The Method
Brown and Bind the Sausage
10 mins
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C) and lightly grease a 9x13-inch baking dish. Heat a large skillet over medium heat, add the ground sausage, and cook until it is completely browned, using your spoon to break it up into small crumbles. Drain off any excess grease. Turn the heat down to low, add the cream cheese block directly to the hot skillet, and stir continuously until the cheese melts completely and coats the sausage uniformly. Remove from heat.
Build the Bottom Crust
5 mins
Pop open your first can of crescent dough. Unroll it right into the bottom of your prepared 9x13-inch baking pan, pressing it gently to cover the base. If you are using standard crescent rolls rather than sheets, firmly pinch the diagonal perforated seams together with your fingers so the wet filling doesn't leak through the crust.
Spoon your warm sausage and cream cheese mixture evenly over the bottom crust, spreading it all the way out to the edges. Unroll the second can of crescent dough onto a clean surface (or directly on top), stretch it neatly over the sausage layer, and pinch the top and bottom dough edges together all around the perimeter to trap the filling inside.
Bake to a Golden Finish
15-20 mins
Bake uncovered for 15 to 20 minutes. Keep a close eye on it—you are looking for the top layer of crescent dough to puff up and turn a deep, beautiful golden brown.
The Southern Baker's Trick: If you want a perfectly crisp, non-soggy bottom crust every single time, blind-bake just the bottom layer of crescent dough for 5 to 7 minutes before adding the sausage and cream cheese mixture. This creates a sturdy structural barrier that locks in the filling without letting the bottom turn doughy.
Slicing and Serving
Once out of the oven, suppress the urge to cut into it immediately! Let the pan rest on the counter for about 10 to 15 minutes. This allows the cream cheese inside to set slightly, giving you beautifully clean, neat squares when you slice it up.
These are fantastic served hot for breakfast, but they hold up remarkably well at room temperature, making them a brilliant make-ahead finger food option for tailgates, bridal showers, or casual weekend potlucks
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