I stumbled on this root veggie gratin idea three winters ago at our farmer's market when the vendor handed me a bag of "ugly" vegetables at half price. Carrots with weird bends, parsnips that weren't perfectly white, turnips that looked lumpy - nothing Instagram-worthy. "Layer them thin, add cream and cheese, bake until bubbly," she said with a shrug. That night, I made what's become our most-requested winter side dish. Oliver, who used to pick around any vegetable that wasn't a potato, now asks when we're making "the striped veggie thing" again. Turns out, those imperfect root vegetables make the best comfort food when you know what to do with them.
Why You'll Love This Root Veggie Gratin
I've been making this Root Veggie Gratin casserole every winter for three years now, and it works for everything from regular Tuesday dinners to Thanksgiving. The vegetables are cheap, especially in fall and winter when root veggies are piled high at every store. You can prep it hours ahead and just slide it in the oven when guests show up. It feeds a crowd - one 9x13 pan serves 8-10 people easily. Oliver's pickiness vanished when he saw the pretty layers through the side of the glass dish. He picks his favorite vegetable layer and eats that first, then somehow finishes the rest too.
Here's what surprised me: leftovers taste better the next day. Day two, that Root Veggie Gratin slices into perfect squares that actually hold together. I've reheated slices in a skillet and they get this crispy bottom that's ridiculous. My neighbor who swears she doesn't like root vegetables ate three servings at our Christmas dinner before asking what was in it. When I told her, she looked genuinely mad that she'd enjoyed parsnips and turnips. It works for regular people, picky kids, and secretly fools vegetable haters who don't realize what they're eating until their plate is empty.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love This Root Veggie Gratin
- Ingredients For Root Veggie Gratin
- Step by Step Method
- Substitutions
- Storing Your Root Veggie Gratin
- Equipment For Root Veggie Gratin
- Root Veggie Gratin Variations
- Grandma's Secret Fix Passed Down for Generations (Now It's Yours)
- Top Tip
- What to Serve With Root Veggie Gratin
- FAQ
- Time to Layer Some Root Veggie Magic!
- Related
- Pairing
- Root Veggie Gratin
Ingredients For Root Veggie Gratin
The Root Vegetables:
- Russet potatoes
- Carrots
- Parsnips
- Turnips
- Sweet potatoes
- Rutabaga
- Celeriac
The Creamy Sauce:
- Heavy cream
- Whole milk
- Fresh garlic cloves
- Fresh thyme
- Fresh rosemary
- Salt and black pepper
- Ground nutmeg
The Cheese Topping:
- Gruyère cheese
- Parmesan cheese
- Butter for greasing
See recipe card for quantities.
Step by Step Method
Prep Your Vegetables
- Peel all root vegetables - no shortcuts here, the peels get tough
- Slice everything ⅛ inch thick using mandoline or very sharp knife
- Keep each vegetable type separate in bowls for layering
- Pat slices dry with paper towels to remove excess moisture
Make the Creamy Base
- Heat cream and milk together in saucepan over medium heat
- Add minced garlic, thyme, rosemary, salt, pepper, and nutmeg
- Bring just to a simmer then remove from heat immediately
- Let steep for 10 minutes so herbs infuse the cream
- Fish out the herb sprigs before using
Layer Your Root Veggie Gratin
- Butter your 9x13 baking dish really well on bottom and sides
- Start with potato layer on bottom - they take longest to cook
- Slightly overlap each slice like fallen dominoes
- Pour small amount of cream mixture over first layer
- Add next vegetable type in another overlapping layer
- Continue layering different vegetables with cream between each
- Press down gently as you go to compact layers
- End with your prettiest vegetable on top for presentation
Bake to Golden Perfection
- Cover tightly with foil and bake at 375°F for 45 minutes
- Remove foil, sprinkle Gruyère and Parmesan on top
- Bake uncovered another 25-30 minutes until cheese is golden
- Let rest 15 minutes before cutting - this is crucial for clean slices
Substitutions
Through reader questions and my own "I'm missing that" moments, here's what works:
Vegetable Options:
- Potatoes → All sweet potatoes for sweeter version
- Parsnips → Extra carrots if you can't find parsnips
- Turnips → Rutabaga works great, same flavor family
- Celeriac → Skip it if unavailable, not crucial
- Mixed roots → Use whatever's on sale at your store
Cream Substitutions:
- Heavy cream → Half-and-half (thinner but works)
- Whole milk → 2% milk (less rich but fine)
- Dairy → Coconut cream for vegan version
- Regular cream → Oat cream for dairy-free
Cheese Swaps:
- Gruyère → Swiss cheese (very similar taste)
- Expensive Gruyère → Sharp cheddar (different but good)
- Parmesan → Pecorino Romano (saltier, use less)
- Dairy cheese → Nutritional yeast for vegan (not the same but adds flavor)
For Vegan Root Veggie Gratin:
- Use coconut cream or cashew cream
- Skip all cheese or use vegan cheese
- Add extra garlic and herbs for flavor
- Nutritional yeast on top adds savory notes
Herb Changes:
- Fresh thyme → Dried thyme (use 1 teaspoon)
- Fresh rosemary → Dried rosemary (use ½ teaspoon)
- Both herbs → Italian seasoning works in a pinch
- No herbs → Just garlic still tastes good
Storing Your Root Veggie Gratin
I make this ahead for every holiday dinner now. Here's what I've learned about timing and storage:
Make-Ahead Strategy:
You can assemble this Root Veggie Gratin completely up to 24 hours before baking. Layer everything in the dish, pour the cream over, cover tightly with plastic wrap and foil, then refrigerate. When you're ready to bake, pull it out while the oven preheats so it's not ice cold going in. Add an extra 10-15 minutes to the covered baking time since it's starting cold. This saves so much stress on busy cooking days.
Fridge Storage (4 days):
Leftovers keep great in the fridge. Cover the baking dish with foil or transfer slices to an airtight container. The Root Veggie Gratin actually slices better cold - those clean squares I mentioned earlier. Reheat individual portions in the microwave for 2 minutes or in a 350°F oven for 15 minutes. For extra fancy leftover treatment, reheat slices in a skillet with a little butter. The bottom gets crispy and it tastes almost better than fresh.
Freezing (Not Recommended):
I tried freezing this once and won't do it again. The cream separates when it thaws and the vegetables get mushy and watery. The texture is just off. If you need to prep way ahead, assemble it unbaked and freeze that, then thaw completely in the fridge before baking. Even then, the results aren't as good as fresh. This is one dish that's better made within a day or two of serving.
Equipment For Root Veggie Gratin
- Mandoline slicer - changes everything for this recipe
- 9x13 inch baking dish - glass works best so you can see layers
- Medium saucepan for heating cream mixture
- Sharp chef's knife for backup slicing
- Vegetable peeler that actually works
- Aluminum foil for covering during baking
Root Veggie Gratin Variations
Over three winters of making this weekly, we've tried different versions. These are the ones worth making again:
French Vegetable Gratin Style:
- Add thinly sliced onions between vegetable layers
- Use only Gruyère cheese for topping - no Parmesan
- Add bay leaf to cream while it steeps
- Sprinkle breadcrumbs mixed with melted butter on top for extra crunch
- Serve with roasted chicken for classic French bistro meal
Mediterranean Vegetable Gratin:
- Add sliced tomatoes and zucchini to the root vegetables
- Mix in fresh oregano and basil instead of thyme
- Use feta cheese crumbled on top instead of Gruyère
- Drizzle with olive oil before final baking
- Perfect for late summer when tomatoes are good
Winter Root Vegetable Casserole with Bacon:
- Cook bacon until crispy, crumble and layer between vegetables
- Use bacon fat to grease the baking dish
- Add caramelized onions for extra sweetness
- Top with sharp cheddar and bacon bits
- Oliver's favorite version by far
Holiday Root Vegetable Gratin:
- Add dried cranberries soaked in brandy between layers
- Sprinkle toasted pecans on top with cheese
- Use maple syrup in cream mixture for subtle sweetness
- Garnish with fresh sage leaves before serving
- Looks fancy enough for Thanksgiving or Christmas
Grandma's Secret Fix Passed Down for Generations (Now It's Yours)
My grandmother Eleanor learned to make root veggie gratin during the Depression when you couldn't be picky and used whatever came out of the garden. Her secret wasn't about expensive stuff or fancy moves - it was about patience and one weird step nobody else did. She'd salt each vegetable layer separately as she built it, not just salt the cream mixture. A tiny pinch on each layer. "Let the salt find the vegetables where they live," she'd say, sprinkling it with her fingers.
But her real trick that she only told me after I'd been making this for a year? She'd save the water from boiling potatoes earlier in the week and use half potato water, half cream for the liquid. Sounds odd, but that starchy potato water made everything stick together better and added this depth you can't get from just cream. The vegetables never slid apart when you cut slices, and the sauce stayed silky instead of breaking. She kept a jar of potato water in her fridge all winter just for Root Veggie Gratin. When I finally tried it her way after being stubborn about doing it "right," I couldn't believe how much better it was.
Top Tip
- I make this ahead for every holiday dinner now, and it's been a lifesaver. You can assemble this Root Veggie Gratin completely up to 24 hours before baking. Layer everything in the dish, pour the cream over, cover tight with plastic wrap and foil, then refrigerate. When you're ready to bake, pull it out while the oven preheats so it's not freezing cold. Add an extra 10-15 minutes to the covered baking time since it's starting cold.
- Leftovers keep great in the fridge for 4 days. Cover the dish with foil or move slices to a container. The Root Veggie Gratin slices better when it's cold - you get clean squares instead of a sloppy mess. Reheat portions in the microwave for 2 minutes or in a 350°F oven for 15 minutes. My favorite leftover trick? Reheat slices in a skillet with butter. The bottom gets crispy and honestly tastes better than fresh. Oliver specifically asks for "crispy gratin" now because he figured out leftovers are superior.
- I tried freezing this once and won't do it again. The cream separates when it thaws and the vegetables turn mushy and gross. The texture is completely wrong and not worth it. If you really need to prep ahead, assemble it unbaked and freeze that, then thaw completely in the fridge before baking. Even then, it's not as good. This is one dish you should make within a day or two of eating, not weeks ahead.
What to Serve With Root Veggie Gratin
Over three winters of making this Root Veggie Gratin for different meals, I've figured out what works on the same plate. For holiday dinners, pair it with roasted turkey or ham since this gratin is rich enough to handle big flavors. Add simple green beans or Brussels sprouts for color, and cranberry sauce to cut through all that cream. Skip the mashed potatoes though - you've already got potatoes in the gratin. For regular family dinners, this goes great with roasted chicken thighs, pan-seared pork chops with apple sauce, or grilled steak if you're in the mood. Always add a big green salad with vinaigrette to balance the richness.
For vegetarian meals, this works as the main dish with just a salad. Add roasted mushrooms for something meaty, sautéed greens with garlic, or crusty bread to fill it out. I've even put fried eggs on top for breakfast-for-dinner and it was ridiculous. What NOT to serve: other cream-based sides (way too heavy), another layered baked thing (weird having two gratins), any other potato dish, or mac and cheese unless you want everyone in a food coma. I always put something acidic on the plate - bright salad, pickled vegetables, or tangy cranberry sauce. Without that contrast, this Root Veggie Gratin feels like too much halfway through eating.
FAQ
Why avoid root vegetables to eat every day?
You don't need to avoid root vegetables daily - they're good for you. Some people limit them on low-carb diets since they have more carbs than leafy greens. Root veggies like carrots, parsnips, and turnips have fiber, vitamins, and minerals. This root veggie gratin is a healthy side dish when you eat normal portions with balanced meals.
What is the healthiest root vegetable to eat?
Sweet potatoes have tons of vitamins A and C, carrots are loaded with beta-carotene. Turnips and parsnips are lower in calories but full of fiber. Honestly, eating a mix like in this Root Veggie Gratin gives you different nutrients from each one. Don't stress about picking one "best" vegetable - eat different kinds for better nutrition overall.
What to do with lots of root vegetables?
Make this gratin first. Then try roasting them with olive oil and herbs, tossing them in soups and stews, mashing them together like fancy mashed potatoes, or pickling them so they last longer. I cube extras and freeze them for quick soup additions later. Root vegetables last weeks in the fridge, so don't panic if you bought too many.
What makes a gratin a gratin?
A gratin has thinly sliced stuff baked with cream or sauce and topped with cheese or breadcrumbs that get brown and crispy. The French word means that golden crust on top. Not all gratins use potatoes - you can gratin almost anything. The key parts are thin slices, creamy liquid, and that browned cheesy crusty top.
Time to Layer Some Root Veggie Magic!
Now you've got everything you need to make this root veggie gratin that turned those "ugly" farmer's market vegetables into our favorite winter side dish. From slicing the vegetables thin enough (thanks to that mandoline I can't live without now) to Jessica's bacon grease secret that adds smoky depth nobody can pin down, you're set to make something that looks like it came from a restaurant but really isn't hard. This gratin has saved countless holiday dinners in our house, turned Oliver from a veggie-hater to someone who asks for "the striped thing," and tricked my neighbor into eating turnips and parsnips without knowing until her plate was empty and she wanted more.
Want more cozy recipes that work for real families? Try our Easy Homemade Garbage Bread Recipe that stuffs everything good into one ridiculous loaf that Oliver and his friends destroy in minutes. Need something healthy that actually gets eaten? Our Healthy Chicken Zucchini Poppers Recipe sneaks vegetables past tough critics - we've tested it on some seriously picky eaters. Or go for dessert with our Easy Brazilian Carrot Cake Recipe that's nothing like American carrot cake but way better, with a chocolate glaze that makes people a little crazy.
Share your Root Veggie Gratin with us! We love seeing your vegetable combos, hearing which variation you tried, and finding out if you fooled any vegetable haters. Did you use Jessica's bacon grease trick? Did your kids eat parsnips without knowing? Did you make it ahead for Thanksgiving and save yourself stress? Tell us everything - we read every tag and comment.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Rate this Root Veggie Gratin and leave a comment about which root vegetables you used and how it went!
Related
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Root Veggie Gratin
Root Veggie Gratin
Equipment
- 1 Mandoline slicer (For even, thin slices)
- 1 9x13 inch baking dish (Glass works best to show layers)
- 1 Medium saucepan (To heat cream mixture)
- 1 Sharp chef's knife (For slicing vegetables)
- 1 Vegetable peeler (A sharp one makes prep faster)
- 1 Aluminum foil (For covering during baking)
Ingredients
Root Vegetables
- 2 large Russet potatoes - Peeled, thinly sliced
- 2 large Carrots - Peeled, thinly sliced
- 2 medium Parsnips - Peeled, thinly sliced
- 2 medium Turnips - Peeled, thinly sliced
- 1 large Sweet potato - Peeled, thinly sliced
- 1 small Rutabaga - Peeled, thinly sliced
- ½ medium Celeriac (celery root) - Optional, peeled, thinly sliced
Creamy Sauce
- 1½ cups Heavy cream - or half-and-half
- ½ cup Whole milk - or 2% milk
- 3 cloves Garlic - Minced
- 2 sprigs Fresh thyme - or 1 teaspoon dried
- 1 sprig Fresh rosemary - or ½ teaspoon dried
- 1 teaspoon Salt - or to taste
- ½ teaspoon Black pepper - Freshly ground
- ¼ teaspoon Ground nutmeg - Optional but classic
Cheese Topping
- 1 cup Gruyère cheese - Shredded
- ½ cup Parmesan cheese - Grated
- 1 tablespoon Butter - For greasing dish
Instructions
- Peel all root vegetables; slice ⅛ inch thick using a mandoline or sharp knife. Keep each type separate and pat dry with paper towels.
- In a saucepan, heat cream and milk over medium heat. Add garlic, thyme, rosemary, salt, pepper, and nutmeg. Simmer gently, remove from heat, and steep for 10 minutes. Remove herb sprigs before using.
- Butter your baking dish. Start with potatoes, slightly overlapping slices. Pour a little cream mixture, then layer the next vegetable. Continue layering with cream between each and press down gently.
- Cover tightly with foil and bake at 375°F (190°C) for 45 minutes until vegetables are tender.
- Remove foil, sprinkle Gruyère and Parmesan on top, and bake uncovered for 25-30 minutes until golden and bubbly.
- Let the gratin rest for 15 minutes before slicing to allow layers to set. Serve warm.
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