Smothered stuffed bell peppers made with seasoned ground beef, soaked rice, and caramelized onions -- all baked in a creamy tomato sauce until the cheddar is bubbly and the sauce has thickened around the peppers. Soaking the rice ahead of time means no precooking, and pre-roasting the peppers keeps everything on track without a lot of extra effort.

Be honest -- do you actually eat the bell pepper or do you quietly push it to the side? I won't judge.
Either way, this recipe works. The filling is what most people are after anyway (no?), and the pepper is really just the vessel. And that creamy, tomato-ey sauce - perfection! Bell pepper season runs from late summer into fall, which is when I make this most, but I love making this year-round because it's just that reliable (and super easy!)
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💡Recipe Overview
- Prep and Cook Time: 25 minutes to prep and 50 minutes to bake
- Cooking Method: Stove-top & Oven-baked
- Who this recipe is for: This one is for the home cook who wants a satisfying, from-scratch dinner that doesn't require a lot of techinque or specialty ingredients. Just good food made simply.
What is an ancestral diet? Read my post on what nourishing foods are based on the traditional dietary principles of the Weston A. Price Foundation.
Why This Easy Stuffed Bell Peppers recipe works!
If stuffed peppers have ever felt like more work then they're worth, this version will change that.
The filling comes together without any fuss, and the fact that the rice doesn't need to be precooked is one less step that makes this more doable on a weeknight. You soak it while you prep everything else and it finishes right in the oven.
I've already made this three times in the past month and it hasn't gotten old. It also makes a great make-ahead meal -- stuff the peppers the night before, refrigerate, and bake the next day with the sauce poured over fresh. Pair it with a simple green salad or a slice of sourdough to soak up the extra sauce and dinner is done.

Ingredients for Stuffed Bell Peppers

- Ground beef - An 80/20 blend is ideal here because the fat keeps the meat moist through the longer bake. Leaner blends tend to dry out. It's also why I don't recommend going for super lean ground chicken breast or ground turkey.
- Bell peppers - Any color works, though green are classic and their slight bitterness balances the richness of the sauce well. I use whatever is available to me or what I have on hand.
- Long-grain white rice - This is the one non-negotiable. Instant or short-grain won't hold up through the soak and bake the way long-grain does. I used white basmati. Soak it with water as soon as you start working on the recipe.
- Tomato paste - Gives the sauce the backbone. Look for one in a jar, not cans. You can also use tomato sauce instead but I love using the paste and controlling the texture as I need it.
- Heavy cream - This is what turns the tomato mixture into a proper smothering sauce. It softens the acidity and thickens as it bakes, so don't swap it for anything lighter. Also, because it may curdle too if you lower the fat content.
- Seasonings - I like to use a simple blend of Italian seasoning and sea salt. It ties the flavors together.
- Cheddar - If you have a few extra minutes, shredding from a block melts noticeably better than the bagged kind. And you avoid all the anti-caking agents.
Substitutions and Variations
- Try other ground meats - Any ground meat works here, including ground turkey, chicken, bison, or pork or a blend of any of these. For an extra nutrient boost, swap in an ancestral blend (a mix of organ meats and ground beef) without changing anything else in the recipe.
- Try jarred salsa - If you love the Porcupine Meatballs in my Dinner, Decoded e-cookbook, you know how a jarred salsa and heavy cream situation can light up a dish. It's the best and I regularly use that instead of the tomato paste to make a similar flavor profile.
- Seasonings - If you'd rather build your own seasoning, a combination of dried oregano, thyme, basil, and a pinch of garlic powder works just as well. You can also use ranch seasoning as another option.

How to Make Smothered Stuffed Bell Peppers
The complete printable recipe is below in the recipe card for your convenience. Follow these simple step-by-step instructions for the best results.

Step 1. Prep
Start with soaking your rice with water first. Set that aside. The longer it sits in water, the quicker it'll cook in the oven. Then, pop the bell pepper halves in the oven to pre-roast. Just a quick 15-20 minute roast is enough.

Step 2. Saute
In a skillet over medium heat, melt the butter and warm avocado oil. Add diced onions and cook until translucent and softened. Stir occasionally. This should take about 15 minutes. Add minced garlic at the end and cook until fragrant.

Step 3. Whisk
While the rice is soaking, peppers are roasting, and onions are caramelizing, whisk the tomato paste with a little bit of water or broth (more nutrients and flavor!).

Step 4. Combine
Pour half of the tomato-broth/water mixture into the sautéed onions and stir well to combine. Reserve the remaining tomato sauce for the smothering sauce.

Step 5. Make the stuffing
Drain the soaked rice and rinse well. In a large bowl, combine the meat, drained rice, onion tomato mixture, Italian seasoning, and salt. Mix until just combined.

Step 6. Stuff the peppers
Mound the meat and rice filling generously into each bell pepper half. Dome it slightly above the rim of the bell pepper. It'll be a hefty, generous portion. Nestle them snugly back into the pan.

Step 7. Smother
Stir together the heavy cream and the reserved tomato sauce mixture. Taste for salt - I like to add a little more salt at this stage. Pour over the stuffed bell peppers. Cover the pan tightly with a lid or foil and bake for 40 minutes until the meat is cooked through.

Step 8. Bake
Remove the cover or lid, sprinkle shredded cheese evenly over the peppers and return back to the oven for 10 more minutes or until the cheese is bubbly and melted and rice is cooked through.
Helpful Tips
- Use long-grain white rice -- no precooking needed. Soaking it in cold water while you prep is enough to jump-start the process, so it finishes cooking through in the oven without any extra steps beforehand. But the type of rice is important here if you're soaking it.
- Pre-roast the peppers before stuffing. Skipping this step means the pepper and the filling won't finish at the same time. You'll either end up with undercooked pepper or overcooked meat. So be sure to pre-roast for 15-20 minutes.
- Dome the filling generously above the rim. The meat shrinks slightly as it cooks, so piling it high gives you a full, hearty result rather than a sunken filling.
- If the rice or filling looks undercooked, cover the pan. Place the lid on your pan or cover tightly with foil and return to the oven for another 10 minutes -- the trapped steam finishes the job.
💭Meal Prep Suggestion!
The filling can be mixed and stuffed into the peppers up to 24 hours ahead. Cover and refrigerate until you're ready to bake. Make the smothering sauce fresh before it goes into the oven or pre-whisk it and keep it in a jar in the fridge.

Serving Suggestions
Smothered stuffed green bell peppers are a complete meal on their own - protein, starch, and vegetable all in one pan. That said, a simple side rounds things out nicely if you're feeding a hungrier crowd or stretching a meal further.
A dollop of raw sour cream is a traditioanlly Slavic choice. But you can also add a simple house salad or this cucumber cabbage salad or cucumber tomato onion salad (another two delicious Slavic recipes).

Frequently Asked Questions
Store leftover stuffed bell peppers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. These glass snap containers are perfect for leftovers. To reheat, transfer the bell peppers to a small covered saucepan and warm over medium-high heat. You can also reheat in the oven. Place the peppers in an oven-safe dish, spoon some of the sauce over the top, cover with foil, and warm at 350°F for 20 to 25 minutes until heated through.
Yes! Arrange fully cooked and cooled peppers in a single layer in a freezer-safe container with sauce poured over them, freeze for up to 3 months, and thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating covered in the oven as above.
The cream and tomato mixture loosens as it heats and thickens as it bakes. As long as you bake uncovered for the last 10 minutes or so, it will reduce into a proper sauce by the time cheese goes in.
Either the pan needed more liquid or the steam escaped too quickly. Add a splash of water or broth to the pan to increase the liquid or keep the stuffed bell peppers covered to allow the rice to cook through.
Looking for more related recipes? Here are some ideas:
Did you make this stuffed bell peppers? Please leave a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ recipe rating in the recipe card below and leave a review in the comments. Thank you!💚
Printable Recipe

Smothered Stuffed Bell Peppers
Ingredients
- 1 cup long-grain white rice uncooked
- 4 green bell peppers halved lengthwise, seeds removed
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 1 tablespoon avocado oil
- 1 yellow onion diced
- 3 garlic cloves minced
- ½ cup tomato paste
- 1 cup broth or water
- 2 pounds ground beef
- 1 tablespoon Italian seasoning
- 2 teaspoons salt
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 1 cup cheddar cheese shredded
- 2 tablespoons fresh parsley chopped for garnish
Instructions
- Place 1 cup long-grain white rice in a bowl and cover with cold water and set aside while you prepare everything else. This soaking jumpstarts the cooking process so the rice cooks through in the oven.
- Preheat the oven to 400°F. Arrange the 4 green bell peppers, halved lengthwise, seeds removed, cut side up in a deep saute pan or baking dish. Drizzle lightly with oil and roast for 15 minutes until just softened but still holding their shape. Remove and set aside.
- In a skillet over medium heat, melt 2 tablespoons butter with 1 tablespoon avocado oil. Add diced 1 yellow onion and cook slowly, stirring occasionally, until golden and sweet, about 15 minutes. Stir in minced 3 garlic cloves and cook until fragrant.
- Whisk together ½ cup tomato paste and 1 cup broth or water until smooth. Pour half into the onion-garlic mixture and stir to combine. Reserve the remaining for the smothering sauce.
- Drain the soaked rice well. In a large bowl, combine the 2 pounds ground beef, drained rice, onion tomato mixture, 1 tablespoon Italian seasoning, and 2 teaspoons salt. Mix until just combined but do not overwork the meat.
- Mound the meat and rice filling generously into each par-roasted pepper half, doming the filling slightly above the rim of the bell pepper. Nestle them snugly back into the pan.
- Add 1 cup heavy cream to the reserved tomato sauce mixture and stir together until smooth and creamy. Taste and adjust salt if needed. Pour this creamy tomato sauce evenly over the stuffed peppers. Bake covered (lid or foil) for 35 minutes, then uncover for the last 5 minutes to allow the sauce to reduce and thicken.
- Sprinkle shredded 1 cup cheddar cheese evenly over the tops of the peppers. Return to oven for 5-7 minutes until the cheese is melted and bubbly.
- Remove from oven and let rest for 5 minutes. Spoon the thickened sauce from the pan over each pepper and garnish with 2 tablespoons fresh parsley.
Notes
- Use long-grain white rice -- no precooking needed. Soaking it in cold water while you prep is enough to jumpstart the process, so it finishes cooking through in the oven without any extra steps ahead of time. But the type of rice is important here if you're soaking it.
- Pre-roast the peppers before stuffing. Skipping this step means the pepper and the filling won't finish at the same time -- you'll either end up with undercooked pepper or overcooked meat. So be sure to pre-roast for 15-20 minutes.
- Dome the filling generously above the rim. The meat shrinks slightly as it cooks, so piling it high gives you a full, hearty result rather than a sunken filling.
- If the rice or filling looks undercooked, cover the pan. Place the lid on your pan or cover tightly with foil and return to the oven for another 10 minutes -- the trapped steam finishes the job.













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