Taco Stuffed Baked Potatoes – Easy Ground Beef Dinner

Taco Stuffed Baked Potatoes

Taco stuffed baked potatoes are the kind of dinner that feels familiar the moment it lands on the table, yet still manages to surprise people because the combination is so satisfying. You get a fluffy baked potato with a crisp skin, a hearty layer of seasoned ground beef, melted cheese, cool sour cream, fresh toppings, and just enough taco spice to keep every bite lively. It is comfort food with structure, and it works especially well on nights when you want something filling, practical, and easy to build from ingredients you probably already have.

This recipe is also useful because it solves a common problem: what to do when you want a ground beef dinner that does not feel like another plain skillet meal. The potato acts like an edible bowl, so it holds the taco filling without getting soggy, and the contrast between creamy, salty, spicy, and fresh toppings keeps the dish interesting from start to finish. It is simple enough for a weeknight, but it still feels complete enough to serve to a family without needing a second main dish.

Why This Dinner Works

This recipe works because it combines two things people already love: baked potatoes and taco night. The potato gives you a sturdy base that is filling on its own, while the taco beef brings salt, spice, and richness that make each bite feel complete. Because the filling is spooned into the potato after baking, you do not need to build a separate sauce or worry about the dish falling apart. The toppings are easy to adjust, which makes the recipe friendly for families with different tastes. One person can add extra salsa and jalapeños, while another can keep it simple with cheese and sour cream. That flexibility is part of what makes this meal such a practical weeknight option.

The Science Behind Taco Potatoes

Baked potatoes taste so good here because their starch changes during baking. As the potato heats through, the starch granules absorb water, swell, and become light and fluffy inside while the skin dries and turns crisp. Ground beef develops deeper flavor when it browns in the pan, because the surface proteins participate in the Maillard reaction, which creates savory browned notes that taco seasoning can cling to. The cheese melts into the hot beef and potato because fat and moisture both help carry flavor across the filling. You can read more about potatoes on Wikipedia: potato.

Chef’s Tip

Bake the potatoes directly on the oven rack or on a wire rack set over a sheet pan. Air circulation around the potato helps the skin dry out evenly, which gives you a better texture than wrapping them in foil, and it keeps the inside fluffy instead of dense and wet. If you want extra crisp skins, brush them lightly with oil and salt before baking.

The Lineup

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Here is everything you need to build the potatoes and the taco filling.

  • 4 large russet potatoes.
  • 1 pound ground beef.
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil, if needed.
  • 1 packet taco seasoning, or homemade taco spice blend.
  • 1/2 cup water.
  • 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese.
  • 1/2 cup sour cream.
  • 1/2 cup diced tomatoes.
  • 1/4 cup sliced green onions.
  • 1/4 cup chopped cilantro.
  • Salsa and jalapeños, optional for serving.

How to Make Taco Stuffed Baked Potatoes

Step 1 – Bake the potatoes: Scrub the potatoes clean, dry them well, and prick them with a fork a few times. Bake them until the skins are crisp and the centers feel soft when squeezed gently with a towel. This gives you the base for the filling and ensures the potato is fluffy enough to hold the taco beef without turning heavy or gummy.

Step 2 – Cook the beef: While the potatoes bake, place the ground beef in a skillet over medium heat. Break it up as it cooks until it is browned and no pink remains. Drain off excess fat if needed, then stir in the taco seasoning and water. Let it simmer until the sauce thickens and coats the meat well. This keeps the filling savory and spoonable instead of watery.

Step 3 – Prep the potatoes: Once the potatoes are done, cut a slit down the center of each one and gently squeeze the ends to open them. Fluff the inside with a fork so the steam escapes and the potato becomes light. This little step makes a big difference because it gives the beef a soft, airy base to sit on.

Step 4 – Add the filling: Spoon the taco beef directly into the center of each potato. Add the shredded cheese while the potato and beef are still hot so the cheese melts slightly and binds the top layer together. The goal is to build a filling that feels generous but still balanced, so every bite includes potato, meat, and cheese.

Step 5 – Finish with toppings: Add sour cream, tomatoes, green onions, and cilantro over the top. Serve with salsa or jalapeños if you want more brightness or heat. The cold toppings help balance the richness of the beef and cheese, while the fresh herbs keep the dish from feeling too heavy.

3 Mistakes That Ruin Taco Potatoes

Undercooking the potatoes: If the potato is still firm in the center, it will not open well and the filling will sit on top instead of sinking in. Bake until the middle is fully soft.

Using watery beef filling: If the taco mixture is too loose, it will soak into the potato and make it soggy. Simmer until the beef mixture is thick enough to spoon cleanly.

Skipping the final toppings: The toppings are not decorative. They balance the richness and make the dish taste brighter and more complete.

What to Serve with Taco Stuffed Baked Potatoes

These potatoes can stand on their own, but they also work well with simple sides that keep the meal comfortable and family-friendly. A crisp green salad, roasted corn, or a bowl of our Clam Chowder Recipe — Thick, Creamy New England Classic can turn the dinner into something more complete without adding much work. For another hearty dinner idea that keeps the same comfort-food feel, serve this alongside our Eggplant Parmesan Recipe — Crispy, Cheesy and Classic, or keep the meal plan going with Leftover Spaghetti Recipes — 5 Easy Ways to Reinvent Last Night’s Pasta when you want an easy follow-up recipe later in the week.

2a82485758a718001d46134f041a22ddChef Amber

Easy Taco Stuffed Baked Potatoes with Ground Beef

Fluffy baked potatoes stuffed with juicy taco-seasoned ground beef, melted cheddar, sour cream, and fresh toppings. A satisfying weeknight dinner with bold taco flavor in every bite.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 4
Course: dinner
Cuisine: American, Mexican
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

  • 4 large russet potatoes.
  • 1 pound ground beef.
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil if needed.
  • 1 packet taco seasoning or homemade taco spice blend.
  • 1/2 cup water.
  • 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese.
  • 1/2 cup sour cream.
  • 1/2 cup diced tomatoes.
  • 1/4 cup sliced green onions.
  • 1/4 cup chopped cilantro.
  • Salsa and jalapeños optional for serving.

Method
 

  1. How to Make Taco Stuffed Baked Potatoes
  2. Step 1 – Bake the potatoes: Scrub the potatoes clean, dry them well, and prick them with a fork a few times. Bake them until the skins are crisp and the centers feel soft when squeezed gently with a towel. This gives you the base for the filling and ensures the potato is fluffy enough to hold the taco beef without turning heavy or gummy.
  3. Step 2 – Cook the beef: While the potatoes bake, place the ground beef in a skillet over medium heat. Break it up as it cooks until it is browned and no pink remains. Drain off excess fat if needed, then stir in the taco seasoning and water. Let it simmer until the sauce thickens and coats the meat well. This keeps the filling savory and spoonable instead of watery.
  4. Step 3 – Prep the potatoes: Once the potatoes are done, cut a slit down the center of each one and gently squeeze the ends to open them. Fluff the inside with a fork so the steam escapes and the potato becomes light. This little step makes a big difference because it gives the beef a soft, airy base to sit on.
  5. Step 4 – Add the filling: Spoon the taco beef directly into the center of each potato. Add the shredded cheese while the potato and beef are still hot so the cheese melts slightly and binds the top layer together. The goal is to build a filling that feels generous but still balanced, so every bite includes potato, meat, and cheese.
  6. Step 5 – Finish with toppings: Add sour cream, tomatoes, green onions, and cilantro over the top. Serve with salsa or jalapeños if you want more brightness or heat. The cold toppings help balance the richness of the beef and cheese, while the fresh herbs keep the dish from feeling too heavy.

Notes

Nutrition Facts (per serving): Carbs: 45g | Protein: 28g | Fat: 16g
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