The essential elements that define a casserole are the baking method and cookware that chefs use. Follow the history of the ubiquitous dish and get some inspiration for a casserole or two of your own.
The term “casserole” can refer to any dish prepared in a casserole dish—essentially a deep, wide baking dish—and baked in the oven. A casserole can have layers, as in the case of an Italian lasagna or a deep-dish pizza, or composed of some evenly distributed combination of veggies, a protein, and a starchy binder.
A casserole is often a one-pot meal that involves combining the ingredients in an oven-safe dish and baking them.
The etymology of “casserole” likely dates back to the Greek “kuathion,” meaning “little cup.” The word eventually morphed into the Medieval Latin “cattia” and settled on “cassole” or “casserole,” the French diminutive of “casse”—essentially meaning “pan.” By the eighteenth century, the English-speaking world used the word “casserole” to refer to a dish of cooked rice with a meaty filling baked in the oven.
Casserole-style cooking grew in popularity because it was convenient and easy, allowing you to cook and serve a meal in the same dish. Home cooks could essentially use a low oven as a slow cooker, leaving a casserole to cook for an extended period.
The convenience factor was responsible for the casserole’s resurgence in the twentieth century, when the introduction of processed and canned foods made it possible to combine already prepared components into a semi-homemade weeknight dinner.
Since the world of casseroles is so far-reaching, there’s no one type, but the following characteristics roughly define casserole-style cooking:
The casserole method spans many cuisines and regions. If you tinker with a recipe enough, it’s hard to find a dish that you can’t modify into a casserole. With that stipulation, here are some of the more commonly known casseroles:
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