Max was busy mapping out a giant flour road across the kitchen counter while I prepped our Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole this morning. He giggled, shouting that his toy tractor was stuck in a massive, thick country gravy swamp. The cozy space instantly filled up with the wonderful, rich aroma of sizzling pork sausage, warm buttermilk dough, and melting cheese.
Jump to:
- Why This Recipe Is Special
- How To Make Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole
- Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole Variations
- Substitutions
- Equipment
- Storage Tips
- Family Secret Worth Sharing
- Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole FAQs
- A Southern Skillet To Share
- Related
- Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole
Why This Recipe Is Special
This dish is our absolute favorite savior when we want to turn a sleepy weekend morning into an interactive family celebration. It beautifully pairs the ultimate comforting richness of a traditional Southern breakfast with the ease of a simple, scoopable bake. Max loves helping me cut the dough rounds into tiny uniform squares, treating the entire assembly like a fun kitchen puzzle game.
How To Make Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole
My very first attempt at building this breakfast bake was an absolute disaster because I poured the hot gravy directly over raw dough layers. Max poked his fork into the pan, watched the soggy centers collapse, and told me our fancy breakfast tasted like "mushy wet dough sponges". We fixed it together by par-baking the biscuit pieces first, ensuring they rise into a perfectly fluffy, golden, and dry structure.
Main Ingredients
- 500g Pork Sausage (lean breakfast sausage browns beautifully to provide our savory, protein-packed baseline flavor)
- 1 Can Buttermilk Biscuits (cut into bite-sized uniform quarters to establish our pillowy foundational crust layer)
- ¼ cup All-Purpose Flour (essential for thickening the rich pan drippings into a traditional white country gravy)
- 2 cups Whole Milk (poured slowly into the roux to create an ultra-smooth, velvety cream gravy layer)
- 1 cup Cheddar Cheese (finely shredded to develop those gorgeous, bubbly golden pockets across the top surface)
Step by Step Instructions
Brown the Sausage
- Heat a large heavy skillet over medium-high heat until completely hot.
- Add your bulk pork sausage, breaking it into fine crumbles with a heavy wooden spoon.
- Sauté continuously for six minutes until no pink remnants remain in the pan.
- Remove the savory meat crumbles with a slotted spoon, leaving the hot grease behind.
Build the Gravy
- Scatter your all-purpose flour directly into the hot, bubbling pan drippings.
- Whisk the flour and fat together for one minute to create a smooth roux.
- Pour the cold whole milk into the pan in a slow, steady stream.
- Simmer gently for five minutes until the cream sauce coats the back of a spoon.
Par-Bake the Biscuits
- Cut your raw buttermilk biscuits into uniform, bite-sized quarter pieces.
- Layer the raw dough cubes across the bottom of a greased square baking pan.
- Bake the dough pieces uncovered at 180°C for exactly ten minutes.
- Remove the pan from the oven when the pieces look slightly puffed and dry.
Layer and Bake
- Scatter your cooked sausage crumbles evenly over the par-baked biscuit foundation.
- Pour the hot, seasoned white country gravy smoothly across the meat layer.
- Blanket the entire top surface with a generous layer of shredded cheddar cheese.
- Bake at 180°C for twenty minutes until the cheese is completely melted and bubbly.
Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole Variations
Max's Loaded Bacon and Chive Feast
We love to fold a half-cup of crispy crumbled bacon and fresh chopped chives right into the white gravy base. Max claims the smoky bacon addition makes his personal breakfast portion taste exactly like a gourmet loaded baked potato.
Spicy Pepper Jack and Chorizo Bake
Swap out the traditional country sausage for spicy Mexican chorizo crumbles and use shredded pepper jack cheese over the top. This introduces a vibrant reddish-orange hue and a sharp peppery kick that cuts through the rich dairy beautifully.
Hidden Veggie Egg and Cheese Scramble
Whisk six fresh eggs with a splash of milk and pour them directly over the par-baked biscuit pieces before adding the gravy. Scatter finely minced bell peppers and onions inside to introduce an easy, colorful nutrient boost for the kids.
Substitutions
- Ground Turkey Sausage: Use lean turkey sausage instead of pork to create a lighter, lower-fat breakfast profile.
- Gluten-Free Drop Biscuits: Use a 1:1 gluten-free baking flour blend to whip up easy homemade drop biscuit dough.
- Colby Jack Cheese: Swap the sharp cheddar for colby jack or shredded mozzarella to achieve a milder, extra-stretchy melt.
- Heavy Cream: Substitute half of the whole milk with heavy cream if you prefer an incredibly dense, traditional gravy.
Equipment
- Large heavy skillet
- 9x13 inch baking pan
- Wire whisk
- Wooden mixing spoon
Storage Tips
Make Ahead Strategy
You can brown your breakfast sausage and whisk up the white country gravy the night before, storing them in separate jars inside the fridge.
Refrigeration
Keep your leftover baked casserole sealed securely inside an airtight glass storage container in the refrigerator for up to three days.
Reheating
Warm individual leftover portions inside your oven at 180°C for ten minutes to preserve that delightful, fluffy biscuit crumb texture.
Family Secret Worth Sharing
The absolute trick to making your breakfast bake look exactly like the stunning, golden-brown masterpiece in our photo comes down to the dual-thickening method. Most traditional guidelines tell you to just use standard flour, but Max and I always stir a tiny half-teaspoon of cornstarch directly into our cold milk before pouring it into the pan roux. This prevents the white gravy from thinning out or breaking down under the high oven heat, ensuring it remains perfectly rich, velvety, and stable while holding up that glorious blanket of melting cheddar cheese.
Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole FAQs
Why did the bottom of my biscuit layer turn out completely soggy and wet?
You likely skipped the par-baking step. Giving the raw dough pieces a quick ten-minute roast in the oven creates a secure moisture barrier that stops the wet gravy from soaking through.
How do I fix a country gravy that turned out way too thick and lumpy?
Remove the skillet from the heat source and whisk in a small splash of warm milk, beating vigorously for thirty seconds to smooth out the flour pockets.
Can I assemble this entire casserole overnight and bake it fresh in the morning?
I do not recommend full overnight liquid assembly, as the biscuits will absorb too much moisture. Instead, prep your meat and gravy ahead, then simply combine and bake in the morning.
A Southern Skillet To Share
We gathered around the wooden kitchen island this morning, Max proudly holding his big spoon high to catch the very first steaming scoop from our pan. If you are looking for more fresh, vibrant options to rotate into your weekend schedule, a large bowl of our crisp Breakfast Fruit Salad is an absolute favorite around here. On slower mornings, Max always asks for a batch of my sweet Nutella Filled Mini Pancake Bombs, or we will bake up a stack of our fluffy Brown Butter Blueberry Lemon Ricotta Pancakes for a wonderful family feast.
Don't forget to snap a picture of your Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole before that first slice disappears (trust me, it will disappear quickly!), and leave a rating below. We'd love to hear how this recipe becomes part of your brunch story! Star Rate this recipe and join our kitchen family.
Related
Looking for other recipes like Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole? Try these:
- Breakfast Fruit Salad10 Minutes
- Nutella Filled Mini Pancake Bombs30 Minutes
- Brown Butter Blueberry Lemon Ricotta Pancakes30 Minutes
- Spinach Cottage Cheese35 Minutes
Biscuits and Gravy Breakfast Casserole
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Brown your bulk pork sausage inside a large heavy skillet over medium-high heat until no pink remnants remain inside the pan.
- Remove the cooked meat with a slotted spoon, leaving behind the rich savory fat drippings to establish our gravy base.
- Whisk your all-purpose flour directly into the warm pan grease to form a uniform, smooth thickening roux paste layer.
- Pour the cold whole milk slowly into the skillet, simmering gently for five minutes until a thick country cream gravy develops.
- Cut your raw buttermilk biscuits into quarters and par-bake them inside a greased baking pan at 180°C for ten minutes.
- Scatter your cooked sausage crumbles evenly over the puffed biscuit pieces to distribute the meat layers uniformly across pan.
- Pour the warm white country cream gravy slowly over the sausage layer to submerge the ingredients beautifully.
- Top with your shredded cheddar cheese and bake at 180°C for twenty minutes until completely melted, bubbly, and golden-brown.












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