 min.
This is a great riff on cottage pie that I make two or three times each winter. It’s not faster than making a traditional pie, but it’s delicious, worth the effort. You almost have to use a mandolin for this; I use the narrow setting for the rutabaga, thick for the potato, and the veg layer comes out perfectly. Recently, I’ve done the meat in a cast iron skillet and transferred everything to a ceramic baking dish for the baking; less stress on the skillet. I’ve made it with lamb a few times and it translates well; haven’t done Impossible Burger or another plant-based substitute but I’m sure it would be fine.
