Ground beef is one of the cheapest proteins at any grocery store, but a single pound disappears fast when you’re not cooking it right. These 11 recipes are built around dishes that bulk out a pound with pantry staples: pasta, potatoes, canned tomatoes, beans, and frozen vegetables. Each one feeds a family without leaning on extra meat, and most come together in under 45 minutes. From a 25-minute tater tot casserole to a slow-built Bolognese, the range covers every kind of tight-budget weeknight.

Big Mac Sloppy Joe

Ready in 35 minutes, Big Mac Sloppy Joes turn one pound of ground beef into sandwiches for up to six people by leaning on the bun and a creamy Big Mac-style sauce made from mayo, pickle relish, and a splash of vinegar. The beef gets layered with cheddar, shredded lettuce, and sliced pickles on toasted hamburger buns. It hits every flavor note of the drive-through version without leaving the house. A solid pick for Friday night when everyone wants something fun and the budget is tight.
Get the Recipe: Big Mac Sloppy Joe
Cowboy Casserole

Feeds six from a single pound of beef, Cowboy Casserole Recipe stretches the meat with a full package of tater tots, a cup of corn, and crushed roasted tomatoes, all seasoned with taco seasoning and blanketed in Mexican shredded cheese. It bakes in 37 minutes in one dish. The tater tots soak up the seasoned beef layer underneath while the cheese melts on top, so every scoop has crunch, heat, and richness. Serve it straight from the pan on a weeknight when cleanup needs to be fast.
Get the Recipe: Cowboy Casserole
Tater Tot Casserole

At just 25 minutes start to finish, Tater Tot Casserole is the shortest recipe in this collection. A cream of mushroom soup base keeps the beef layer saucy while grated cheddar and a full package of tater tots form the top. The ingredient list is short: ground beef, onion, garlic, Worcestershire, soup, cheese, and tots. No draining, no layering fuss. This one works especially well for weeknights when dinner needs to be on the table before anyone starts complaining.
Get the Recipe: Tater Tot Casserole
Cheeseburger Casserole

Elbow macaroni is what makes Cheeseburger Casserole such a strong budget move: one pound of lean ground beef feeds six people once it’s combined with 1.5 cups of pasta, onion, Worcestershire, mustard, ketchup, and two cups of cheddar. Total time is 45 minutes. The flavor profile is exactly a cheeseburger, but baked into a pasta dish that portions out cleanly and reheats well for lunch the next day.
Get the Recipe: Cheeseburger Casserole
Chili Relleno Casserole

Built around whole baked green chilies layered with ground beef and Monterey Jack, Chili Relleno Casserole stretches a pound of meat with refried beans and corn tortilla chips inside the bake itself, not just on the side. An egg-and-milk custard holds it all together as it sets in the oven over one hour. The result is close to a deconstructed chile relleno: smoky, cheesy, and filling without needing a second protein. Works well for a weekend dinner when you have a little more time than a weeknight.
Get the Recipe: Chili Relleno Casserole
Hamburger Soup

Thirty minutes and one pot is all it takes for Hamburger Soup to convert a pound of ground beef into a full meal for the week. The broth builds from beef broth, tomato paste, Worcestershire, and Italian seasoning, with diced potatoes and frozen mixed vegetables doing most of the volume work. Everything cooks together so the broth picks up the beef flavor while the vegetables make it genuinely filling. Serve it with bread and it stretches across two dinners without anyone noticing they’re eating leftovers.
Get the Recipe: Hamburger Soup
Beef Moussaka

The most layered recipe in the collection, Beef Moussaka uses eggplant and sliced potatoes to bulk out a pound of ground beef into a baked dish that feeds a crowd. The meat layer simmers with red wine, tomato paste, chopped tomatoes, and cinnamon before going between the vegetables, and a butter-and-flour béchamel tops the whole thing. One hour total. It takes more steps than the casseroles here, but it produces something that tastes genuinely special for a weeknight grocery budget.
Get the Recipe: Beef Moussaka
Cheeseburger Soup

Potatoes, carrots, celery, and two cups of shredded cheddar turn one pound of ground beef into a thick, filling soup that takes 35 minutes from start to finish. Cheeseburger Soup uses a butter-and-flour roux to build body, then finishes with milk and sour cream for a creamy base that tastes like a cheeseburger in bowl form. The vegetable content is high enough that the beef goes a long way per serving. A good option for cold nights when soup needs to actually be a meal.
Get the Recipe: Cheeseburger Soup
Mexican Spaghetti

Twelve ounces of spaghetti and a full cup of Monterey Jack make Mexican Spaghetti one of the most efficient one-pot dishes in this list: one pound of beef, taco seasoning, Rotel, tomato sauce, and beef broth all cook together in the same pan in 30 minutes. The pasta absorbs the seasoned broth as it cooks, so there’s no draining and the sauce clings to every strand. A weeknight dinner that reads as fun and different but costs the same as a basic pasta night.
Get the Recipe: Mexican Spaghetti
Sloppy Joe Casserole

Sloppy Joe Casserole takes the classic loose-meat flavor and bakes it under a Bisquick topping that cooks straight from the mix, no biscuit-making skills required. One pound of lean ground beef combines with onion, ketchup, and yellow mustard for the base layer, then the Bisquick-and-milk topping and a cup of shredded cheddar go over the top. Forty-five minutes, one baking dish, feeds the table. Good for families who want the comfort of sloppy joes without the mess of sandwiches.
Get the Recipe: Sloppy Joe Casserole
Spaghetti Bolognese

The longest recipe in the group at 40 minutes, Spaghetti Bolognese builds a proper Bolognese from one pound of ground beef with pancetta, onion, celery, carrot, white wine, tomato paste, San Marzano tomatoes, and a cup of whole milk stirred in at the end. The milk rounds out the acidity and keeps the sauce from tasting sharp. It makes enough sauce to coat a full pound of pasta, so the beef goes further than any other recipe here. Worth making on a Sunday when you have a few extra minutes and want leftovers that actually taste better the next day.
Get the Recipe: Spaghetti Bolognese