This 4-ingredient oven beef and cheese casserole is exactly the kind of hands-off comfort food I lean on for busy, emotionally full days like Mother’s Day. It’s built from pantry-friendly ingredients, comes together in minutes, and then quietly bubbles away in the oven while you pour a glass of wine or actually sit down and talk with your family. While baked meat-and-cheese casseroles have roots in classic Midwestern potluck culture, this version strips things down to the essentials: seasoned ground beef, a creamy sauce, pasta, and a generous blanket of golden, bubbly cheese on top. The result is deeply satisfying without demanding much from you in the kitchen.
Serve this casserole straight from the oven while the cheese is still molten and lightly crisp at the edges. A simple green salad with a sharp vinaigrette balances the richness nicely, as do steamed green beans or roasted broccoli. Warm, crusty bread or soft dinner rolls are perfect for catching the creamy sauce that collects at the edges of the pan. For drinks, a light red wine, a chilled pilsner, or sparkling water with citrus keeps the meal feeling celebratory without being fussy.
4-Ingredient Beef and Cheese Oven Casserole
Servings: 6
Ingredients
12 oz (about 4 cups) uncooked short pasta (such as penne, rotini, or elbow macaroni)
1 lb (450 g) ground beef (80–90% lean)
2 cans (10.5 oz/300 g each) condensed cream of mushroom soup
3 cups (about 12 oz/340 g) shredded cheese (cheddar, Colby-Jack, or mozzarella blend), divided
Directions
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Lightly grease a 9x13-inch (23x33 cm) baking dish with a thin film of oil or nonstick spray for easier cleanup.
Bring a large pot of well-salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook for 2–3 minutes less than the package directions for al dente. The pasta should still have a firm bite; it will finish cooking in the oven. Drain well and set aside.
While the pasta cooks, heat a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the ground beef and cook, breaking it up with a spoon, until fully browned and no pink remains, about 6–8 minutes. If there is more than a thin sheen of fat in the pan, spoon off the excess. Lightly season with salt and pepper if desired, but keep in mind the soup and cheese both contain salt.
In the drained pasta pot (or a large mixing bowl), combine the cooked pasta, browned ground beef, and both cans of condensed cream of mushroom soup. Add 2 cups of the shredded cheese, reserving the remaining 1 cup for the topping. Stir until everything is evenly coated in the creamy mixture; it will be quite thick, which is what you want for a rich, cohesive casserole.
Transfer the mixture to the prepared baking dish, spreading it into an even layer and pressing gently into the corners so it bakes uniformly. Sprinkle the remaining 1 cup shredded cheese evenly over the top, making sure the entire surface is covered to create that golden, fully blanketed cheese layer.
Cover the baking dish tightly with foil and place it on the center rack of the preheated oven. Bake for 20 minutes to allow the casserole to heat through and the pasta to finish cooking in the sauce.
Remove the foil and continue baking for another 15–20 minutes, or until the casserole is bubbling around the edges and the cheese on top is fully melted, with spots of deep golden brown and slightly crispy edges. If you prefer a more pronounced browned top, you can move the dish under the broiler for 1–3 minutes, watching closely so the cheese doesn’t burn.
Carefully remove the casserole from the oven and let it rest for at least 10 minutes before serving. This short rest allows the creamy sauce to thicken slightly and keeps the portions from sliding apart when you scoop them. Serve warm, making sure each portion gets some of the browned, bubbly cheese from the top.
Variations & Tips
For a bit more nuance without adding extra ingredients, you can build flavor into the existing components: brown the ground beef until you see deep, caramelized bits on the bottom of the pan, then scrape those up as you stir; this mimics the slow-cooked flavor of a longer braise. If you’d like to stay within the four-ingredient framework but shift the character, swap the cream of mushroom soup for cream of chicken or cream of celery, or use a different cheese like pepper Jack for gentle heat or smoked cheddar for a campfire note. Any short pasta shape works; choose elbows for a more classic, kid-friendly feel or rigatoni for a sturdier, more rustic presentation. To make this ahead, assemble the casserole fully, cover tightly, and refrigerate up to 24 hours; add 10–15 minutes to the covered baking time to ensure it heats through. For food safety, always cook the ground beef until it is no longer pink and reaches an internal temperature of at least 160°F (71°C), and refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours of baking. Reheat leftovers until steaming hot in the center (165°F/74°C) before serving. If freezing, cool the baked casserole completely, portion into airtight containers, and freeze for up to 3 months; thaw overnight in the refrigerator and reheat, covered, in a 350°F (175°C) oven until hot and bubbly.