This tater tot casserole recipe is the cozy 9×13 dinner people come back to for seconds: seasoned ground beef, creamy mushroom filling, melted cheddar, and frozen tots that bake golden and crisp on top.
The small upgrade is all in the layering. Most of the cheese goes under the tots, the filling stays creamy but not loose, and the casserole bakes uncovered so the topping browns instead of steaming. That one change helps keep the casserole from turning into a soft, heavy pan of potatoes and sauce.
It does not ask much from you: one skillet for the beef, one baking dish, and a bag of tots straight from the freezer. Make it with cream of mushroom soup, green beans, corn, or mixed vegetables, or use the no-soup version below when you want a homemade sauce.
Best of all, it feels bigger than the effort: a little browning, a little stirring, one layer of tots, and then the oven turns everything into a bubbling, scoopable casserole. It is the kind of dinner that works on a cold night, a busy school night, or any evening when you want something familiar, filling, and easy to scoop straight from the pan.
Table of Contents
Recipe Basics
Quick Answer: Tater Tot Casserole Recipe
To make tater tot casserole, brown 1 pound of ground beef with onion and seasoning, stir in cream of mushroom soup, sour cream, milk, vegetables, and cheese, spread the filling in a 9×13-inch baking dish, top with frozen tater tots, and bake uncovered at 375°F for 40–45 minutes. For the best texture, keep the tots frozen, arrange them in one layer, and add extra cheese only near the end.

When it comes out of the oven, the edges should be bubbling, the filling should scoop easily, and the tots on top should still have that little crisp bite. That balance comes from using a filling sturdy enough to support the tots, draining excess grease and vegetable liquid, and avoiding a heavy cheese layer over the top too early.

If your biggest worry is a soft topping, check the crispy tater tot tips before you bake.

This method is especially helpful when your old version tasted good but came out with soft tots, because it fixes the two biggest texture problems: trapped steam and loose filling.
Tater Tot Casserole at a Glance
Here is the simple version to keep in mind before you start cooking. It uses a full bag of frozen tater tots, a savory ground beef filling, and a 9×13-inch baking dish so the topping has enough room to brown.
| Oven temperature | 375°F / 190°C |
|---|---|
| Pan size | 9×13-inch / about 3-quart baking dish |
| Bake time | 40–45 minutes, plus 5–10 minutes resting |
| Best meat | Lean ground beef or hamburger |
| Tater tots | Use frozen tots, not thawed |
| Best vegetables | Green beans, corn, peas and carrots, or mixed vegetables |
| Make ahead? | Yes, but add frozen tater tots right before baking for the best topping |
| Freezer friendly? | Yes, especially if you freeze the cooked filling separately and add tots before baking |
Why This Recipe Works
A good tater tot casserole should be creamy underneath, cheesy in the middle, and crisp on top. This tater tot casserole recipe keeps the comfort-food flavor people love, but it avoids the usual soggy topping problem by using a sturdy filling, a wide baking dish, frozen tots, and an uncovered bake.

The cheese placement does a lot of the work. Most of the cheddar melts over the beef filling, so you still get that cheesy casserole bite. Meanwhile, the tots stay exposed to the oven heat. A small final sprinkle of cheese can go on near the end if you want a little extra melt.
That matters because the best bite is not just creamy or cheesy. It is the contrast: hot beefy filling underneath, melted cheddar in the middle, and a potato topping that still has texture when your spoon breaks through.
The filling is creamy without being runny, the beef tastes seasoned rather than flat, and the vegetables add enough balance to keep each scoop from feeling too heavy. Because the filling is sturdy, the tots can sit on top instead of sinking into the sauce.
Ingredients for Tater Tot Casserole
The ingredient list stays simple: ground beef, frozen tater tots, cream of mushroom soup, cheese, and vegetables. However, small upgrades like sour cream, Worcestershire sauce, garlic, paprika, and careful layering give the casserole better flavor without making it fussy.

Frozen tater tots
Use 28–32 ounces of frozen tater tots, or enough to cover the casserole in one generous layer. If a few are left in the bag, save them rather than piling them too high. Thawed tots soften quickly and are more likely to turn mushy on top of the filling.
A single layer is ideal. The tots do not need to be arranged perfectly, but they should not be stacked into a thick mound. More exposed edges mean better browning and more crunch.

For more texture help, the crispy tater tot tips explain how pan size, cheese placement, and uncovered baking work together.
Ground beef or hamburger
Lean ground beef gives this casserole its familiar flavor. An 85–90% lean blend works well because it browns nicely without leaving too much grease. Drain excess fat before adding the creamy ingredients so the filling does not turn oily or watery.
Ground turkey can work too, but it tastes milder. If you use turkey, add a little extra Worcestershire sauce, garlic powder, or paprika so the filling still has enough savory depth.
Cream of mushroom soup
Condensed cream of mushroom soup is the traditional base for this kind of casserole. It gives the beef filling a creamy, savory texture and helps everything hold together.
If you do not like mushroom soup, cream of chicken or cream of celery can work too. Also, there is a homemade no-soup sauce later in the post for anyone who wants more control over salt, thickness, and flavor.
There is no need to apologize for the soup version. This is the flavor many people grew up with, and it is the reason the casserole is fast, creamy, and dependable. The homemade sauce is there when you want it, not because the classic version needs fixing.
That same creamy, pantry-friendly style is why dishes like tuna noodle casserole are still so comforting: the sauce, filling, and topping all need to stay balanced.
Sour cream and milk
Sour cream makes the filling richer, while a little milk loosens the condensed soup so it spreads evenly. The sauce should coat the beef and vegetables without pooling in the pan. If it looks loose before baking, simmer it for another minute or two in the skillet.
Green beans, corn, or mixed vegetables
Green beans give the casserole an old-school hotdish feel, corn makes the filling sweeter and more kid-friendly, and mixed vegetables make it feel more like a full dinner in one pan. Drain canned vegetables well and thaw frozen vegetables if they are icy.
That draining step matters. Otherwise, extra liquid from canned green beans, corn, or frosty frozen vegetables can thin the filling and soften the potato topping from below.

Cheddar cheese
Sharp or medium cheddar works best. For a better topping, put most of the cheese over the filling and under the tots. Then, save a small handful for the last few minutes of baking.
Pre-shredded cheese is convenient, while freshly shredded cheddar melts more smoothly. Either one works here.
Easy Ingredient Swaps
You can bend this casserole in a lot of directions, but the filling still needs to stay thick enough to hold up the tots. These swaps keep that balance in mind.
| Instead of | Use | What changes |
|---|---|---|
| Ground beef | Ground turkey, ground chicken, or plant-based crumbles | Milder flavor; add extra Worcestershire, garlic, or paprika |
| Cream of mushroom soup | Cream of chicken, cream of celery, cheddar soup, or homemade sauce | Changes the flavor and salt level of the filling |
| Green beans | Corn, peas, carrots, or mixed vegetables | Adjusts sweetness, color, and texture |
| Cheddar cheese | Colby Jack, Monterey Jack, or a cheddar blend | Softer, meltier cheese profile |
| Sour cream | Greek yogurt or a little extra milk | Tangier with yogurt; looser with milk |
How to Make Tater Tot Casserole
The filling comes together in one skillet, and then the oven does the rest. The only real trick is layering it so the tots stay on top where they can brown.
1. Brown and season the beef
Cook the ground beef and onion in a large skillet until the beef is browned and the onion has softened. Break the meat into small crumbles so the filling spreads evenly through the casserole.
Next, drain excess grease. Then, stir in garlic, Worcestershire sauce, garlic powder, paprika, salt, and pepper. Let the seasonings cook for 30–60 seconds so the beef tastes savory before the creamy ingredients go in.

2. Make the creamy filling
Stir in the cream of mushroom soup, sour cream, milk, and vegetables. The mixture should be creamy but sturdy enough to hold the tots on top. After that, spread it evenly in a greased 9×13-inch baking dish.
Drain canned green beans or corn well before stirring them in. For frozen mixed vegetables, thaw any icy pieces first so the sauce does not thin out in the oven.

3. Add cheese under the tots
Sprinkle about 1 1/2 cups of cheddar over the filling. This gives the casserole a cheesy middle layer while leaving the top clear for browning.

You still get plenty of melted cheese, but the tots are not trapped under a heavy blanket of cheese for the entire bake. Instead, they stay on the surface where the oven heat can reach them.
4. Arrange frozen tots in one layer
Place the frozen tater tots over the cheese in one generous layer. Try not to pile them too tightly. A little space helps hot air reach more edges.
The tots do not need to be perfectly lined up, but a neat layer does bake more evenly and looks better when served.

5. Bake uncovered until golden and crisp
Bake uncovered at 375°F for about 40 minutes. Then, sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup of cheddar over the top if you want extra cheese. Finally, bake 5 minutes more, until the filling bubbles at the edges and the tots are golden and crisp.
Let the casserole rest for 5–10 minutes before scooping. That short rest helps the filling settle so it serves more neatly. Try not to let it sit too long, though, because the topping will slowly soften from the steam.
Before You Bake
- The beef filling should be creamy, not runny.
- Canned vegetables should be drained well.
- Frozen vegetables should not be icy.
- The cheddar should sit mostly under the tots.
- The tots should cover the dish in one layer, not a pile.
- The casserole should go into the oven uncovered.

After those checks, use the bake-time guide to judge when the center is hot and the topping is browned.
How Long to Bake Tater Tot Casserole
The best balance of bubbling filling and crisp tater tots comes from baking at 375°F / 190°C for 40–45 minutes. It is ready when the edges are bubbling, the center is hot, and the potato topping is browned.

A lower oven temperature gives the filling more time to heat gently, but the topping may not brown as much. A hotter oven can work; however, it can also make the filling bubble too hard, especially if the dish is very full. That is why 375°F is the best default for this version.
If your baking dish is very full, set it on a rimmed baking sheet before it goes into the oven. It catches any bubbling sauce and makes the casserole easier to move in and out of the oven.
| Oven temperature | Approximate bake time | Best use |
|---|---|---|
| 350°F / 175°C | 45–55 minutes | Gentler bake, slightly softer topping |
| 375°F / 190°C | 40–45 minutes | Best default for this recipe |
| 400°F / 200°C | 35–45 minutes | Can brown well, but watch for aggressive bubbling |
| From the fridge | Add 10–15 minutes | Best if the filling was made ahead |
| From frozen | Covered first, then uncovered | Use a thermometer to check the center |
If your casserole is coming from the refrigerator, see the make-ahead notes before you add extra time.
If you are baking the casserole from cold or reheating leftovers, check that the center is hot before serving. The USDA recommends reheating leftovers to 165°F / 74°C, and an instant-read thermometer is the easiest way to check a deep casserole. See the USDA safe temperature guidance here.
How to Keep Tater Tots Crispy in Casserole
Soggy tots usually come from too much moisture, overcrowding, thawed tots, or a heavy cheese layer trapping steam. Fortunately, a few small choices make a big difference.

- Use frozen tots. Do not thaw them before adding them to the casserole.
- Use a 9×13-inch dish. A wide dish helps the top layer spread out instead of steaming in a deep pile.
- Keep the filling sturdy. Drain beef grease and vegetables well.
- Arrange tots in one layer. Avoid piling them on top of each other.
- Bake uncovered. Covering traps steam and softens the top.
- Use the cheese-under-the-tots rule. Put most of the cheddar under the potato layer and add only a small final sprinkle near the end.
- Serve after a short rest. Let it settle for 5–10 minutes, but do not let it sit too long before serving.
- Reheat in the oven or air fryer. The microwave works, but the tots will soften.
Another useful trick is to avoid overfilling the dish. If the filling comes too close to the top of the pan, it can bubble up through the tots and soften them. A 9×13-inch dish gives the filling room to heat while the potato layer stays exposed to dry oven heat.
If you like this kind of creamy potato bake but want a softer side-dish version, this hashbrown casserole recipe uses frozen potatoes in a different way.
Common Mistakes That Make Tater Tot Casserole Soggy

- Using thawed tater tots instead of frozen ones.
- Adding too much milk or soup so the filling turns loose.
- Not draining ground beef grease or canned vegetables.
- Using icy frozen vegetables without thawing or draining them first.
- Covering the casserole for the whole bake.
- Piling on cheese too early and trapping steam over the tots.
- Using a deep small dish instead of a wide 9×13 pan.
Tater Tot Casserole with Cream of Mushroom Soup
The traditional version uses condensed cream of mushroom soup because it thickens the filling, adds savory flavor, and keeps the recipe fast. One 10.5-ounce can is enough for this 9×13 casserole when mixed with sour cream and a little milk.

Cream of mushroom blends especially well with ground beef, green beans, corn, and cheddar. It also gives the dish the familiar flavor many people expect from tater tot hotdish.
If you want a slightly different flavor, cream of chicken, cream of celery, or cheddar cheese soup can also work. Cream of mushroom gives the most familiar flavor, while cream of chicken tastes milder. Cheddar soup, meanwhile, makes the filling richer and more obviously cheesy.
Prefer not to use canned soup? Use the no-soup version below.
Tater Tot Casserole Without Cream of Mushroom Soup
To make it without cream of mushroom soup, use a quick homemade sauce with butter, flour, beef broth, milk, and Worcestershire sauce. This replaces the canned soup, sour cream, and milk mixture in the main recipe.

The soup version wins on speed. The homemade sauce wins when you want more control over salt, thickness, and mushroom flavor. Either way, the sauce should coat the beef and vegetables without turning loose in the pan.
| No-soup ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Butter | 2 tbsp / 28 g |
| All-purpose flour | 2 tbsp / 16–18 g |
| Beef broth | 1 cup / 240 ml |
| Milk or half-and-half | 1/2 cup / 120 ml |
| Worcestershire sauce | 1 tbsp / 15 ml |
| Sour cream, optional | 1/4–1/2 cup / 60–120 g |
To make it, melt the butter in the skillet after browning the beef, sprinkle in the flour, and cook for about 1 minute. Slowly stir in the broth and milk, then simmer until thick. Once it thickens, fold the sauce into the beef and vegetables, then continue with the cheese and tater tot topping.
If the homemade sauce looks thin, simmer it a little longer before transferring it to the baking dish. Otherwise, a loose sauce can make the tots soften from underneath.
Once the sauce is ready, use it in the main recipe card in place of the canned soup mixture.
Tater Tot Hotdish vs Tater Tot Casserole
Tater tot hotdish and tater tot casserole are basically the same family of dish. “Hotdish” is the Midwest and Upper Midwest name, especially for a baked dish made with meat, vegetables, creamy sauce, and a starch topping. “Tater tot casserole” is the broader name many people use elsewhere.

Whatever you call it, the comfort-food idea is the same: savory beef, creamy sauce, vegetables, cheddar, and a potato topping that comes out browned instead of soggy.
Some hotdish versions use green beans, corn, or mixed vegetables. Others use two cans of soup for a heavier filling. This version, however, keeps the spirit of the dish but uses a balanced amount of sauce so the casserole stays creamy without drowning the tots.
Best Vegetables for Tater Tot Casserole
The vegetable changes the whole feel of the casserole: green beans make it old-school, corn makes it sweeter, and mixed vegetables make it feel more like a full dinner in one pan.

| Vegetable | Best for | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Green beans | Classic hotdish flavor | Drain canned green beans well |
| Corn | Sweeter, kid-friendly casserole | Use drained canned corn or thawed frozen corn |
| Mixed vegetables | Easy family dinner | Thaw if icy so the filling does not get watery |
| Peas and carrots | Classic creamy casserole feel | Use frozen or canned, but avoid excess liquid |
| Mushrooms | Deeper savory flavor | Sauté first to remove moisture |
Green beans are the most nostalgic choice for many people, but corn is often the version kids go for first. If your family has a strong opinion about the “right” vegetable in tater tot casserole, this is usually where the debate starts.
Avoid very watery vegetables unless you cook off the moisture first. Zucchini, fresh mushrooms, spinach, and bell peppers can all work, but they should be sautéed before they go into the filling. That way, the casserole stays creamy instead of loose.
Make Ahead, Freezer, Storage, and Reheating
Tater tot casserole is make-ahead friendly, but the best method depends on whether you care more about convenience or texture. For the best result, the filling can wait in the fridge; meanwhile, the tots should wait in the freezer.
Best make-ahead method
Cook the beef filling, spread it in the baking dish, cover, and refrigerate. When you are ready to bake, add the cheese and frozen tater tots, then bake as directed. If the filling is very cold, add 10–15 minutes to the bake time.

That way, you get the convenience of a make-ahead dinner without letting the tots sit on the wet filling for hours. It is especially helpful if you are assembling dinner during a busy afternoon or prepping for guests.
It is also the best method if you are bringing the casserole to another family, prepping for a weeknight dinner, or trying to get the messy skillet work done before the evening rush.
For a brunch version of the same make-ahead comfort-food idea, this breakfast casserole with hash browns uses eggs, sausage, cheese, and potatoes in a 9×13 pan.
Best freezer method
Freeze the cooked beef filling separately in an airtight container. Then, thaw it overnight in the refrigerator, spread it into the baking dish, add cheese and frozen tater tots, and bake uncovered until hot, bubbling, and golden on top.

The texture is better this way because the tots are added fresh from the freezer instead of freezing and thawing on top of the filling.
Fully assembled freezer method
You can freeze the fully assembled casserole, but the tots may not bake quite as well. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 2–3 months. Bake covered first until the center is hot, then uncover near the end so the top can brown.
How to store leftovers
Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 3–4 days. The topping will soften as it sits, but the flavor stays good.
How to reheat tater tot casserole
For the best texture, reheat leftovers in a 350°F oven or air fryer until hot. The microwave is fastest, but it will soften the tots.
If reheating a larger portion, cover it loosely at first so the center warms through. Then, uncover for the last few minutes to help the topping crisp again.
When you are ready to cook, use the timing in the recipe card and add extra minutes if the filling is cold.
Which Version Should You Make First?
If this is your first time making tater tot casserole, start with the classic cream-of-mushroom version. It gives you the familiar creamy filling, beefy flavor, cheddar middle layer, and golden potato topping most people expect. After that, adjust the vegetable, sauce, or cheese to match your table.

| Choose this version | Best for | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Classic green bean version | Old-school comfort | Use cream of mushroom soup, green beans, cheddar, and frozen tots. |
| Corn version | Kid-friendly sweetness | Swap green beans for drained corn and keep the seasoning mild. |
| No-soup version | More control over salt and thickness | Use the homemade butter, flour, broth, milk, and Worcestershire sauce base. |
| Extra-crispy version | Best topping texture | Keep cheese under the tots and pre-bake the frozen tots for about 10 minutes. |
For more ways to change the filling, protein, or seasoning, see the variation ideas next.
Tater Tot Casserole Variations
Keep the main recipe simple the first time. Once the basic method works, you can change the vegetable, protein, seasoning, or sauce without losing the creamy filling and crisp topping.

Classic family versions
- Green bean version: Use 2 cups drained green beans for the most old-school option, especially with cream of mushroom soup and cheddar.
- Corn version: Use drained corn instead of green beans for a sweeter, softer, and usually more kid-friendly filling.
- Mixed vegetable version: Use peas, carrots, corn, or a frozen mixed vegetable blend when you want the casserole to feel more like a full dinner in one pan.
Bigger flavor twists
- Taco tater tot casserole: Add taco seasoning, corn, black beans, and Mexican-style cheese.
- Chicken bacon ranch: Use cooked chicken, ranch seasoning, bacon, cheddar, and cream of chicken soup.
- Breakfast tater tot casserole: Use eggs, breakfast sausage or bacon, cheese, and tots in a brunch-style bake. For another make-ahead breakfast option with smaller portions, these egg muffins are easier to pack, reheat, and meal prep than a full 9×13 casserole.
Meat, vegetarian, and method swaps
- Hamburger tater tot casserole: Same as the main recipe; “hamburger” is another common name for ground beef here.
- Ground turkey version: Use ground turkey instead of beef and add extra Worcestershire, garlic, or paprika so the filling does not taste flat.
- Vegetarian version: Skip the beef and use sautéed mushrooms, extra vegetables, or plant-based crumbles.
- Slow cooker tater tot casserole: Use the same flavor base, but expect a softer topping than the oven version. If you are in more of a crock pot mood, this slow cooker sausage casserole is built for a softer, saucier comfort-food dinner.
The best first variation is usually the vegetable: green beans for old-school comfort, corn for sweetness, or mixed vegetables when you want the casserole to feel more like dinner in one pan.
Once you choose a version, use the recipe card as the base and adjust only the vegetable, protein, or seasoning.
What to Serve with Tater Tot Casserole
Tater tot casserole is rich, creamy, and filling, so simple sides work best. Try it with a crisp green salad, roasted broccoli, steamed green beans, coleslaw, pickles, fruit salad, or soft dinner rolls.
For a lighter plate, choose something fresh and crunchy next to the casserole. A vinegar-based slaw, cucumber salad, or simple green salad helps balance the creamy filling and cheesy potato topping.
Recipe Card: Tater Tot Casserole
This version has enough sauce to stay creamy, but not so much that the tots sink or steam. You still get a cheesy middle layer, while the potato topping stays exposed to the oven heat.
If you ignore everything else, remember the cheese-under-the-tots rule. Keep the tots frozen, and do not bury them under cheese too early. Those two choices make the difference between a soft topping and the crisp golden layer everyone reaches for first.
Tater Tot Casserole Recipe
This easy tater tot casserole recipe is made with seasoned ground beef, creamy mushroom filling, vegetables, cheddar cheese, and a frozen tater tot layer that bakes golden and crisp on top.
Equipment: 12-inch skillet, 9×13-inch / 3-quart baking dish, spatula or wooden spoon, measuring cups and spoons.
Ingredients
- 28–32 oz / 800–900 g frozen tater tots, or enough for one generous layer
- 1 lb / 454 g lean ground beef
- 1 medium yellow onion, diced, about 120–150 g
- 2 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 tbsp / 15 ml Worcestershire sauce
- 1 can / 10.5 oz / 298 g condensed cream of mushroom soup
- 1/2 cup / 120 g sour cream
- 1/3 cup / 80 ml milk
- 2 cups / about 250–300 g drained canned green beans, drained corn, or thawed mixed vegetables
- 2 cups / 225 g shredded cheddar cheese, divided
- 1/2 tsp garlic powder
- 1/2 tsp paprika
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 1/2 tsp salt, plus more to taste
- Chives or green onions, optional, for serving
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 375°F / 190°C. Grease a 9×13-inch baking dish.
- In a large skillet over medium-high heat, cook the ground beef and onion until the beef is browned and the onion is softened. Drain excess grease.
- Add garlic, Worcestershire sauce, garlic powder, paprika, salt, and black pepper. Cook for 30–60 seconds.
- Stir in the cream of mushroom soup, sour cream, milk, and vegetables. The filling should be creamy but thick enough to support the tots.
- Spread the filling evenly in the prepared baking dish.
- Sprinkle 1 1/2 cups of cheddar cheese over the filling.
- Arrange the frozen tater tots in one generous layer over the cheese. Do not force extra tots on top if the dish is already covered.
- Bake uncovered for about 40 minutes, until the edges are bubbling and the tots are golden.
- Sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup cheddar over the top, if using, and bake 5 minutes more.
- Rest for 5–10 minutes before serving. Garnish with chives or green onions if desired.
Notes
- For crispier tots, follow the cheese-under-the-tots rule: bake uncovered, keep most cheddar under the potato layer, and add only a small sprinkle near the end.
- This casserole is best served after a short 5–10 minute rest while the tots still have texture.
- For the best make-ahead version, prepare the beef filling ahead and add frozen tots right before baking.
- For a no-soup version, use the homemade sauce in the section above.
- If baking from the refrigerator, add 10–15 minutes to the bake time.
- If using salty soup, canned vegetables, or pre-shredded cheese, start with less salt and adjust after the filling is mixed.
- Place the baking dish on a rimmed sheet pan if it is very full, because the sauce can bubble at the edges.
- For best leftover texture, reheat in the oven or air fryer instead of the microwave.
For a quick saveable version, use this visual recipe card as a reminder of the core timing, pan size, and cheese placement.

If you grew up with tater tot casserole, I’d love to know what version was on your table: green beans, corn, mixed vegetables, extra cheese, or no vegetables at all? And if soggy tots have ever ruined a pan for you, try the cheese-under-the-tots method once and tell me if it changed the texture.
FAQs
Do you cook tater tots before adding them to casserole?
No, you do not need to cook tater tots before adding them. Put them on the casserole frozen so they bake on top while the filling heats underneath. For extra crunch, you can pre-bake them for about 10 minutes before layering.
Should tater tots be frozen or thawed for casserole?
Use frozen tater tots. Thawed tots soften quickly and can turn mushy during baking.
Do you cover tater tot casserole when baking?
For the best topping, bake tater tot casserole uncovered. Covering traps steam and can soften the tots. However, if baking from frozen or very cold, you can cover it first to heat the center, then uncover near the end to brown the top.
What temperature is best for tater tot casserole?
375°F / 190°C is the best default temperature. It gives the filling enough time to heat through while helping the tater tots turn golden and crisp.
How do you keep tater tot casserole from getting soggy?
Use frozen tots, drain excess grease and vegetable liquid, keep the filling sturdy, bake uncovered, and arrange the tots in one layer. Also, putting most of the cheese under the tots helps the top brown better.
Can I make tater tot casserole ahead of time?
For the best make-ahead texture, prepare the beef filling first, refrigerate it, and add the cheese and frozen tater tots right before baking.
Can I assemble tater tot casserole the night before?
You can make the beef filling the night before and refrigerate it, but wait to add the frozen tater tots until right before baking. If the tots sit on the creamy filling overnight, they are more likely to soften.
Can you freeze tater tot casserole?
Yes. The best method is to freeze the cooked filling separately, then thaw it, top with cheese and frozen tots, and bake. You can also freeze the fully assembled casserole, but the tots may bake softer.
What can I use instead of cream of mushroom soup?
You can use cream of chicken, cream of celery, cheddar cheese soup, or a homemade sauce made with butter, flour, beef broth, milk, and Worcestershire sauce.
Is tater tot hotdish the same as tater tot casserole?
They are basically the same style of dish. “Hotdish” is the Midwest name, while “casserole” is the broader term many people use elsewhere.
What meat works besides ground beef?
Ground turkey, ground chicken, cooked shredded chicken, or plant-based crumbles can work. Ground beef gives the most familiar flavor, but the same creamy filling and tater tot topping can handle many swaps.
