These adorable Potato Gratin Stacks are the mini version of Potatoes au Gratin (Dauphinoise). Layers of thinly sliced potato baked in a muffin tin with cream, cheese, garlic and thyme, the best bit are the crusty caramelised cheesy edges!
Serve as a potato side for dinner. Breakfast with eggs. Party food bites. So many possibilities!
Mini Potato Gratin Stacks (Dauphinoise)
All you need to know is that these Mini Potato Gratin Stacks are cheesy, creamy and ridiculously irresistible. I mean, let’s be blunt. Potatoes + cheese + cream + garlic + butter. BAM! That’s a home run right there!
Actually, they’re a mini version of French Potato Gratin / Dauphinoise. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – everything is better in mini form, not just because it’s cute. But because you get the whole thing to yourself.
Right? 🤷🏻♀️
Besides not having to share, making these in mini form means you get nice golden cheesy edges on each piece which might be my favourite part. No golden edges when you make Dauphinoise the usual way!
What you need to make Mini Potato Gratin Stacks
Here’s what you need to make these:
Potatoes – Use starchy or all-rounder ones so they become fluffy when cooked and absorb flavour. Sebago (the common dirt brushed potatoes in Australia), Russet (US), Dutch creams, King Edwards and red delight are all ideal.
If you use waxy potatoes, the layers sort of slip apart when you cut into them.
Shape – Opt for long thin ones so you have less offcuts when trimmed into a cylinder shape to cut slices that fit the muffin thin.
Cheese – Gruyere and Swiss cheese are my favourites here, for their melting quality and flavour. Any cheese that melts will work just fine – cheddar, Colby, tasty cheese. I tend not to use mozzarella because it doesn’t have as much salt / flavour as other cheese but you can if you wish.
Shredded and sliced – I find it best to use slices of cheese between the potato layers and shredded cheese on top.
Cream – Thickened / heavy cream works best because it’s thicker so it pools on the layers better.
Garlic – For flavour, to infuse the cream sauce.
Thyme – Classic herb flavouring for Dauphinoise.
How to make Mini Potato Gratin Stacks
Assembling each gratin stack does take a little more effort than making one big bubbly Dauphinoise for sharing. But it’s worth it – especially for the golden cheesy edges that you never get when you make one big gratin bake!!
1. Cutting the potato slices
Peel and trim – Peel the potatoes then cut the base so it is stable when standing upright. Then trim the potato to make a (rough!) cylinder shape. It doesn’t matter if they are not a perfect round – mine aren’t!. Once they are cooked, you can’t really tell if your potatoes are a little more hexagon-y or octogon-y, or even rectangular or triangular!!!
Check size – The cylinder should be the size of the muffin tin holes.
Potato cylinders – Repeat with remaining potato. To fill a standard 12 hoc muffin tin, you will need 3 potato cylinders cut from 1.2 kg / 2.4 lb of potato.
Slice thinly – Using either a mandolin or a sharp knife, cut the potato into 2mm / 0.1″ thin slices.
Separate slices – Use your fingers to separate the slices as they have a tendency to stick. We want to make sure the creamy sauce seeps between all the potato layers!
Cream sauce – Melt the butter in a saucepan then sauté the garlic for 20 seconds or until it smells amazing. Then add the cream and salt, and simmer for 30 seconds to bring the flavours together.
Now, we’re ready to assemble!
2. Assembling the gratin stacks
Fill halfway – Place a stack of potato slices in the muffin tin hole so they come up halfway.
Pour over cream – Drizzle about 1 teaspoon of cream over the potatoes. No need to be exact here, just use about half the cream.
Cheese slices – Top with a slice of cheese.
Potato and cream – Top each stack with another stack of potatoes so they are just higher than the rim of the muffin tin. We want to make them taller because they sink slightly once cooked.
Then drizzle the remaining cream over each stack.
3. Bake!
Thyme – Sprinkle each stack with most of the thyme. Reserve a bit to sprinkle on at the end. A hint of fresh thyme is a really nice finishing touch!
Cover and bake – Cover loosely with foil then bake for 40 minutes at 180°C/350°F or until the potato is cooked. Check by inserting a knife all the way to the bottom – there should be no resistance.
Cheese then oven – Top with the shredded cheese and return to the oven uncovered for 10 minutes or until the cheese is melted and there are some lovely golden spots on the surface.
Garnish with thyme & serve! Sprinkle the top with the remaining thyme, then serve immediately!
What to serve with Mini Potato Gratin Stacks
You will want to eat them straight out of the oven, and they are certainly tasty enough to do so! But actually, they are intended to be a side dish.
I tend to pull these out for special occasions when we want a side dish that’s a bit special. Think, holidays and celebratory gatherings, alongside things such as:
the most glorious buttery, herby, garlicky roast chicken
the roast pork of your dreams (because it’s completely encased in crackling)
a grand Thanksgiving Turkey (brined is the only way!)
a big juicy steakhouse steak
If you make these for just-a-usual-midweek-dinner, I wish I was you. I could eat these everyday and never tire of them. There’s a reason my nickname was Potato Girl when I was growing up!! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Cheesy Potato Gratin Stacks (Muffin Tin)
Ingredients
- Oil spray
- 1.2 kg / 2.4 lb starchy potatoes , large long ones (Note 1)
- 30g /2 tbsp butter , unsalted
- 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
- 1/2 cup heavy / thickened cream
- 1 tsp fresh thyme leaves (or 3/4 tsp dried)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- Black pepper
- 75g / 2.5 oz gruyere cheese sliced into 12 squares to fit into muffin tin (or other melting cheese, Note 2)
- 3/4 cup gruyere cheese (or other melting cheese), shredded
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F/180°C (all oven types).
- Brush muffin tin with butter: Melt butter in a saucepan over medium heat then use what you need to lightly brush the muffin tin holes with butter. (Remaining butter is for the cream sauce)
- Cream sauce: Into the remaining butter, add garlic and cook for 20 seconds. Add cream and salt then bring to a simmer. Simmer for 30 seconds, then remove from stove and keep warm.
- Slice potato: Peel potatoes. Trim base so it stands upright. Then cut into cylinder shapes that fit the muffin tin. Cut into 2mm/ 1/10" slices using a mandolin or sharp knife.
- Assemble stacks: Place potato slices into the muffin tin so they go halfway up the muffin tin holes. Try to match by size to make them into neat stacks.
- Cream: Drizzle each potato stack with 1 tsp of cream mixture – use 1/2 of the mixture.
- Cheese slice: Top with cheese slice.
- Top with potato, cream then thyme: Top each stack with remaining potato slices so the height is about 1cm / 1/3" above the rim of the muffin tin (they sink once baked). Drizzle with remaining cream mixture and sprinkle with most of the thyme (reserve some for topping).
- Baked 40 minutes: Cover loosely with foil and bake for 40 minutes or until potato is cooked through. A small sharp knife should go through without any resistance.
- Top with cheese, bake 10 minutes: Remove from oven, sprinkle with shredded cheese and bake without foil for 10 minutes or until golden.
- Garnish with thyme: Sprinkle with remaining thyme.
- Stand 5 minutes then remove to serve. Use a tablespoon or butter knife to help scope them out. (Note 3)
- To Serve: Dinner – serve as a side. Finger food – serve warm as is. Breakfast – serve with eggs and bacon.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Originally published September 2015. Updated November 2021 with improved recipe, new instructional photos and better video.
Life of Dozer
Happy to help with the washing up….!
This is how I deal with dishes on big recipe development days for the cookbook – pile them into tubs to keep them out of the way then do giant loads at a time. The amount of dirty pots and pans we generate on big cook days is pretty phenomenal…!!!
Rachel says
Approximately how thick/thin are your slices?
Nagi says
Hi Rachel! Thanks for the question, didn’t realise I didn’t put it in! Around 2mm / 1/10″ thick 🙂 I’ll update the recipe
Denise Shelton says
Do you have to freeze these in the muffin tin or can you remove them to a foil pan for freezing and reheating? They sound fantastic. Should they be thawed before reheating? How much time to reheat if frozen vs. thawed?
Denise Shelton says
Oh, sorry. You already specified about the reheating. Please just let me know if moving them to a foil pan and reheating in that is okay. Thanks!
Nagi says
Hi Denise! Yup remove them from the tin, they kind of set once baked 🙂
elena Hall says
The picture shows perfectly formed mini potato slices and I don’t see how you get that effect without using a mandoline and cookie cutter. Also, I would assume the ones in the picture were make in a mini muffin tin instead of a regular size muffin tin because those would not be considered mini. I think this recipe is worth a try but I will need to make some adjustments to make them mini
Nagi says
Hi Elena! I definitely made these in a standard muffin tin. I took the time to choose rounds that were the same-ish size so they’d look nice for the photo, but you can see lopsided ones too. I used potatoes that are sort of longish which helps provide rounds that are the same shape so the stacks are even. Hope that helps!
Maria Estay says
Hey! Thank you so much for the recipe. Do you bake them and then freeze them?
Nagi says
Hi Maria! Yes I bake first then freeze 🙂 Please see note 2
Natalie D. says
Hello, I new to your site (1st time) and would love to make these mini delights for my christmas eve dinner. I had (probably a redundant question) a question about freezing. Should I make them per your recipe instructions, then freeze OR should I omit anything in the cooking instructions, then freeze and add to the thawed mini delights before reheating? Like adding more cream or cheese? I hope my question makes sense, I just want the potatoes to come out crunchy on the outside and tender on the inside.
Thank you and look forward to tasting these mouth watering mini’s!!!
Nagi says
Hi Natalie! Add added an extra tip in note 4 for this 🙂 I don’t add anything, it definitely comes out crunchy when reheated! That cheese! 🙂
Kim says
I’m planning to make this today, I just need to know what do you mean by cream, is it sour cream or whipping cream or something else.
Thanks in advance
Nagi says
Hi! Any pourable cream is fine though thickened / heavy cream will yield creamiest result. 🙂 Not sour cream.
Lucy says
I used whipping cream. Turned out great.
Katherine says
Hi Nagi from Canada!
I was looking for a Chicken Cordon Bleu recipe and stumbled across your site, so glad I did! I made your Chicken recipe plus these Potato stacks; my kids were fighting over the last ones left! I’ve made them twice more since then, but I keep forgetting to buy fresh thyme so I’ve had to use dried. I can see the fresh thyme would make them even better. I use Russet potatoes and I don’t peel them as my kids love the skins.
I look forward to trying more recipes. ?
Nagi says
I’m so thrilled to hear that your family loved these AND the Cordon Bleu! Thank you for trying my recipes and for taking the time to come back and let me know what you thought. Hope you are keeping warm over there! I won’t tell you how I spent my lunch hour at the beach…. 🙂 N x
Sarah Conner says
For step 3, slicing the potatoes, how do you get all the slices to be circles with the same diameter? Do you use potatoes that are naturally shaped very cylindrical, or do you trim the potato before slicing or the slices themselves?
Nagi says
Hi Sarah! I chose kind of longish ones then I stacked them by selecting ones that were roughly the same size 🙂 If you want to be perfect, you could use a round cutter but I don’t.
Pamela says
OMG. Just made these but halved the quantity as it was just an experiment. I ate them so fast. Thinking of all the other combinations of flavours. Including the substitution of potatoes for sweet potatoes. Gonna have fun with this. Thanks so much for sharing a great recipe!
Nagi says
Fantastic! So glad to hear that Pamela, thanks so much for letting me know! N x
Marcela says
Delicious! Used my mandolin slicer to easily slice the potatoes. I had green onion on hand that I used sprinkled in the middle and on top. I think they needed a touch more salt. Better than another similar recipe I used in the past! Thanks!
Nagi says
I’m so glad to hear that Marcela! Thank you for letting me know! N x
Christy says
Do you freeze them with the butter sauce on top? Thanks!
Nagi says
Hi Christy – yep! 🙂
Kathy says
Served these at a dinner party as a side with some steak tips. They were a huge hit! Glad I had made 18 of them and not just a dozen as I had originally planned. Not a one left! Great recipe.
Nagi says
I’m so glad you enjoyed this Kathy! Thanks so much for taking the time to come back and let me know! N x
Kay says
Hi! This recipe looks amazingly delicious! How would you reheat these?
Microwave? Oven? Convection?
Can’t wait to try them!! Thank you!
Nagi says
Hi Kay! Any is fine 🙂 It reheats beautifully!
Heather says
Can you do it in mini muffin tins with shredded potatoes? Thinking for my toddler for lunch sides
Nagi says
Oooh! what an idea! I haven’t tried that but I see no reason why it wouldn’t work!
Rosalinda says
I loved your Cheesy Potato Gratin Stacks, I hope you can clear my doubt.
Do I boil the potatoes before or not?
Thank you so much. Rosalinda / Mexico City
Nagi says
Hi Rosalinda! Nope, just pop them in raw 🙂
Shelby Taylor says
Awesome side dish! Thank you.
Nagi says
You’re most welcome Shelby! 🙂
Kristy-lee says
Hi, do you think this would work as well alternating slices of sweet potato in between white potato? My toddler loves potato and these are an excellent freezer meal to have on hand but want to try incorporating sweet potato also. Thanks!
Nagi says
Yes!!! What a fantastic addition! 🙂 N x
Lyndsay says
Do you think milk would be okay? And Parmasean cheese? It’s what I have on hand and I really want to make these!
Nagi says
Hi Lyndsay! It will work with milk and parmesan but I would add more butter to make it creamier because milk has a lot less fat than cream. 🙂
C. Alexa says
Hi,
I haven’t tried this recipe, but they look amazing. I have a catering company and am looking at making these for a wedding. I have a question?
A potato gratin normally you fill up with cream mixtrure to the top of potatoes, so for these is it really just a 1/4 teaspoon of cream in each?? is the texture creamy or more of a fluffy potato.
Ill try them out to see but your knowledge would be appreciated.
Nagi says
Hi! I find that 1/4 tsp is enough for these to make these creamy enough and still hold their shape 🙂 When I tried using lots more cream I found the stacks didn’t stand up as well!
Rosemary Lord says
Very tasty recipe. I put the potato cakes in cup cake cases as I didn’t have deep enough tins
Nagi says
Thank you for trying my recipe Rosemary! I am so glad you enjoyed it, and thank you for letting me know! N x
Lulu says
Hey there, thanks for the recipe they look amazing!! I would like to make for a dinner party with 12 guests as a side – do you think it could be made ahead and reheated it would it get dried out? How would you suggest baking ahead to ensure they are perfect??
Nagi says
Hi Lulu! These actually reheat great, thanks to the cream and cheese 🙂 You don’t need to do anything special to reheat them!
Danielle says
I’ve made them four times now for different people and everyone has LOVED them! Thank you for sharing your recipe!
Nagi says
Thanks for trying my recipe Danielle! So glad you and your friends/family enjoyed it – and thank you for taking the time to come back and let me know! N x