This 4-ingredient oven beef using frozen beef burger patties is one of those throw-it-on-a-sheet-pan dinners that saves my weeknight sanity. I started making it on nights when I’d get home from work, realize I forgot to thaw anything, and still wanted something hot and filling without a big cleanup. It quickly turned into a regular because my husband kept going back for seconds. You literally grab frozen patties, whisk together three pantry staples into a thick, creamy sauce, smear it on top, and let the oven do the work.
It tastes like a cross between a juicy burger and a cozy meatloaf, but with almost zero effort and even fewer dishes.
Serve these saucy baked beef patties with mashed potatoes, buttered egg noodles, or simple white rice to soak up all the creamy drippings. A crisp green salad, steamed green beans, or roasted broccoli balances the richness. If you want to lean into the burger vibe, tuck a patty into a toasted bun and add lettuce and pickles. Leftovers reheat well and are great sliced over a salad or stuffed into a wrap for an easy lunch the next day.
4-Ingredient Oven Beef Using Frozen Beef Burger Patties
Servings: 4

For a slightly lighter version, you can swap half of the mayonnaise with plain Greek yogurt, though the sauce will be a bit tangier and less rich. Add pantry-friendly seasonings to the sauce if you like: a pinch of garlic powder, onion powder, smoked paprika, or black pepper all work well without changing the basic 4-ingredient structure. If your family likes a little heat, stir in a dash of hot sauce or a pinch of red pepper flakes.
To stretch the meal for more people, use 6 patties and simply mix 3/4 cup mayonnaise, 3 tablespoons ketchup, and 1 1/2 tablespoons mustard. For an open-face “burger plate,” serve the patties over toasted bread with lettuce and sliced pickles on the side.
Food safety tips: Always start with fully frozen patties kept at a safe temperature (below 40°F/4°C) before cooking. Bake until the internal temperature reaches at least 160°F (71°C) for ground beef to ensure it’s safe to eat; color alone is not a reliable indicator of doneness. Use a clean meat thermometer and avoid touching the pan when checking temperature. Refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours of cooking and reheat to at least 165°F (74°C) before eating.