This oven baked 4-ingredients cream cheese potato bake is the kind of dish that quietly steals the show at a holiday table. My mother-in-law first brought a version of this to Easter years ago, and it was the very first casserole dish scraped clean—no leftovers, just a golden ring around the edges and a lot of recipe requests. The method is wonderfully simple: thinly sliced potatoes layered with cream cheese and cream, baked until the top is burnished and the interior is impossibly creamy and fluffy. It leans on classic Midwestern comfort food roots—minimal ingredients, maximum coziness—while using cream cheese to give the potatoes a velvety, almost soufflé-like texture without any fussy technique.
Serve this potato bake piping hot straight from the blue stoneware or any sturdy casserole dish, with a big spoon for generous scoops. It pairs beautifully with roasted or grilled meats—ham, roast chicken, pork loin, or beef tenderloin—as well as simple sautéed greens or a crisp salad dressed with a bright vinaigrette to cut through the richness. For brunch, it’s lovely alongside scrambled or poached eggs and fruit. Leftovers (if you’re lucky enough to have any) reheat well in the oven and make a great base for a skillet hash with a few fried eggs on top.
Oven Baked Cream Cheese Potato Bake
Servings: 8
Ingredients
3 pounds russet potatoes, peeled and very thinly sliced
8 ounces full-fat cream cheese, softened and cut into small cubes
2 cups heavy cream
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
Directions
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Lightly grease a 9x13-inch blue stoneware or similar casserole dish with a bit of neutral oil or butter, just enough to keep the potatoes from sticking.
Peel the russet potatoes, then slice them very thinly, about 1/8 inch thick. You can use a mandoline for even slices or a sharp knife. The thin, even slices are key to getting that fluffy, creamy interior without any undercooked bites.
In a medium saucepan, combine the heavy cream and kosher salt. Warm over low heat, stirring occasionally, just until the cream is loose and slightly steamy but not boiling. This helps the salt dissolve and the cream pour more easily between the potato layers.
Layer half of the sliced potatoes in the prepared casserole dish, spreading them out evenly and fanning them slightly so there are no big gaps. It doesn’t need to be perfect, but aim for a relatively even layer for consistent cooking.
Scatter half of the cream cheese cubes evenly over the potatoes, tucking some pieces down between the slices so they melt into the layers rather than just sitting on top.
Pour half of the warm salted cream slowly and evenly over the potatoes and cream cheese, tilting the dish gently if needed so the cream seeps down into the corners and between layers.
Repeat with the remaining potatoes, arranging them in an even layer, then top with the remaining cream cheese cubes. Pour the rest of the warm cream over the top, again making sure it distributes as evenly as possible. Lightly press down on the potatoes with the back of a spoon or your clean hands to settle everything into the cream.
Cover the casserole tightly with foil, tenting it slightly so it doesn’t stick to the top layer of potatoes. Bake, covered, for 45 minutes. This covered bake time allows the potatoes to steam and turn tender while the cream and cream cheese meld into a velvety sauce.
After 45 minutes, carefully remove the foil (watch for steam). Continue baking uncovered for 25 to 35 minutes, or until the top is deeply golden in spots, the edges are bubbling vigorously, and a knife slides easily through the center with no resistance. The exposed top should look richly browned, not pale.
Once baked, remove the dish from the oven and let the potato bake rest for at least 10 to 15 minutes before serving. This short rest allows the creamy mixture to thicken slightly so the interior is fluffy and sliceable rather than soupy. Taste a small edge piece and sprinkle on a pinch more salt if needed before bringing it to the table.
Variations & Tips
You can adjust this four-ingredient base to suit your table while keeping the spirit of that impossibly creamy, first-to-disappear Easter casserole. For a slightly lighter version, you can replace up to 1/2 cup of the heavy cream with whole milk, but keep most of the cream for that luxurious texture. If you prefer a tangier flavor, swap in Neufchâtel cream cheese (often labeled as 1/3 less fat cream cheese); it will still melt nicely but with a bit more sharpness. Garlic lovers can rub a cut clove of garlic around the inside of the baking dish before adding the potatoes for a gentle aroma without adding extra ingredients to the actual bake. For a more pronounced golden top, you can move the dish to the upper third of the oven for the last 5 minutes of baking, watching carefully so it doesn’t scorch. If you need to make this ahead, assemble the dish up to the point of baking, cover tightly, and refrigerate for up to 24 hours; add 10 to 15 minutes to the covered bake time to account for starting from cold. Food safety tips: Always keep cream and cream cheese refrigerated until you’re ready to use them, and don’t leave the assembled unbaked casserole at room temperature for more than 1 to 2 hours. Leftovers should be cooled, covered, and refrigerated within 2 hours of baking, then reheated to a steaming hot 165°F (74°C) before serving again, either in a 350°F (175°C) oven or in small portions in the microwave.