Cajun-Style Hash Brown Skillet

During all of our eating on a trip to New Orleans, we made kind of a funny discovery–when you order sausage for breakfast in New Orleans, you don’t get breakfast sausage, you get a big ol’ hunk of smoked sausage. And when you order a Cajun-Style Hash Brown Skillet in a (very) feeble attempt to offset the 3 beignets and hot chocolate you also ordered for breakfast, it also comes with smoked sausage. Luckily, it’s flavorful and delicious and awesome. This Cajun-Style Hash Brown Skillet is a fun diversion from traditional breakfast sausage hash brown skillet meals and one my family has on repeat year round.

Ingredients Needed

This is just a preview of ingredients and method, keep scrolling for full printable recipe.

  • Potatoes O’Brien – This is simply a frozen mix of cubed frozen hash brown potatoes, onions, and bell peppers. Cubed hash brown potatoes work as well, you’ll just need to add your own peppers and onions.
  • Butter – Always use real butter if you can!
  • Fresh garlic cloves
  • Andouille sausage – This Cajun smoked sausage is full of flavor. It’s a fully cooked sausage that is pretty widely available in grocery stores in the US. If you can’t find it, any smoked sausage will do.
  • Eggs
  • Cajun seasoning – Like Tony Chachere’s or Tabasco sauce.
  • Shredded cheese – Optional. We like Pepper jack or sharp cheddar.

How to Make a Cajun-Style Hash Brown Skillet

  1. To start, garlic and sliced sausage get a quick sauté in a buttered skillet. Then you’ll add your potatoes O’Brien and cook according to the package directions until the potatoes are crispy on the outside and tender on the inside. Season to taste with Cajun seasoning and/or Tabasco sauce, and remove from heat.
  2. Next you’ll make some indentations in the potato mixture and crack in some whole eggs, seasoning with Cajun seasoning as desired. That whole pan gets popped in the oven until the egg whites are cooked through and the yolks are warm but runny. If desired, add a little freshly shredded cheese in the last 5 minutes or so of cooking.
  3. Carefully spoon out of the hot skillet and enjoy immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make this without the sausage?

Yep. Replace it with a breakfast meat of your choice, or skip the meat all together.

Can I use fresh diced potatoes in this recipes?

You can, but they need a little prep work. They will need to be par-boiled before being cooked. You can follow the method in this Breakfast Potatoes recipe if all you have is fresh potatoes.

Can I add other things to this skillet meal?

Yep. If you’re a fan of veggies, this is a great place to pack them in. Add your favorite greens or mushrooms, meats, cheeses, etc.

Is Andouille sausage spicy?

Traditional Andouille is usually spicy. However, many mainstream brands mellow it down quite a bit for the average consumer.

Cajun-Style Hash Browns

5 from 5 votes
A yummy Cajun-Style breakfast bursting with flavor!
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Servings6 people

Ingredients

  • 20 ounces Potatoes O’Brien
  • 4 tablespoons butter
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 8 ounces Andouille or other smoked sausage sliced
  • 6 eggs or more if you want, especially if you want to scramble them
  • Cajun seasoning like Tony Chachere’s or Tabasco sauce
  • ½-1 cup shredded pepper jack or sharp cheddar optional

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350℉. In a 12" (or larger) oven-safe skillet (preferably cast-iron), heat the butter over slightly-hotter-than-medium heat. Melt the butter in the heated skillet and add the garlic and sliced sausage. Cook until the garlic is tender and fragrant. Add the potatoes and cook according to the package/recipe directions until crispy on the outside and tender inside. Season to taste with Cajun seasoning or Tabasco sauce. Remove from heat.
  • Using a spoon, make 6 evenly-spaced indentations into the potatoes. Carefully crack an egg into each well and, if desired, sprinkle lightly with Cajun seasoning or salt and Tabasco sauce. Bake in the preheated oven for 18-25 minutes or until the egg whites are completely cooked but the yolks are still runny (mine were done at exactly 20 minutes, but you want a little give or take in each direction). If adding cheese, do it in the last 5 minutes of cooking. Carefully spoon out of the skillet and serve immediately. Makes 6 servings.

Notes

  • This dish is best enjoyed fresh. If you do have leftovers, store in an airtight container in the refrigerator and enjoy within 2-3 days for best results.
  • If you want to plan ahead, you could cook the potato mixture through the step of adding eggs. When ready to eat, heat potato mixture in the microwave or on the stove top and then follow the egg directions for the oven, or top with freshly fried or poached eggs.
  • Scrambled egg variation: Instead of the runny egg, after you cook the hashbrowns, push them off to one side of the pan and reduce the heat to medium-low. Whisk 6-8 eggs, a splash of water, and a few dashes of Cajun seasoning or salt and Tabasco sauce together in a small bowl. Melt a tablespoon of butter on the cleared side of the skillet and slowly add the whisked eggs. Use a rubber spatula to drag the scrambled egg curds across the pan until the eggs are cooked. Combine the scrambled eggs with the potatoes and add cheese if using. When the cheese is melted, serve immediately.

Nutrition

Calories: 330kcal, Carbohydrates: 18g, Protein: 15g, Fat: 23g, Saturated Fat: 10g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g, Monounsaturated Fat: 8g, Trans Fat: 0.4g, Cholesterol: 216mg, Sodium: 451mg, Potassium: 462mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 1g, Vitamin A: 486IU, Vitamin C: 8mg, Calcium: 40mg, Iron: 2mg
Calories: 330kcal
Author: Our Best Bites
Cost: $10
Did You Make This Recipe?Snap a picture, and hashtag it #ourbestbites. We love to see your creations on our Instagram @ourbestbites!


For the potatoes, you can also try this recipe and add in a green or red pepper (or half of each).

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Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. Quick question: is tony what’s-his-name’s creole seasoning the same as Cajun? I checked my cupboard and all I’ve got is the creole stuff. Thanks a bajillion for all your amazing recipes and fun posts. You gals are my absolute favorite!

    1. Yep, same thing! I just use Tony What’s His Face as an example because it’s cheap and easy to find and it’s something you’ll find in pretty much every Louisiana kitchen. 🙂

  2. 5 stars
    I thought I was the only one who felt that way about eggs so I was literally laughing out loud reading this. And as for the chickens, we just moved to the country and got our kiddos 6 baby chicks for Easter. (For the eggs not the meat.) My rule is any animals at my house will never be food, I’m a horrible farmer lol. I just made this for dinner and the problem I had was with mushy potatoes, I could not get them to brown and crisp. Is a cast iron skillet the secret to that? I used a stainless one. Other than that it was a good and easy weeknight dinner. By the way, according to my husband I’m the best cook ever (thanks to your site 🙂 so thank you!

    1. Jen, that’s too funny! So a cast-iron skillet helps. You could also substitute some or all of the butter with canola oil and make sure the skillet temp is around medium-high. Try to handle the potatoes as little as possible and that should really help. 🙂

  3. This Cajun menu is amazing. The eggs are perfect.
    I don’t have any cast-iron skillets. Wish my stainless saute pan will do the same job well.
    Very excited to try.

  4. I love all Cajun food, and especially look forward to our vacations to New Orleans! Luckily living in Texas, we can get Andouille sausage at all our local stores!

  5. Made this for our “hubby has graduated and got a job teaching for this fall” celebratory breakfast. Delicious!!!!! And soooo full now. 🙂

  6. The eggs are beautiful! Much like what I get every day from my chickens. I don’t eat my chickens, yet. I do love having fresh eggs. They taste great and make everything I make with them taste better. That dish looks great too.

  7. The scrambled egg version of this has me droolin’ on the keyboard, and I just finished dinner, lol!

  8. This looks amazing…I wish I wasn’t at work because I would SO make this right now and I’m starving! AND I have all the ingredients at home. Why? Why do I do this to myself? During LUNCH time no less… LOL

    Thanks for this post! It’s yet another dish to add on my things to try. 🙂

  9. Looks great! mmm I love everything from new Orleans and inspired by new Orleans. I just got a new cast iron skillet, I’ll have to give this a try