Side Dishes

Potato Gratin with Processed Cheese

by Editorial Staff

Summary

Prep Time 30 mins
Cook Time 1 hr 30 mins
Total Time 2 hrs
Course Side Dish
Cuisine European
Servings (Default: 4)

Ingredients

  • 800 g potato (s), mainly waxy
  • 125 ml milk
  • 200 ml cream
  • 100 g processed cheese, with herbs
  • 200 g cheese, rated. e.. Gruyère
  • 1 clove garlic
  • salt and pepper
  • Nutmeg, freshly grated
Potato Gratin with Processed Cheese
Potato Gratin with Processed Cheese

Instructions

  1. Heat the oven to 180 ° C.
  2. Peel the potatoes and slice them into 2 mm thick slices. Then wash and pat dry on kitchen paper.
  3. Mix the milk and cream and heat slowly. Let the processed cheese melt in it.
  4. Grease a baking dish with butter and rub half of a pressed clove of garlic on it. Spread a layer of potatoes in a fan shape in the baking dish, season lightly with salt, pepper and grated nutmeg and sprinkle with a little grated cheese. Now pour some of the liquid over it. Then another layer of potatoes etc. Spread the rest of the liquid on the last layer.
  5. Now place the baking dish in the oven on the lower rail. After about 1 hour of cooking, sprinkle the rest of the grated cheese over the casserole and let it cook until the cheese turns slightly brown.
  6. The amount of liquid seems to be too much at first, but be careful towards the end of the cooking time: Take out of the oven if some liquid is still visible, because the potatoes will still draw liquid. But only works perfectly with casserole dishes made of glass. Check the cooking point of the potatoes in between.
Editorial Staff

About Editorial Staff

The Boss Kitchen editorial staff oversees content review, fact-checking, and recipe verification across the site. Published articles pass through the editorial team before going live, ensuring ingredient lists, techniques, cooking times, and nutritional claims hold up in a home kitchen. The team coordinates contributions across the site writers, handles reader corrections, and maintains consistency in measurement conventions, safety guidance, and dietary labeling. Posts under this byline typically represent team-reviewed reference material, site announcements, or editorial roundups rather than individual-author features, and they are held to the same sourcing standards as bylined recipe and product coverage.

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