Bacon Breakfast Casserole
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Load your flaky crescent roll dough with hash browns, crispy bacon, egg, and melted cheese to make the bacon breakfast casserole of your dreams.
This bacon breakfast casserole is part of my Oh My Bacon Grease! series. To see how it all began, click here.
I’m working on filling up my bacon grease jar today so I followed my mother’s advice and decided to make her breakfast pizza, starring bacon. In its original form, this recipe could feed an army. Literally. Mama made it on those mornings my dad or brother had friends over getting ready to go fishing, camping, canoeing, you name it. I made it a bit smaller but still large enough to feed company. If you like, you can use the small can of crescent rolls and half everything else to make it an 8×8 baking pan.
The basic ingredients for my cheesy bacon breakfast casserole recipe are hash browns, shredded cheddar cheese, eggs, bacon, and crescent roll dough. But you can go wild and add your favorite breakfast toppings. I’ve included lots of variations below. This easy breakfast casserole recipe is perfect to make during the holidays, as it only takes 10 minutes to prep and you can even do that the night before. Then you can pop it in the oven the next day and it will be ready in under an hour.
Let me show you just how easy it is to make.
Recipe Ingredients
- Frozen shredded hash browns (can use cubed hash browns)
- Shredded cheddar cheese
- Eggs
- Bacon
How to Make Bacon Breakfast Casserole
Go ahead and fry the bacon first.
You know, you can cook up a few packages of bacon at once and store the cooked bacon in the refrigerator to make meal prep easier. When I do this, I try to use mine within a few days.
Open your can of crescent rolls and place them evenly in the bottom of a greased 9×13-inch casserole dish.
Eh, that looks even enough for me.
Spread your hash browns over them. The hash browns are still frozen, don’t worry about thawing them.
Salt and pepper to taste if you like. I’d start with about 1/2 teaspoon of each.
Crack all of your eggs in a bowl and beat them up well.
Pour the eggs over your hash browns.
Now that your bacon is done, crumble it up a bit and sprinkle it over the top of your eggs.
Bake this in an oven at 350 for about 45 minutes, or until set in the center.
Sprinkle shredded cheese over the top and return to the oven just until cheese melts.
Storing the Bacon Grease
Now for the good part! Let’s preserve all of that miraculous substance that is bacon grease or bacon drippings if you prefer.
I let mine cool in the skillet first, then pour it into a mason jar.
Now a lot of people strain off their grease but I actually scrape the pan just to get all of the little bits in mine. Then, when I’m making cornbread and such I dip my spoon waaaaaaaaaaay down to the bottom so I have the yummy bits in my batter.
A lot of folks have asked how I store my bacon grease. While my family stores theirs right on the counter, I started storing mine in the refrigerator a few years back to prolong its shelf life. It solidifies but it’s just fine, you can scoop it out and put it right in the pan when you need it. I find that refrigerated bacon grease is a lot more convenient because there is no worry of messy drips when you spoon some out of the jar. If you need liquid bacon grease, you can scoop out what you need and heat it for a few seconds in the microwave.
Tipnut says you can even freeze bacon grease, which I hadn’t thought of before. I guess because I tend to use mine up before I have a surplus. Now that I think about it, though, my goal is to have TWO mason jars full and put one in the freezer. Oh my, what a bounty that would be!
This is my bacon grease jar straight from the fridge, right after I added the new grease on top of the old. We’re getting there!
I think I need to cook some more bacon though…
There you have it! Bacon breakfast pizza or casserole, all ready to serve up!
To see the final post in this series, click here.
Storage
- Store casserole leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. Reheat in the microwave, oven, or air fryer.
- You can also freeze leftovers for up to a month. It’s a great recipe for meal prep when you need breakfast on the go!
Recipe Notes
- Here are some variations and additions to make this bacon breakfast casserole recipe your own:
- Substitute the frozen hash browns for frozen diced potatoes or tater tots.
- Dice and saute onion, mushrooms, and/or bell pepper after you cook the bacon.
- Other vegetable options include ripe Roma tomatoes, corn kernels, or diced zucchini.
- Crumble some breakfast sausage in the casserole along with the bacon.
- Substitute the bacon for leftover ham if making it as a holiday casserole, or use a combination of both.
- Use a different type of cheese, like sharp cheddar cheese, Monterey Jack cheese, or mozzarella cheese.
- Soak some bread cubes in the bacon grease and add them to the top of your casserole so it’s similar to a strata cake.
- For more flavor, add half a teaspoon of garlic powder and onion powder to the egg mixture.
- For a creamier casserole, add 1 cup of heavy cream or milk (or 1/2 cup each of cream and milk) when you beat the eggs and pour this over your hash browns.
- Serve with diced avocado, tomato, and chives.
- To test whether your egg casserole is done, stick a toothpick in the center. When it comes out clean and not wet, it’s ready to eat.
Recipe FAQs
Can I make this bacon breakfast casserole in advance?
Absolutely. I’d just store the egg mixture separately and pour it over the top just before you bake it in the oven, so it doesn’t make the dough soggy. You can refrigerate your casserole up to 24 hours in advance.
Check out these other breakfast casserole recipes:
Hash Brown Casserole With Sour Cream
Jiffy Cornbread Casserole With Ham and Cheese
Cracker Barrel Cheesy Hash Brown Casserole (Copycat Recipe)
Overnight Stuffed French Toast
Ingredients
- 1 can crescent roll dough 8-count
- 3 cups shredded hash browns can use cubed hash browns
- 12 eggs
- 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
- 6 slices bacon more or less, depending on what you have on hand
- salt and pepper to taste
Instructions
- Cook bacon and set aside.6 slices bacon
- Spray a 9x13-inch baking dish with cooking spray. Place the crescent roll dough in the bottom of the pan, pinching seams together to seal. Spread frozen hash browns over dough. Salt and pepper to taste (I start with 1/2 tsp of each). Beat all eggs in a bowl and pour over hash browns. Sprinkle crumbled bacon over.1 can crescent roll dough, 3 cups shredded hash browns, 12 eggs, salt and pepper to taste
- Place in oven at 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes, or until set in the center. Sprinkle cheese over top and return to oven just until melted. Serve warm.1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
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Our children teach us what life is all about.
~ Angela Schwindt. Submit your quote here.
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Another way to get some good grease for Collard Green seasoning, Cornbread, and such, is when you buy a Shank portion of Smoked Ham for any reason, trim all the fat off and cut it up into baby lima bean size pieces. Then put it all in a big pot and cook it on medium until you render the fat out of those pieces and those pieces float. Be on the alert for some pieces to pop and slatter hot grease. Skim the floaters off and let them drain on paper towels. Those pieces are good as snacks or add them to your cornbread batter. Depending on how much fat you start with, you may get a lot of Smoked Ham Grease this way. It’s every bit as good as Bacon Grease. Same with Smoked Hog Jowl.
Christy,
Quick question. Do the hashbrowns crisp up or are they soggy? Is is possible to cook them first so they are a little crisp to eat.
Any help would be appreciated.
As always than you for sharing a piece of your world with the rest of us.
I firmly believe that anything that comes from “nature” is not as unhealthy as we are led to believe. I don’t believe that the good Lord made critters such as pigs and cows so we could clog our arteries with their products. I use real butter and have forever – they are now saying that margarine is not good for you either – so there! The only thing I can see with bacon is that it is now more processed than it used to be.
Partake in moderation and enjoy!
This dish looks wonderful! I wish I were home so I could make it….guess I will have to wait until we come off vacation.
I think the three most romantic words for my man to hear are “bacon for breakfast!”. Seriously. It’s sad.
But this looks amazing.
What a great recipe!! Yum!! Enjoy this fun filled day! Love ya!!
Bountiful Blessings!
I really do not know what the worry about bacon grease is all about. I am a Southern girl raised on butter, coke in the glass bottle, candy from the candy store…fried everything and lots of cooking with bacon grease. I think anything in moderation is fine just don’t go over board. What scares me is all the Hormones that they are using now in Milk and Dairy. So give me bacon grease with my fried eggs. But I am now eating brown farm eggs and Hormone free milk and meat.
Christy,
I just love your site and your recipes and precious notes that you share with us!!
Happy Birthday to your precious son! I understand, totally, how hard it is to watch the time pass so quickly as we raise our children. It is so wonderful that you make their birthdays so special for them. It is a celebration of God giving us our precious angels, our babies!! My boys are now 20 and 22. They are in college (one is still at home, in college in our city.) I still thank God for everyday that I am a Mom.
I collect cookbooks and recipes and can not wait to get your cookbook! I can remember my great grandmother always had a jar of bacon grease on her stove. Delicious cooking. She lived to be 98.
God bless you and have a wonderful birthday celebration.
Can’t wait to try this breakfast pizza recipe!
Blessings,
Pam