by Jessica | July 9, 2026 2:00 pm
Key Takeaways
I made these on a Tuesday when I had exactly four potatoes, half a bag of shredded cheddar, and no real plan for dinner. They ended up better than half the things I actually planned for, so now they show up whenever I’m too tired to think but still want something that feels like effort.
The idea is simple: thick potato slices, roasted until the edges go dark and crisp, then loaded with cheese and popped back in until it melts and browns a little at the tips. That’s it. No parboiling, no double-frying, no fifteen-step method. Just potatoes doing what potatoes do best when you leave them alone in a hot oven.
Russets work here for a reason beyond habit: they run about 79% water to 21% starch by weight, according to the Idaho Potato Commission, and that lower moisture is exactly what lets the outside go crisp instead of steaming in its own liquid. Yukon golds sit closer to the middle of that scale, which is why they crisp a little less but taste more like themselves once roasted.
Contents

Preheat the oven to 425°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment — the sugars in the potatoes will want to stick otherwise, and scrubbing a pan at 9pm is nobody’s idea of a good time.

Toss the potato[2] rounds with the olive oil, garlic powder, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper. Don’t overcrowd the pan; if the slices touch, they’ll steam instead of crisp, and you’ll end up with soft rounds instead of ones with a real edge to them.
Roast for 20 minutes, flip each round, then roast another 15. You’re looking for deep golden color on both sides, maybe a few spots that go almost brown. That’s flavor, not a mistake.
Pull the pan out, scatter cheese over every round, and put it back in just long enough for the cheese to melt and start to blister at the edges — usually 4 to 5 minutes. Watch it instead of setting a timer; ovens run differently and cheese goes from perfect to burnt fast.
Top with a small dollop of sour cream and the chopped chives. Serve them straight off the pan while the cheese is still stretchy.
Russets[3] crisp up better than waxy potatoes, but Yukon golds have more flavor on their own — I go back and forth depending on whether I want texture or taste to lead. Either works.
If you slice the potatoes thinner than ½ inch, they’ll cook faster but you lose that soft, almost mashed-potato center under the crisp top. Thicker than ¾ inch and the middle stays a little raw unless you add real time. Half an inch is the sweet spot I keep landing on.
Sharp cheddar matters more than people think. Mild cheddar melts fine but disappears into the background; sharp cheddar actually tastes like something once it’s browned.
These don’t reheat especially well — the crisp edges go soft in the microwave. If you’ve got leftovers, a few minutes back in a hot oven brings them mostly back, though never quite all the way.

No. The skin crisps up along with the cut edges and holds the round together better than a peeled one does. If you’d rather peel them, that’s fine too — it just changes the texture slightly, not the cook time.
Sharp cheddar is the one that keeps its flavor after browning. Gruyère and smoked gouda both work well too. Mild cheddar and mozzarella melt fine but taste mostly like salt once they’ve browned, so they’re not the best fit here.
Usually one of two things: the pan was overcrowded, so the rounds steamed instead of roasting, or the oven wasn’t fully preheated before they went in. Give them space on the pan and let the oven come all the way up to 425°F first.
You can slice and season the potatoes a few hours ahead and keep them covered in the fridge, but roast them fresh — the crisping only really works right out of a hot oven, and reheated rounds lose most of that edge.
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