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Potatoes Romanoff is a classic steakhouse side dish. Tender baked potatoes are shredded and folded into rich sour cream and cheese, and baked to perfection.
This is the perfect recipe to use up any of those leftover baked potatoes. Some of our favorite mains to serve with it are this bacon wrapped filet mignon, baked pork chops, or roasted spatchcock chicken for a fancy steakhouse meal at home.
Pin this recipe for later!Why We Love This Recipe
- Creamy and Cheesy – The texture and rich flavor is out of this world!
- Make Ahead – You can even prep it the day before and then bake before serving.
- Decadent Side Dish – Don’t let the ease fool you, this is an impressive side dish!
Ingredients For Potatoes Romanoff
You can even use leftover baked potatoes to make this recipe!
- Russet Potatoes – You’ll bake them the day before for easy prep!
- Shallot – These are different from onions. Shallots have a more delicate flavor than their spicy counterparts, so they are great for adding onion flavor without heat.
- Minced Garlic – Freshly minced garlic is best, but you can use the kind in a jar if that’s what you have on hand.
- Sour Cream – I mean, this is an indulgent side dish, go for the full fat! However, you can certainly go with low-fat sour cream or even plain Greek yogurt if you like
- Shredded Sharp White Cheddar Cheese – It’s best to shred a block yourself. The pre-shredded cheese in a bag doesn’t melt as well.
- Grated Parmesan – Also freshly grated off the block. The pre-grated stuff in the can is great for topping Instant Pot Spaghetti, but won’t work as well here.
How To Make Potatoes Romanoff
See the recipe card below for full, detailed instructions
Cook Shallot and Garlic – Melt the butter in a small pan and saute the shallot until translucent then add the garlic and saute for another 30 seconds until fragrant. Remove from heat.
Grate Potatoes – Grate the cooled baked potatoes (skin on!) with a box grater or food processor.
Mix Ingredients together. Combine the sour cream, salt, pepper, 2 cups of white cheddar, shallot, and garlic in a large mixing bowl. Gently fold in the shredded potatoes. You want to do this carefully so you keep the shredded texture of the potatoes.
Assemble Casserole – Pile the potatoes into the greased baking dish and top with the rest of the cheddar and parmesan.
Bake – Bake until golden brown and enjoy!
Recipe FAQs
The reason it’s best to bake the potatoes the day before is so that they can fully cool. This makes them much easier to shred with a box grater.
Baked potatoes can be stored in the fridge for 3-4 days. This is a great recipe to use up leftover baked potatoes in a new way!
Variations
- Frozen Hashbrowns – You can use thawed frozen hashbrowns in place of the baked potatoes, but the texture will not be as fluffy.
- Different Cheeses – You can use different combinations of cheeses. Smoked cheddar, gouda, or gruyere are all good choices.
Storage, Reheating, and Make Ahead
Storage – Store leftovers in a covered container in the fridge for up to 5-6 days.
Reheating – Cover the leftovers with foil and reheat in a 350℉ oven until warmed. If they’re dry, you can add a splash of milk or cream. I like to add a little fresh shredded cheese on top before baking.
Make Ahead – These make a great make-ahead side, and can be made a day ahead. Just store in the fridge until ready to bake. Increase bake time to 45 minutes. If the top starts getting too brown, cover with foil.
Helpful Tips
- Use Russet Potatoes – Russet potatoes will give the best texture. Waxy potatoes such as reds and Yukon golds will not be as fluffy.
- Shallots – Some recipes call for adding the raw shallot straight to the potatoes, but I like the subtleness and tender texture cooking the shallots gives the dish.
- Cool Baked Potatoes – Cooling the baked potatoes makes them much easier to grate.
- Servings – As a single side dish, you will get about 6 servings from this recipe. However if you’re serving as part of a holiday buffet with lots of sides, you could easily get 8-10 servings.
More Potato Recipes
- French Onion Mashed Potatoes
- Crockpot Cheesy Potatoes
- Easy Skillet Potatoes
- Homemade Loaded Potato Skins
- German Fried Potatoes (Bratkartoffeln)
Potatoes Romanoff
Ingredients
- 3 large russet potatoes baked and cooled overnight in the fridge
- 3 tablespoons salted butter
- ¼ cup diced shallot
- 1 clove garlic minced
- 2 teaspoons salt
- ½ teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1 ½ cups sour cream
- 2 ½ cups freshly shredded sharp white cheddar cheese divided
- ½ cup grated parmesan
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375℉ and grease a 2 qt baking dish.
- In a small pan, melt the butter over medium low heat and saute the shallot until softened and translucent, about 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for 30 more seconds. Remove from heat.
- Using a box grater or food processor, grate the cooled baked potatoes with the skin still on.
- In a large mixing bowl stir together the sour cream, salt, pepper, 2 cups of the cheddar, and the sauteed shallot and garlic. Gently fold in the shredded potatoes until just evenly combined, trying to keep the shredded texture.
- Lightly pile the potato mixture into the prepared casserole dish and evenly top with the remaining cheddar and parmesan cheese. Bake for 25-30 minutes until golden brown.
Notes
- The recipe states that this will make 6 servings, but at a holiday buffet where there are lots of sides, you could easily get 8-10 servings.
- Store leftovers in a covered container in the fridge for up to 5-6 days.
- To reheat, cover the leftovers with foil and reheat in a 350℉ oven until warmed.
- If your potatoes are dry when you reheat them, you can add a splash of milk or cream. I also like to add a little fresh shredded cheese on top before baking.
- Make a day in advance and just store in the fridge until ready to bake. Increase bake time to 45 minutes. If the top starts getting too brown, cover with foil.
Nutrition
Nutritional Disclaimer Kristin Maxwell of “Yellow Bliss Road” is not a dietician or nutritionist, and any nutritional information shared is an estimate. For accurate calorie counts and other nutritional values, we recommend running the ingredients through your preferred online nutritional calculator. Calories and other nutritional values can vary depending on which brands were used.
Is there any possibility of cooking these in the crock pot? I only have one small oven which is usually in use with the main entree. It looks delicious!!
Hi Sandi, I haven’t tested this recipe in a slow cooker, but I imagine it could work. I wouldn’t expect the same texture and it obviously wouldn’t brown though. I would worry that it might get too soggy. Maybe try something like a Stove Top Chicken Breast as your main entree so your oven would be freed up?
Hi Kristin, I haven’t tried this recipe yet but it looks very yummy!!
I just had a question. Can I put the potatoes in the freezer & make it the same day? Just wondering, in case I don’t have time to do it overnight.
Hi Stephanie, I haven’t tried putting them in the freezer, but just don’t let them actually freeze and you should be fine.
Love this recipe. Can I make ahead and freeze?
Do not use full salt quantities- too salty. This is an excellent recipe except it was way too salty.
Texture is great but agree with Steve, would use half a teaspoon of salt instead of 2 teaspoon.
The amount of salt needed will depend mostly on the saltiness of the cheese. I just slowly add salt to taste. There’s nothing wrong with tasting this before baking.
This recipe is awesome very, very tasty and easy.👍 I have made it before and I will be making it for Christmas dinner.
Thank you Mona! awesome feedback, thanks for stopping by.
If using a 3 quart baking dish (rather than a 2 quart) should I add an additional 1/2 of all recipe ingredients? Or rather, half the measurements from the x3 recipe?
You could increase the ingredients by 50% is you want. Otherwise it will be a fairly shallow casserole. 🙂
Can you make this 2 days ahead?
Assuming it’s fully baked and then stored, I think it would probably be ok.
how unfortunate that you use Pinterest as a platform to promote your content then turn off the comments for users to review the recipe, give tips and tell what worked for them. I depend on those reviews vs. those on the creators site… bummer I had planned to try this.
I most definitely do not have comments turned off, seeing as how you were able to leave one. Pinterest is one of many platform, but they don’t own my content, I do.
Jac meant comments on Pinterest. Often people can be blatantly honest on there & it can help with judging a recipe.
This looks like a delish dish. I Pinned this recipe a while back and put it on my menu to give it a try in the next week or so. Am I missing something? Why is the TOTAL TIME 10 hours hrs 45 minutes?
It’s a misprint – it should take about 45 minutes from start to finish.
Can I use frozen shredded hash browns?
Fresh would be best, but as long as they are completely thawed they should work.
Did you try it with hash browns? I’d like to cut some corners during the holidays…was thinking of thawing and then wringing out the liquid.
As stated in the post: You can use thawed frozen hashbrowns in place of the baked potatoes, but the texture will not be as fluffy. Do be sure to that and ring out water as possible.
Can I substitute the potatoes for cauliflower?
That would be a completely different texture, so no, I wouldn’t substitute cauliflower.
Can I use Bob Evans mashed potatoes for this? We’re seniors and can’t stand and cook like we once did, we need shortcuts. Thank you.
Hi Patti, This recipe calls for fresh shredded mashed potatoes, so premade mashed potatoes would be a completely different ingredient and outcome. However, maybe you could add the cheese and sour cream to mashed potatoes and bake them? I think that would probably be similar.
What size casserole dish do you use?
It’s a 2-quart baking dish. (step 1)
Any idea, even rough, as to how many cups of grated potatoes are in this? Potatoes here vary so much in size, depending on where we get them/time of year.
Hi Kiy, It’s roughly 2 1/2 to 3 pounds of potatoes.