The 20 Best Retro Dinner Casseroles Ever

The 20 Best Retro Dinner Casseroles Ever

Just for fun, a number of years ago, I decided to spend a week cooking only dinners from Betty Crocker’s New Good and Easy Cookbook, published in 1962. This meant casseroles, lots and lots of casseroles containing everything from ground beef to sliced hot dogs.

And guess what? My husband and I generally loved it. Casseroles put on no airs and provide comfort at the end of the day, plus potentially leftovers at the end of the meal. They’re also convenient, which is what midcentury home cooks wanted. It’s what I want in 2024.

Plenty of casseroles from back in the day are best left exactly that—back in the day (Good and Easy cookbook’s tuna puff, for example). But the casserole recipes I’m sharing below are all winners, and all older than me. How old is that? Let’s say I still call hashtags pound signs.

I promise none of them calls for sliced hot dogs, but you’d not be remiss adding them to a few recipes if you felt like it. Improvisation is all in the spirit of a good casserole, after all.

Simply Recipes / Dude that Cookz


For a dinner with all the things—macaroni, ground beef, and cheddar cheese—this reader favorite totally delivers. Look out, Hamburger Helper!

Simply Recipes / Mihaela Kozaric Sebrek


Contributor Nick Evans says, “Almost every version of shipwreck casserole I’ve seen includes some sort of potato, most often lots of raw potatoes that are peeled and sliced very thinly. In my recipe, frozen hash browns make it quicker and easier. Plus, the hash browns get incredibly crispy on the bottom and top of the casserole.”

Elise Bauer

Here’s a dinner party casserole that’s totally retro-classy. Our founder, Elise Bauer, set out to duplicate Campbell’s chicken and mushroom casserole, but from scratch. And it’s seriously in its own stratosphere. Sour cream, dry sherry, fresh herbs, and sautéed mushrooms lend it an air of a very grown-up soirée. Serve it with a green salad, and you have a predictably crowd-pleasing hit for entertaining company.

Simply Recipes / Photo by Jen Causey / Food Styling by Emily Nabors Hall / Prop Styling by Lindsey Lower


Senior Editor Laurel Randolph says, “Add some vegetables to up the nutritional value. Add diced bell peppers or tomatoes along with the onion, or toss in handfuls of fresh spinach or frozen peas at the end.”

Sally Vargas

I grew up eating lots of casseroles like this in the basement fellowship hall of the church that my parents still attend to this day. At community meals and youth group meetings the fare there hasn’t changed much. If you’re going to show up at a potluck, this creamy casserole made filling with shredded chicken is always a good bet.

Elise Bauer

This hearty breakfast casserole is based on the recipe found for years on packages of Jimmy Dean sausage. My family kicked off many a Christmas morning with this beauty, but it makes a fine dinner any time of year. You can assemble it ahead of time and add whatever vegetables and cheese you have handy in the fridge.

Simply Recipes / Photo by Jen Causey / Food Styling by Emily Nabors Hall / Prop Styling by Lindsey Lower


Laurel says, “The taco seasoning packets have a thickening agent that helps to absorb some of the liquid in the salsa. This helps to thicken the liquid so the chips are coated without fully absorbing the sauce.”

Simply Recipes / Marta Rivera


I’m 100% positive that I ate chicken enchilada casserole for years before I consumed a single true enchilada. It’s all the flavors and ingredients with a much easier assembly. No wonder my working mom used this as a weeknight go-to.

Nick Evans | Art Banner Credit: Andy Christensen

Technically this would be a side dish, but not if I’m at your house when you serve it. My plate will have nothing but mounds of cheesy potato casserole and maybe a token broccoli floret. My mom made hers with canned cream of mushroom soup, but this recipe includes a from-scratch cream sauce. You still enjoy the convenience of frozen hash browns, so it’s win-win!

Alison Bickel

Reuben sandwiches are not light affairs, and neither is this filling casserole that easily delivers Reuben flavors to a crowd. It takes all the elements of a Reuben (corned beef, Swiss cheese, kraut, and Thousand Island dressing) and uses cubed rye bread as the foundation.

Simply Recipes / Ciara Kehoe


I prefer Club or Ritz crackers in this recipe, while my mom says Cheez-It or Goldfish are superior. Even plain old saltines work, though.

Elise Bauer

May we apologize to the entire countries of Mexico and Italy for the utterly fanciful name of this cultural mashup that’s more American than anything else? Taco lasagna is another of its aliases. But layering taco-seasoned ground beef and cheddar cheese with tostadas or broken-up hard taco shells is a formula for a meal that’ll get everyone at the table lickety-split, with no reminders or cajoling necessary.

Simply Recipes / Ciara Kehoe


We have not one, but two tuna casseroles for your dining pleasure. One is made from scratch; the other uses canned condensed cream of mushroom soup. Either way, be sure to pile those potato chips on top! I recommend Ruffles for the job.

Simply Recipes / Photo by Will Dickey / Food Styling by Julian Hensarling / Prop Styling by Christina Daley


Laurel says, “You can make the filling a day or two ahead, let it cool, then refrigerate it until you’re ready to bake. Reheat the filling before adding to the dish and topping with the potato tots. You can also completely assemble the casserole, then tightly wrap it and freeze for up to 3 months. Defrost in the fridge before baking.”

Simply Recipes / Ciara Kehoe


Make this a few days after Thanksgiving or any big turkey dinner. Upgrade alert: add some leftover gravy to the bechamel sauce.

Simply Recipes / Mark Beahm


This Ohio-bred casserole dates back to at least the 1910’s and feeds a large army. Back in high school when we had my crew team of hungry teenagers over for dinner, this is the carb load we all requested. Whether you serve it with red wine or a glass of milk, it makes any dinner an occasion.

Megan Keno

Homemade crispy onions and a little Parmesan cheese are just a few of the upgrades this green bean casserole benefits from versus its cousin made with convenience products. Our reader Jolee commented, “Add 1/4 cup bacon and it’s even better!” 

Simply Recipes / Cambrea Gordon


Turkey Tetrazzini, which originated in a San Francisco restaurant in the early 1900s and is named after an opera singer, is another casserole that’s special enough to serve to company. Sherry, Gruyère, and a light grating of nutmeg distinguish it from ordinary weekday fare.

Elise Bauer

Even the image here is retro, as far as food styling goes. It might not be pretty, but this beef noodle casserole is darned tasty. Simply Recipes founder Elise Bauer ate this growing up on nights when her grandmother cooked. With ground beef, egg noodles, black olives, corn, mushrooms, and shredded cheddar cheese, it also goes by the name talerine. Says Elise, “It may sound like an everything-but-the-kitchen-sink kind of recipe, or a midwestern version of tamale pie, but wow is it good!”

Sally Vargas

Only in America would you find something this exquisitely sweet served at a dinner table. Love it or hate it, this casserole is iconic, particularly around the holidays. For the rest of the year, get creative and try it with pork chops.

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