Bacon and Gruyère Green Bean Casserole
Updated Nov. 1, 2023

- Total Time
- 1¼ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2pounds green beans, trimmed and broken in half
- Salt, to taste
- 6slices bacon
- 2shallots, finely chopped (about ½ cup)
- ½pound mushrooms, sliced
- 1cup crème fraîche
- ⅓cup heavy cream
- 6ounces Gruyère, shredded (1½ cups)
- 2teaspoons chopped fresh marjoram or 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves (optional)
- ½cup bread crumbs (or crumbled Ritz crackers)
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 375 degrees. Use 1 tablespoon butter to grease a 2- to 2½-quart baking dish or gratin.
- Step 2
Bring a large pot of water to a boil, salt generously and add green beans. Boil for 5 minutes and transfer to a bowl of cold water. Drain on a kitchen towel.
- Step 3
Heat a large, heavy skillet over medium heat and add bacon. Cook until crispy, about 10 to 12 minutes. Remove to paper towels and let cool.
- Step 4
Discard all but 2 tablespoons of bacon grease in pan and return to heat. Add shallots and cook, stirring, until they begin to soften, 2 to 3 minutes. Add mushrooms and turn heat up slightly. Cook, stirring and scraping the bottom of pan, until mushrooms begin to sweat. Add salt to taste and cook until tender, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat.
- Step 5
In a large bowl whisk together crème fraîche and cream. Stir in Gruyère. Add green beans, mushrooms and shallots, and marjoram or thyme. Crumble in bacon. Add salt and pepper to taste and stir everything together until beans are well coated. Transfer to baking dish.
- Step 6
Melt remaining butter and toss with bread crumbs. Sprinkle evenly over top of casserole. Bake 30 minutes, until bread crumbs are golden brown and casserole is bubbling. Remove from heat, let sit until bubbles subside, and serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Here in the Midwest, this recipe has one serious mistake. (Insert smiley face icon here!) This is the one time of the year many of us ever eat/have in our kitchen those very processed things called "French Fried Onions." Ritz crackers? Bread crumbs? Why even bother to make this!?!
A few notes:
6 oz grated Gruyère made 2 cups for me, not 1.5 cups.
Creme fraîche at my supermarket comes in 7 oz containers, so I add 1 oz (2 Tbsp) sour cream to make up the difference.
Next time I'm going to use a salad spinner to dry the cooked beans before using a towel for the last bit.
I suggest cutting the beans to 1"-2" lengths instead of just in half: easier to eat.
The recipe filled a 3-qt pot and would not have fit a 2.5-qt pot (and certainly not a 2-qt pot).
My mother's recipe, in Ohio 50 years ago, did not contain canned soup or canned mushrooms or ritz crackers. It was made from scratch with fresh mushrooms, fresh frenched string beans, a cream sauce made with cheddar cheese, no bacon, and crunchy water chestnuts. A delicious recipe, that the food companies ruined so no one even remembers what the original was! Ms. Shulman has gotten us most of the way back to the original. Thank you, but I'll still make my mother's version.
I’ve made this recipe for the last 5 thanksgivings, everyone always loves it. I 1.5x the recipe for our family, only two adjustments I make (after a few tweaks) is using plain greek yogurt in addition to the 7 Oz of creme fraiche I get at the store. I also add a little extra cheese cause what could that hurt?
This was delicious -- I "veganized" it. No bacon. Used all non dairy products --Earth balance non-soy "butter", Califa non-dairy Heavy cream and Coconut plain unsweetened yogurt. And non-dairy snoked gouda for the gruyere. Also used about a pound of baby bellas. I topped it with seasoned panko and nutritional yeast. It was even better the second day!
I’ve made this several Times successfully and this last year it split! Any ideas what happened?