Shepherd’s Pie Recipe (2024)

By Samantha Seneviratne

Shepherd’s Pie Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 30 minutes
Rating
4(4,796)
Notes
Read community notes

Shepherds are in the business of herding sheep, which makes lamb the most obvious choice for this shepherd's pie recipe, but ground beef is a tasty addition. The combination of ground lamb and ground beef is earthy and robust, and keeps lamb’s gaminess in check. Ground lamb tends to be fatty, so this recipe uses lean ground beef to compensate. If you prefer all beef, be sure to use something with a little more fat (and call it a cottage pie, if you like). And if you prefer all lamb, you may want to skim off some of the extra fat after browning the meat.

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Ingredients

Yield:6 servings

  • 2tablespoons kosher salt, plus more for seasoning
  • pounds (about 3 to 4 large) russet potatoes, peeled and quartered
  • 8tablespoons unsalted butter
  • ½cup whole milk
  • 1cup shredded aged white Cheddar
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 1small yellow onion, diced small (about 1¼ cups)
  • 2medium carrots, peeled and diced small (about 1¼ cups)
  • 4cloves garlic, minced
  • 4sprigs fresh thyme
  • 24-inch sprigs fresh rosemary
  • ¾pounds lean ground beef
  • ¾pounds ground lamb (or use all ground beef)
  • cup tomato paste
  • 1tablespoon all-purpose flour
  • ¾cup beef stock
  • 1cup fresh parsley, chopped

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

726 calories; 48 grams fat; 24 grams saturated fat; 2 grams trans fat; 16 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 46 grams carbohydrates; 5 grams dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 31 grams protein; 1073 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Shepherd’s Pie Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    In a large pot, bring a gallon of water and 2 tablespoons salt to a boil over high heat. Add potatoes to boiling water and boil for about 15 to 20 minutes, until soft; a knife should go in with almost no resistance.

  2. Step

    2

    In a small saucepan or a microwave oven, heat 6 tablespoons of the butter and milk together until butter melts. Drain potatoes well and return to pot. Using a masher or a ricer, mash hot potatoes until smooth. Mix in the hot butter mixture, just until blended. Stir in the Cheddar. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Cover and set aside.

  3. Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Melt the remaining 2 tablespoons of the butter in a large oven-safe skillet with high sides or an enameled cast-iron braiser (at least 2½-quart capacity) over medium heat. Add the onion, carrot, garlic, thyme and rosemary and cook, stirring often with a wooden spoon, until the onions are translucent and the carrots are just tender, about 10 minutes. Add the beef and the lamb and cook, breaking the meat up with a spoon, until it is no longer pink. (At this point, you can drain off some of the excess fat if you like.) Season the mixture to taste with salt and pepper.

  4. Step

    4

    Add the tomato paste and stir, cooking until it is well combined, another 2 to 3 minutes. Sprinkle the flour over the mixture and cook for 1 minute. Add the beef stock and cook, stirring, until the liquid has thickened slightly. Stir in the parsley and remove the thyme and rosemary stems. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

  5. Step

    5

    Top the meat mixture with dollops of the mashed potatoes then spread them out over the top. (Or transfer the meat mixture to a 3-quart casserole dish and spread into an even layer, and top with potatoes.) Transfer to the oven and, if the mixture is at the top edges of your pan, set a foil-lined baking sheet underneath the pan to catch any drips. Bake the pie until the potatoes have begun to brown and the edges are bubbling, about 30 minutes. Let stand at room temperature for 15 minutes before serving.

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Stacey K

I added a few shakes of Worcestershire sauce, as a previous poster suggested, plus 1.25 C of frozen peas with the carrots and onions.

Jessica

Cheese in the mash I have never heard of. Shredded cheese on top is characteristic of a Cumberland pie, but I always add it to my cottage (beef) or shepherds’ (lamb) pies too. Other than that, Worcester sauce essential, garlic unnecessary (it’s in the Worcester sauce) and peas best served on the side. A fat tablespoon of wholegrain mustard is great in the meat sauce, too, if you have it to hand.

Jonathan

Always found shepherd’s pie lacking in many ways but this is a winner. Added celery (same amount as carrot) which increased the veggie count and reduced the carrot sweetness. Now a standard in our home.

gf

To keep fat low, don't add cheese to the potatoes, it's not necessary and isn't really a problem for flavour. You can always sprinkle grated cheese on top of the potatoes if you want. If you drag a fork over the mashed potato topping, it will give it a nice crisping and looks nice. Definitely let it stand before serving or else you get a gloopy mess.

Suellen

What have you named this new recipe?

Chris

I always use leftover roast lamb in my version. Get a bigger leg of lamb than you need when doing a Sunday roast and keep the leftovers in the fridge for a Shepherd’s Pie a few days later. I don’t have a meat grinder, so I chop the lamb into a coarse dice by hand while the vegetables (onion, carrot and celery) are cooking. Worcestershire Sauce is a must, while cheese in the mashed potatoes is definitely not traditional.

LFK

Tasty! Modifications: 1) Instead of 3/4 cup stock, boiled alcohol off 1 cup dry red wine, added 1 cup beef stock, reduced all to 3/4 cup; 2) Added 1 Tbs of worcestershire sauce to the reduction; 3) Mixed in a cup of frozen peas prior to adding the potato layer, which I scored w a fork. Cooked everything in a 12" cast iron skillet which had plenty of room. My 10" skillet volume was 2.25 qts. At 30 min., the edge browned nicely, but center was pasty. Fixed by a few minutes under the broiler.

Trent

My Only addition to this recipe was I added Worcestershire sauce. It made all the difference. This was easy and utterly delicious.

Amy

I put cauliflower in with the mashed potatoes so used less potatoes. Next time, I will only use cauliflower.I used olive oil and the potato water to mash them together instead of butter and milk.I substituted Parmesan cheese for the cheddar.It was really good family friendly, feed a crowd food.

Amanda

This was fantastic! I made some changes, based on all the recommendations here: Added half bag each of frozen peas and frozen corn right before adding potatoes on top, used Yukon golds instead of russets, doubled the cheese in the potatoes, brushed the top with melted butter, added the 2-3 shakes of Worcestershire to the meat, drained about half a cup of fat out, used 1# each of ground lamb and 90/10 ground beef. I will not be waiting until next St Patrick's day to make it again!

Catherine

I vegetarian-ized this recipe with the following changes:+1 carrot+8 oz porcini mushroomssubs. med. onion for small onion+1 cup peas+2.5 tbsp vegetarian worchestire saucesubs. vegetable Better than Bullion for beef broth+10 oz Beyond Beef Beefy CrumblesOmit lamb and beefIt turned out very well! I'll be making this again, perhaps swapping turnips for the potatoes.

April

I've made Shepherd's Pie for years, and fancied an alternate way of doing it. I did the potatoes as suggested, but for the meat, I fried 4 rashers of good quality bacon for the fat. I also didn't add the stock. Instead I added 14.5oz of chopped tomatoes. I did add Worcestershire to the veggies when they were almost done. I also added frozen peas. Its now cooking so I will report back when its done. Oh! And a tip from a Brit... score the potatoes with a fork. It helps to brown.

Geoff G

Added peas and mushrooms, and a turnip to the potatoes. Delish!

Zach

Substituted a cauliflower mash for the potatoes. A nice healthful twist to the recipe. Obviously not quite as delicious as mashed potatoes but still really good. I would definitely make again.

Cyndi

I added Worcestershire (1 tb.), whole grain mustard (1 tb.) and frozen peas (3/4 c.) as suggested by others. Instead of cheddar, I used parmesan (2 generous tbs.) in the mashed potatoes and on the top (4 generous tbs.) for a good crisp. Next time, I'll add a little more Worcestershire. It was delicious.

Richard X

A French Canadian version of this, called “paté chinois”, uses creamed corn between the layers of meat and mashed potatoes. Mustard is the preferred condiment.

RebeccaF

I made this vegetarian by subbing 1 pound Beyond Beef and adding 4 oz of diced crimini mushrooms to the carrots and onions. Used veggie stock instead of beef. I also added 2 tbsp vegan worcester sauce after the tomato paste to up the "umami" factor. Comforting, easy, and delicious!

Imp

Made this last night with a few of the modifications in comments. Added peas and Worcestershire sauce. I found that 1/3 c of tomato paste was way too intense. Next time I'll add 2-3 T. I put a little shredded cheddar on top, but I'll omit next time. I used dried herbs and swapped out Rosemary in favor of Marjoram. It was good on a cold night. I'll make it again.

Aleta

I heavily adulterated this recipe based on what I had on hand, but still followed recipe for some guidelines. The end result was FANTASTIC. No herbs other than parsley and added that right at the end of cooking. I had frozen corn and some carrots in the fridge, and red onion instead of white, so that was my veggie mix. I did not have worcestershire sauce to add as some commenters mentioned, but I made my own and did not regret adding a hearty splash, recipe from Little House Living.

lynda

Used only beef and added Kitchen Bouquet to give sauce more depth. Next time I will also add rutabaga / swede and celery, to round out the classic cottage pie flavors.

LaSalt

Just made this tonight with ground lamb, which was not too fatty. Cut down on the butter overall and used chicken stock in the mash and with the lamb. Added peas, carrots, not too much tomato paste. Really tasty. I think it can be as flavorful as you want to make it!

susan

Can this be made ahead of time? Maybe in the morning and final bake in the evening before guests arrive?

rmary

Add some sliced carrots when sautéing the onions, then add some shelled edamame. Use half puréed steamed cauliflower, half potatoes (or all cauliflower). Adjust the butter, omit mixing in cheese; a little on top is plenty. Flavors aged well for our weekday lunches. I’ll definitely add it to the winter lunch rotation.

brittainy

Can you make this with instant mashed potatoes?

Richard X

Of course. You can use instant mashed potatoes or packaged mashed potatoes. But don't expect the deliciousness of homemade mashed potoatoes.

Rachel

Yummy! Followed the recipe but used only ground beef. Next time, though, I’ll definitely drain the far.

MauraJS

I haven't made a Shepherd's Pie for a bazillion years. (Way before I assigned value to marvelous recipes and the joys of food preparation as experienced when I am not in a hurry and open a bottle of wine at the onset.) I offered to make some food for a friend who is scheduled for surgery in a few days. She requested a "comforting dish, like Shepherd's Pie." Alrighty then! I decided to make this recipe for myself, as a trial run. I made it EXACTLY as written. It was amazing!!! The End.

cooking tips

Use beef only, add Worcestershire sauce

NHchickens

Made twice, first minus beef stock (mine was plenty moist) and less tomato paste. Added bit of Worcestershire sauce as recommended by others. Delish, but parsley is major yuck factor. Second time nondairy with olive oil and vegan marg in the potatoes. Frozen peas as sub for the parsley was a big win. Those who say not enough flavor, I don't understand. Very tasty!!!

jane

I found 1/3 c. of tomato paste to be too much - made it taste very “ketchup-ey” and it overwhelmed the other flavors. Paprika and Worcestershire sauce are nice additions.

Richard X

Tomato paste is sometimes sold double concentrate or triple concentrate. That might account for the "too much" tomato that you report.

Tess

Adding a generous shake of paprika and cumin to the meat mixture kicked this recipe into the sublime

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Shepherd’s Pie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you thicken shepherd's pie filling? ›

The easiest way to thicken shepherd's pie filling is by sprinkling a few tablespoons of flour into the ground beef mixture as it cooks before adding it to the baking dish. The starch in the flour will absorb the extra liquid and create a thick gravy.

What is shepherd's pie normally made of? ›

It's traditionally made with minced meat (usually ground lamb), gravy, vegetables, and mashed potatoes. You may also hear it called "cottage pie." The two terms are used interchangeably, but technically traditional shepherd's pie is made with ground lamb and traditional cottage pie is made with ground beef.

How do you keep shepherd's pie from falling apart? ›

How do you keep shepherds pie from falling apart? The eggs in the mashed potatoes help keep the pie together. You should also make sure to spread the potatoes and press down a bit.

Why do you put flour in shepherd's pie? ›

After this, we cook the ground / mince meat – traditionally lamb but equally delicious made with beef – before adding flour (which thickens the sauce) and gravy flavourings (beef broth, tomato paste, beef bouillon cube, Worcestershire sauce and red wine which is optional).

What is the best thickener for pie filling? ›

Very often flour or cornstarch is used, but in certain instances tapioca, arrowroot and potato starch can also help achieve the desired consistency. Tapioca starch is preferable for products that will be frozen because it will not break down when thawed. We like tapioca in blueberry, cherry or peach pies.

How can I improve my pie filling? ›

Enhance Flavor with Spices: Adjust the flavor with spices and seasonings. For apple pie filling, add cinnamon, nutmeg, or a pinch of cloves to achieve a homemade taste. Simmer the filling with these spices for a few minutes to meld the flavors.

Why is my shepherd's pie soggy? ›

Classic shepherd's pie is made with ground lamb, gravy, mashed potatoes, and veggies like peas, corn, celery, and carrots. Why is my shepherd's pie soggy? Avoid a soggy pie by simmering the meat mixture for at least 8 minutes. Be sure to cook down the mixture to remove excess moisture.

Does shepherd's pie have egg in it? ›

Dominic Chapman's shepherd's pie recipe offers a few secrets on how to get it perfect. Adding egg yolks to the mash, which will give the top layer a golden crust, is just one of them.

What is a fun fact about shepherd's pie? ›

According to the Oxford Companion to Food, once upon a time, Scotland made its shepherd's pies with pastry instead of mashed potatoes. Indian cooks once considered shepherd's pie to be a perfect dish for tiffin (a word used to mean a light snack in British India).

How is shepherd's pie originally made? ›

And, by doing so, the humble shepherd's pie was born. Originally, the dish contained a pastry shell at the bottom, top, or both. Over time, this morphed into potato slices at the bottom and top of savory minced lamb meat, until it eventually became a topping of mashed potatoes.

What is the best bakeware for shepherd's pie? ›

A large oven proof Le Creuset, metal handled frying pan or enamel coated cast iron pan works well. Or you can cook your meat in a frying pan and then transfer it to a ceramic or glass lasagna dish to bake. Alternatively you can make individual pies in ramekins or small ovenproof dishes.

Why does my potato sink in shepherds pie? ›

Residual moisture from the potatoes will drip into the beef below as it cooks, and too much of it will cause the potatoes to eventually sink. Aside from ridding your potatoes of excess moisture before you mash them, it also helps to cool the beef down, BBC Good Food shares.

How do you keep mash from sinking in shepherds pie? ›

To stop the mash sinking into the filling, allow the meat to cool before topping with the mashed potato. Freeze in individual ovenproof dishes for an easy meal for one.

How do you thicken shepherd's pie without tomato paste? ›

Add in the flour and wine.

Stir in the flour to help thicken the sauce. Then add the wine, and scrape the bottom of the pan with your wooden spoon to loosen any of those tasty brown bits.

Why do Irish people eat shepherd's pie? ›

Sometime in the 18th century, a dish called “cottage pie” came about somewhere in the vast expanse of the United Kingdom and Ireland. It seems to have originated as a way for folks to make use of leftovers, in order to avoid waste, both of the food and money varieties.

What to do if pie filling is runny after baking? ›

But if you bake your pie and it's STILL runny try letting it cool down (if you haven't yet) and it will likely thicken as it cools, put it back in the oven again to activate the thickener or drain off some of the liquid off and then put it back in the oven.

How do you thicken shepherd's pie without cornstarch? ›

Arrowroot Powder – If you're following the Paleo Diet then Arrowroot Powder is a great alternative to using cornstarch to thicken gravies and sauces.

Why did my pie filling is too runny? ›

If you slice the pie too soon , it just won't set. Why did my blueberry pie turn out runny? Without knowing your method or ingredients its hard to say. My best guess is you didn't use enough thickener( flour or cornstarch) in the filling, or you didnt cook long enough, or you cut it before cooling sufficiently.

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