Potatoes au Gratin – forget scalloped potatoes, THIS is the creme de la creme of all potato recipes!! Also known as Dauphinoise Potatoes, this French classic is adapted from a Julia Child’s recipe. With layers upon layers of finely sliced potatoes baked in, cream, butter and cheese with a hint of fresh thyme, it’s luxurious and thoroughly indulgent.
Bonus: It’s the ultimate make ahead potato side dish! And next time, try Brie Dauphinoise…
Potatoes au Gratin
Potatoes au Gratin? Or Scalloped Potatoes?
If you’re wondering what the difference is between Scalloped Potatoes and Au Gratin Potatoes, scalloped potatoes are made with a flour-butter-milk roux, whereas Potatoes au Gratin are made with 100% indulgence: cream, butter and cheese.
So I ask you again: Potatoes au Gratin? Or Scalloped Potatoes?
There’s no contest. Cream trumps flour Every. Single. Day. 😂
Potatoes au Gratin for the win!!!
All the essential food groups present
I was going to say that it’s quite remarkable how so few ingredients can make something so luxurious. But the reality is, it’s pretty hard to go wrong when potatoes, cream, butter and cheese are involved.
We’re working with all the good stuff today!
Best kind of potatoes for au gratin
This is the sort of potato dish where we want the potatoes to breakdown and become lovely and soft under that golden cheesy crust, so we need to ensure we use starchy potatoes. Australia – I use Sebago (those dirt brushed potatoes). America – Russet is perfect, and for those of you in the UK, King Edward or Maris Piper are perfect. Or any other starchy potatoes – Dutch creams, King Edwards or red delight.
To be honest, as long as you do not use a waxy potato then it’s going to work great – I’ve used all sorts over the years. Waxy potatoes are the kind used for potato salads and if used in Potatoes au Gratin, the layers sort of slip apart and you’ll have paper-thin-potato UFO’s flying all over the place.
Been there, done that. Not good, my friends.
How to make potatoes au gratin
Thinly sliced potato is layered with a cream-butter-garlic mixture, sprinkled with thyme and the mandatory cheese in every layer. Bake covered for 75 minutes (yes really, it takes that long), then uncovered just to make the cheese on top lovely and golden.
While it might seem daunting to thinly slice 1 kg / 2 lb of potatoes, this is the sort of task where you’ll quickly get into a rhythm. By the 3rd potato, you’ll be slicing like a pro!
Though having said that, a mandolin will make short work of it….
I am yet to meet a form of potato I don’t like. And of all the ways to cook potato, this is my favourite. (UPDATE: Though the newly invented Brie Dauphinoise version is also a hot contender!).
Sure, sometimes I stray and get excited by my latest obsession. I went mad for Ultra Crispy Smashed Potatoes, and crazy over Parmesan Crusted Potatoes. I thought Twice-baked Stuffed Jacket Potatoes were the ant’s pants.
But Potatoes au Gratin are a classic that I’ll love forever and ever. First made using Julie Child’s recipe which then evolved slightly over the years to what it is today. A slightly more streamlined assembly process, the addition of garlic and… I upped the cheese.
Do you think Julia would approve?? 😂 – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Potatoes au Gratin (Dauphinoise)
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups cream , full fat (Note 1)
- 2 garlic cloves , minced
- 30g / 2 tbsp unsalted butter , melted
- 1.25 kg / 2.5 lb starchy potatoes , Russet, Sebago, Maris Piper (Note 2)
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/4 tsp pepper
- 2 1/2 cups gruyere cheese (colby, cheddar, havarti or tasty), freshly grated yourself (Note 3)
- 2 tsp thyme leaves , fresh (optional – but highly recommended)
Instructions
- Cream Mixture: Place butter, cream and garlic in a jug. Mix until combined.
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (both fan and standard ovens).
- Slice potatoes: Peel the potatoes and slice them 1/8"/3 mm thick. Or use a slicer!
- Layer 1: Spread 1/3 of the potatoes in a baking dish (Note 3), then pour over 1/3 of the Cream Mixture, scatter with 1/3 of the salt, pepper and thyme. Sprinkle with 3/4 cups cheese.
- Layers 2 & 3: Repeat for the 2nd and third layer, but do not finish with cheese on the top layer (will add later).
- Cover & bake: Cover with lid or foil, and bake for 1 hour 15 minutes or until the potatoes in the middle are soft (use knife to test), it might take 1 1/2 hours. (Note 5)
- Top with cheese, bake again: Remove foil, top with cheese. Bake for a further 10 to 15 minutes until golden and bubbly. Stand 5 minutes before serving.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Au Gratin Potatoes recipe originally published December 2014. New photos, recipe video and updated post in December 2018, then some tidying up done in December 2020. No change to recipe!
Feed your potato obsession
Life of Dozer
Rachel says
Has anyone tried making this recipe in cupcake tins? For individual servings? I’m catering a wedding and wondering if this recipe would be good to make via cupcake tins for one of the Hors D’oeuvres.
Doreen says
I had been looking for an au gratin potato recipe to replace a recipe I had been using for a while, (using creamed canned ingredients). I doubled it and tried this recipe this Easter. I did use the tips on the make ahead version and it turned out beautifully! When I placed them out everyone commented how wonderful they looked. They were just as delicious. This is my new au gratin recipe I will use from now on! Thank you for a wonderful recipe!!
Jennifer says
I found this recipe years ago and we’ve been making them as part of Easter dinner ever since. Delicious!!!
Tanya says
Amazing! These were so good and my family just loved them! Well make them again for sure.
Ashleigh says
Okay I’m obsessed!
I made this recipe today because I had just bought a brand new mandolin slicer (that also got a taste of my thumb cleaning it before use).
I’d probably recommend a par boil without the mandolin, but with the mandolin it came out perfect!
As I pulled it out of the oven I did like other comments have some of the oil of the butter at the top. Gave it a solid 10 minutes resting time and it was beautifully rested and ready to serve.
Smelt amazing cooking, tasted even better. Am looking forward to devouring the leftovers tomorrow.
What I loved about this was how easy it was to cut in very neap shapes! You could honestly serve this at a restaurant!
AMY WIETGREFE says
I just made these for Easter. I used smokey cheddar to go with the ham we’re having. So good! Mine baked a bit longer (extra 20 minutes) but maybe I had thicker layers than the original recipe.
jackie says
Just popped this in the oven for Easter dinner tomorrow after making it for the umpteenth time over the years. Truly decadent and beautiful to serve. After the first couple of times making it I came to the conclusion that I prefer to make it one day ahead. The potato mixture all condenses a bit as it sits in the fridge making a firmer au gratin. Once finished the next day, I allow it to stand for a bit and am able to slice perfectly square portions for serving for presentation purposes an they look beautiful. For those who say that their cream has split and left an oily film on top, there are a couple of reasons that can happen. One is the type of cream you are using, I have only used Heavy Whipping Cream (40% fat) and Gruyere or a mixture with Mozzarella. If you are using Cheddar or another type cheese that doesn’t melt well you will have an oily effect and NEVER use pre-shredded cheese. Thanks again Nagi for blessing us with this lovely recipe.
steph says
do you assemble it a day ahead and cook it the day of?or cook it the day before and reheat it the day you’ll eat it?
Carole Guy says
Made this a day ahead and it was absolutely delicious. In fact it was better than the one I made on the day of eating so definitely recommend making ahead. Teenage grandsons said it was “banging!” 😂
Geraldine Pugh says
Did you cook it and then put in fridge and reheat? Or did you prepare it and then cool and cook on the day?
Debbie says
If I cut this in half would I use an 8×8 pan? And how long would I bake?
Brenda Izbicki says
How far ahead can I make this? If I make this on Friday night, is it ok for Sunday at 1pm? Thanks!
Siobhan says
Did anyone reply as to how far ahead you can make it !? I have the same question 🙋♀️… today Wednesday for consumption Friday
Barb Pitkin says
Hi Nagi,
On the au gratin potatoe….. any substitute for the Thyme? Do not like it at all☺️ Rosemary maybe? Thank you😀
Tina says
When I add rosemary to a dish like this I gently heat the cream with rosemary in and take it out before putting the dish together. It can be too woody to leave in. Otherwise sage or freshly ground pepper would be delicious.
Jennifer says
This potato gratin is delicious! Used parmesan and it worked perfectly. Only advice is to give yourself time to assemble and remember it does take 70 min in the oven. Thank you Nagi 😋
George says
your definitions are close, but, a gratin is a browned top with cheese and often bread crumbs. Escalloped: Scalloped, is potatoes, onion or leek (optional) milk and butter and nothing else… but no worries, martha stewart drowns her “scalloped potatoes” in bechamel sauce and tops with cheese, delicious, but not the french original.
Kathryn says
I am sure this is delicious, BUT… I always thought onions were very important in Gratin Dauphinoise?
Linda Baker says
This recipe is really good and easy to put together, just like my mom did in the old days. I have to say, not sure about where you are, but mozzarella cheese would lend no flavor at all to this dish. If you don’t want to use Gruyre I might suggest Havarti or Jarlsberg which both add flavor and are great melting cheeses. Cheers.
Lorie says
I was thinking i could assemble put in fridge until ready to cook then bring to room temp and bake per instructions- any thoughts or experience?
Darrell Ernst says
Exactly the question I had. By chance, have you tried doing it that way yet?
Danielle says
This was so creamy and delicious! I opted to do two smaller containers instead of one large casserole and it was still perfect. I’ll be making this one again very soon!
Sara says
This came out perfectly. It was so good, I had dreams about it. The best bit is that we have leftovers for tonight. I can’t wait for dinner.
Laura K. says
These potatoes are creamy and delicious! Thanks for sharing:)
Lea says
Delicious, however I had a similar problem to others- my cream (Woolies brand thickened cream) split and ended up with a layer of grease on top. Not sure why. Still very yummy though
Jill says
This sometimes happens when dairy is cooked at too high of a temperature or too quickly.