Brenda Gantt Meatloaf

Servings: 6 Total Time: 55 mins Difficulty: Easy
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I make Brenda Gantt meatloaf when I want a family-style meatloaf with tomato sauce tucked into the top and enough leftovers for sandwiches. The ingredient list is practical, but the recipe still asks for a little attention: the pieces need to be prepared evenly, the seasoning needs to be tasted, and the pan or pot needs to be watched instead of ignored.

I am not trying to turn Brenda Gantt meatloaf into restaurant food. I want a dependable home recipe with the same comfort as the original idea, only written clearly enough that I can cook from it without guessing.

The detail I pay closest attention to is mixing gently and shaping 2-3 smaller loaves instead of one dense mound. When that part is handled well, the rest of the recipe feels calm. When it is rushed, I can taste it in the finished dish, so I build the method around that small bit of discipline.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • It uses familiar ingredients and still gives Brenda Gantt meatloaf a clear, old-fashioned flavor.
  • The timing is manageable: 10 minutes of prep and 45 minutes of cooking in the source card.
  • The recipe is flexible enough for a weeknight table but still feels cared for.
  • I can taste the main ingredients instead of only salt, sugar, or heat.
  • The leftovers, when there are any, are easy to handle with simple reheating or chilling.
  • It is the kind of recipe where small technique choices make a visible difference.

What you need (and what each one is doing)

  • 3 pounds hamburger meat.
  • 1 pc white onion; large, finely chopped.
  • 2 cans tomato sauce; about 15 ounces each if standard cans.
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt.
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper.
  • 2 eggs; beaten.
  • 14 regular crackers or bread crumbs; crushed; source unit was garbled.
  • 1 bell pepper or sweet banana pepper; regular size, finely chopped.
  • 1 tablespoon cooking oil; for greasing the pan.

How I make it

Step 1 — Start the meat

Place the hamburger meat in a large bowl and break it up lightly.

Step 2 — Add vegetables

Finely chop the onion and pepper, then add them to the meat.

Step 3 — Season and bind

Add 1 can tomato sauce, salt, and black pepper; beat the eggs separately and add them too.

Step 4 — Add crackers

Crush the crackers, or use bread crumbs, and mix them in gradually until the mixture holds together.

Step 5 — Prepare the pan

Add water to the bottom of a broiler pan or baking pan, then grease the top surface with cooking oil.

Step 6 — Shape the loaves

Divide the mixture into 2-3 loaves, shape them on the pan, and press a shallow valley down the center of each.

Step 7 — Add tomato sauce

Spoon the remaining tomato sauce into the valleys and around the loaves.

Step 8 — Bake and rest

Bake at 400°F for 40-45 minutes until cooked through, then rest briefly before slicing.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Mix gently.Squeezing the meat too hard makes a dense loaf.
  • Chop small.Fine onion and pepper pieces soften and help slices hold together.
  • Use the valleys.Tomato sauce in the center keeps the tops moist.
  • Rest before slicing.Even a short rest makes cleaner slices.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Saltine:Use plain saltine crackers for a classic taste.
  • Bread crumb:Add bread crumbs gradually until the meat holds shape.
  • Ketchup glaze:Brush ketchup over the sauce for the last 10 minutes if you want sweetness.
  • Pepper swap:Use sweet banana pepper for a gentler flavor.
  • Sandwich loaf:Shape one loaf flatter for leftover sandwich slices.

Storing and serving

Leftover meatloaf keeps 3-4 days in the refrigerator. I store slices with a spoonful of tomato sauce over them, then reheat covered in a 325°F (163°C) oven or gently in the microwave. Slices freeze well for quick sandwiches.

For serving, I think about contrast. If Brenda Gantt meatloaf is rich, I add something sharp or fresh beside it. If it is spicy, I give it something creamy. If it is soft, I like a crisp edge somewhere on the plate. That is usually enough to make the meal feel complete without adding another complicated recipe.

What can go wrong

Crumbly meatloaf usually needs finer vegetables, enough binder, or a better rest. Dense meatloaf usually means it was mixed too aggressively. I would rather leave the mixture slightly rough than knead it smooth.

The other mistake I watch for is overcorrecting. I would rather adjust Brenda Gantt meatloaf in small steps: a pinch of salt, a splash of liquid, a few more minutes, or a short rest. Big fixes can push a good batch too far.

Frequently asked questions

Can I make one big loaf?

Yes, but it may need longer than 40-45 minutes. Smaller loaves cook more evenly and give more sauced surface.

What crackers should I use?

Plain regular crackers work well. Crush 14 crackers finely, or add bread crumbs gradually until the mixture holds.

Do I drain the tomato sauce?

No. The sauce seasons the meat and moistens the valleys during baking.

How do I know it is done?

Use an instant-read thermometer and look for 160°F (71°C) in the center of the loaf.

Can I make it ahead?

Yes. Shape the loaves, cover, refrigerate, and add the final sauce right before baking.

If you make Brenda Gantt meatloaf, leave a note with what you changed and what you kept exactly the same. I always like hearing which details mattered in another kitchen.

Brenda Gantt Meatloaf

Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 45 mins Total Time 55 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 6 Calories: 26 kcal Dietary:
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Description

This Brenda Gantt meatloaf uses 3 pounds of hamburger meat, onion, pepper, eggs, crackers or bread crumbs, and tomato sauce. I bake it at 400°F for 40-45 minutes and let it rest before slicing.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Place the hamburger meat in a large bowl and break it up lightly.
  2. Finely chop the onion and pepper, then add them to the meat.
  3. Add 1 can tomato sauce, salt, and black pepper; beat the eggs separately and add them too.
  4. Crush the crackers, or use bread crumbs, and mix them in gradually until the mixture holds together.
  5. Add water to the bottom of a broiler pan or baking pan, then grease the top surface with cooking oil.
  6. Divide the mixture into 2-3 loaves, shape them on the pan, and press a shallow valley down the center of each.
  7. Spoon the remaining tomato sauce into the valleys and around the loaves.
  8. Bake at 400°F for 40-45 minutes until cooked through, then rest briefly before slicing.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 6


Amount Per Serving
Calories 26kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 2g4%
Saturated Fat 1g5%
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 62mg21%
Sodium 501mg21%
Potassium 34mg1%
Total Carbohydrate 1g1%
Protein 2g4%

Calcium 13 mg
Iron 0.4 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Gentle hands. Stop mixing as soon as the bowl looks even.

Small loaves. Two or three loaves bake evenly.

Source salt. I read 11/2 as 1 1/2 teaspoons.

Resting helps. Slices hold together better after a pause.

Keywords: brenda gantt meatloaf, hamburger meatloaf, meatloaf with tomato sauce, cracker meatloaf, southern meatloaf, baked meatloaf, family dinner, 400 degree meatloaf

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I make one big loaf?

Yes, but it may need longer than 40-45 minutes. Smaller loaves cook more evenly and give more sauced surface.

What crackers should I use?

Plain regular crackers work well. Crush 14 crackers finely, or add bread crumbs gradually until the mixture holds.

Do I drain the tomato sauce?

No. The sauce seasons the meat and moistens the valleys during baking.

How do I know it is done?

Use an instant-read thermometer and look for 160°F (71°C) in the center of the loaf.

Can I make it ahead?

Yes. Shape the loaves, cover, refrigerate, and add the final sauce right before baking.

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