There’s something about the smell of bell peppers and beef bubbling together that just pulls everyone into the kitchen. Ground Beef Stuffed Pepper Casserole is that one-dish dinner that feels like a hug cheesy, hearty, and done without the fuss.
Last spring I started leaning hard on meals like this the kind where you brown the beef, dump everything in, and just let it go. Long evenings, that low-grade tired where even choosing what to cook feels like too much this is what I kept coming back to. After eight years shooting slow cooker and casserole food, I’ve learned that the dishes with the most visual payoff are always the ones that don’t demand much. One pan, melted cheese pulling apart in the spoon, rice soaking up all that savory tomato it photographs itself.

Ground Beef Stuffed Pepper Casserole Warm Comforting Way to Make Dinner Real
Ingredients
Notes
- Using an oven-proof skillet allows you to prepare and bake this entire meal in one dish. If not available, transfer the mixture to a 3.5-quart casserole dish before baking. For extra flavor, try fire-roasted diced tomatoes or Rotel instead of regular diced tomatoes. You can substitute ground beef with ground turkey or Italian sausage. Keep an eye on the rice; if it’s still firm after baking, add a splash of liquid and return to the oven for a few more minutes. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat with a microwave or on the stovetop. This casserole freezes well for up to 3 months — freeze in portions or as a whole, thaw overnight before reheating. For make-ahead convenience, prepare through step 3, cool, and refrigerate for up to 2 days; then continue from step 4 when ready to bake.

Why You’ll Love This Casserole
Here’s why this one keeps coming back into rotation: everything happens in a single pan, the rice cooks right inside the dish, and the cheese bubbles up under the broiler into something that honestly looks stunning. Low effort, minimal cleanup, and it doesn’t feel heavy perfect for those spring evenings when dinner still needs to feel like dinner.
It hits all the flavors of classic stuffed peppers savory beef, sweet bell peppers, tomato, rice without any of the careful scooping and stuffing. The kind of meal that earns a second helping before anyone even asks.
What You’ll Need
No specialty ingredients here this is a straight pantry-and-fridge situation. A few things worth noting before you start:
- Ground beef: Lean works best less draining, cleaner pan
- Bell peppers: One red, one green they soften beautifully and add color
- Long grain white rice: Goes in dry and cooks directly in the broth
- Beef broth: Carries all the savory flavor into the rice as it bakes
- Canned diced tomatoes: The base that ties everything together
- Shredded cheese: Cheddar, mozzarella, or both melted under the broiler at the end
- Worcestershire sauce and Italian seasoning: The quiet flavor builders
Note: You’ll need a 3.5-quart oven-proof skillet or a 9×13-inch casserole dish to take this from stovetop to oven without switching pans.
How to Make Ground Beef Stuffed Pepper Casserole
The whole thing moves in one direction stovetop first, then oven, then broiler. That broiler finish is what makes a casserole look like it came from somewhere special.
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Heat olive oil in your oven-proof skillet over medium-high heat and brown the ground beef, breaking it apart as it cooks. Drain the fat.
- Add the diced onion and bell peppers. Cook for 2–3 minutes until just softened.
- Stir in garlic, Italian seasoning, Worcestershire sauce, salt, and black pepper. Cook for 30 seconds, then add the canned diced tomatoes and stir.
- Add the rice and beef broth. Stir to combine, bring to a boil, then cover with a lid or foil.
- Bake covered for 20–25 minutes. Test the rice if it still has a crunch, add a splash of water and return to the oven for 5 more minutes.
- Remove the lid, sprinkle shredded cheese over the top, and broil for 3–5 minutes until melted and bubbling. Garnish with fresh parsley.
Can You Make This Casserole Ahead of Time?
Yes, and it’s genuinely useful on a busy week. Cook through step 3 the beef, peppers, and tomato base then cool and refrigerate for up to 2 days. When you’re ready, pick back up at step 4 with the rice and broth.
Pro Tip: The uncooked rice absorbs liquid fast, so always add the broth fresh when you’re ready to bake don’t let it sit overnight with the rice already in.
Storage and Simple Swaps
Leftovers hold up well and reheat without losing much texture. Here’s the full rundown:
- Fridge: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days
- Freezer: Freeze baked portions for up to 3 months thaw overnight before reheating
- Reheat: Microwave individual servings, or warm gently in a pot over medium-low heat
A few easy swaps worth trying:
- Swap regular diced tomatoes for fire-roasted or Rotel for extra depth
- Replace ground beef with ground turkey or ground Italian sausage
- Use a blend of cheddar and mozzarella for the best melt and pull
FAQs ( Ground Beef Stuffed Pepper Casserole )
Do I need to pre-cook the rice for stuffed pepper casserole?
No, the rice cooks directly in the pan with beef broth and diced tomatoes. Just add it uncooked and bake covered at 350 degrees F for 20-25 minutes.
Can I use cauliflower rice instead of regular rice?
Cauliflower rice is not listed in this recipe, so cook times and liquid amounts may need adjusting. Check a low-carb casserole resource for reliable guidance.
What color peppers are best for stuffed pepper casserole?
This one-pan meal uses one red and one green bell pepper for a balance of mild sweetness and classic savory flavor.
Can I freeze ground beef stuffed pepper casserole?
Yes, this dish freezes well for up to 3 months. Freeze it whole or in individual portions, and thaw overnight before reheating.
How long does stuffed pepper casserole last in the fridge?
Store leftovers in an airtight container and this meal will stay fresh in the fridge for up to 4 days.

This Ground Beef Stuffed Pepper Casserole comes together faster than you’d expect browned beef, sweet peppers, rice bubbling up in savory broth, and that broiler finish that pulls cheese into golden, melty perfection. Every time it comes out of the oven, it looks like you spent serious effort. You really didn’t. That’s the whole beautiful point.
A couple of things worth keeping in your back pocket: if you want deeper flavor with almost zero extra work, swap the regular diced tomatoes for fire-roasted it’s a small upgrade that makes the whole pan taste like you knew exactly what you were doing. And don’t skip the Worcestershire sauce. It’s one of those background notes you can’t quite name but would absolutely miss if it were gone. Leftovers reheat gently on the stovetop over medium-low, and honestly, the second day might be even better than the first.
Did you grow up eating stuffed peppers at someone’s kitchen table? There’s something about this dish that carries that same warmth familiar, filling, just right. If you make it, I’d love to see how yours turns out. Share a photo, leave a comment, or pass this along to a friend who needs an easy dinner win this week. Here’s to meals that help you find your rhythm again.