My grandmother used to say that Easter dinner didn’t really start until the potatoes came out of the oven, all golden and crackling in their brown butter bath. This simple little trick—just three ingredients and a hot oven—was her secret to getting potatoes that were nutty, deeply flavored, and beautifully caramelized without any fuss. The butter is slowly browned on the stove until it smells toasty and rich, then poured over a pan of plain potatoes with a good pinch of salt. Into the oven they go, and out comes a glass casserole dish full of glistening, amber-coated potatoes that taste like they took all day, but really didn’t. It’s a very Midwestern kind of magic: humble ingredients, careful attention, and a recipe that shows up at every holiday, especially Easter, where it’s passed from one generation to the next.
These brown butter roasted potatoes are right at home beside a glazed ham, roast turkey, or a simple pork loin. I like to spoon some of the nutty butter from the bottom of the dish over the meat on each plate. They also pair nicely with buttered green beans, roasted carrots, or a simple lettuce salad to balance the richness. If you’re setting out an Easter buffet, tuck the glass casserole dish of potatoes near the main roast so guests can help themselves; they hold their heat well and taste just as good at room temperature, which makes them easy company for church schedules and family gatherings.
Oven-Baked 3-Ingredient Brown Butter Roasted Potatoes
Servings: 6
Ingredients
3 pounds small yellow or red potatoes, scrubbed and cut into 1 to 1 1/2-inch pieces
1 cup (2 sticks / 226 g) unsalted butter
2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
Directions
Heat the oven to 400°F (200°C). Place a 9x13-inch glass casserole dish on the middle rack while the oven heats so the dish gets hot.
Prepare the potatoes by scrubbing them well and cutting them into even 1 to 1 1/2-inch chunks. Pat them dry with a clean towel so they roast instead of steam.
Brown the butter: Place the unsalted butter in a medium, light-colored saucepan or skillet over medium heat. Let it melt completely, then continue cooking, swirling the pan often. The butter will foam, then the foam will subside. Watch closely as the milk solids on the bottom turn from pale to a deep golden brown and the butter smells nutty and toasty, 5 to 8 minutes total. As soon as it reaches a rich amber color, remove the pan from the heat so it doesn’t burn.
Carefully remove the hot glass casserole dish from the oven and set it on a heatproof surface. Add the cut potatoes to the hot dish and sprinkle evenly with the kosher salt.
Pour the warm brown butter over the potatoes, making sure to scrape in all the browned bits from the bottom of the saucepan—they carry most of the nutty flavor. Toss gently with a spatula or large spoon until every potato is coated in the brown butter and salt.
Spread the potatoes into an even layer in the glass dish so they have room to brown. Return the dish to the middle rack of the oven.
Roast the potatoes for 25 minutes, then carefully pull the dish out and stir the potatoes, turning them so new sides are exposed to the hot glass and butter. Spoon some of the brown butter from the bottom of the dish over the top as you stir.
Continue roasting for another 20 to 30 minutes, stirring once more if needed, until the potatoes are tender all the way through, deeply golden on the edges, and glossy with a nutty amber butter glaze. Total roasting time will be about 45 to 55 minutes, depending on your oven and the size of the potato pieces.
Taste a potato and add a pinch more salt if needed, tossing gently to coat. Serve the potatoes straight from the glass casserole dish while they’re hot and sizzling, making sure each serving gets some of the browned butter from the bottom.
Variations & Tips
For a slightly different feel while keeping the three-ingredient spirit, you can swap the type of potato: use baby red potatoes left in halves for a more rustic look, or Yukon Golds for an extra buttery texture. If you’d like a bit of contrast without adding more ingredients, cook the butter just to a medium brown for a lighter, gentler flavor, or go a shade darker for a more pronounced nutty taste—just be careful not to let it burn. To make ahead for a busy Easter morning, cut and dry the potatoes a few hours early and keep them in the fridge; brown the butter right before roasting so the kitchen fills with that toasty aroma as guests arrive. For extra crisp edges, give the potatoes a quick parboil in salted water for 5 to 7 minutes, drain well, rough up the edges in the colander, and then proceed with the brown butter roast. Leftovers reheat nicely in a hot skillet with a spoonful of any butter left in the dish, turning them into breakfast potatoes to serve with eggs the next day.