Cheesy sausage breakfast bombs bake up into golden, pull-apart biscuit bites with a crisp outside and a hot, savory center that stays soft instead of drying out. The garlic butter on top gives them that just-from-the-oven shine, and the filling tastes like a full breakfast tucked into one neat handful.
The trick is keeping the filling modest and sealing the biscuits well. Too much sausage and egg will push the seams open before the dough sets, and that’s when you lose the cheese into the pan. Scrambling the eggs first also matters here; they finish in the oven without turning watery, which keeps the inside fluffy instead of soggy.
Below you’ll find the small details that make these work reliably, plus a few swaps if you need to use what you already have on hand. These are the kind of breakfast bombs that disappear fast, so I’d read the storage note before you start.
The biscuits sealed up beautifully and the garlic butter made the outside crisp instead of doughy. I made them ahead for a school morning and they reheated with the cheese still melty.
Cheesy sausage breakfast bombs are perfect for make-ahead mornings when you want a crisp biscuit shell and a cheesy center.
The One Thing That Keeps the Biscuits From Bursting Open
The biggest mistake with breakfast bombs is overfilling them. Biscuit dough needs enough room to stretch, seal, and expand in the oven, and if the filling mound is too generous, the seam splits before the dough sets. That leads to leaked cheese and flattened bottoms instead of neat, round bombs.
Use the 2 to 3 tablespoon range and keep the filling centered. Pinch the dough firmly, then place each bomb seam-side down so the weight of the filling helps hold the seal shut. A hot oven matters here too; the biscuits need to rise and brown quickly before the filling has a chance to soak into the dough.
What the Biscuit Dough, Sausage, and Garlic Butter Each Bring

- Refrigerated biscuit dough — This gives you the soft, layered shell that makes the recipe work fast. Canned dough is the right choice here because it stretches without tearing if you flatten it evenly. If you use homemade biscuit dough, keep it on the sturdier side so it can hold the filling.
- Breakfast sausage — The sausage carries most of the seasoning, so cook it until it’s browned and crumbly instead of pale and soft. Turkey sausage works, but it needs a little extra salt and pepper because it doesn’t bring the same richness.
- Eggs — Scrambling them before they go into the biscuits keeps the texture tender. Raw egg inside the bombs would release steam and can make the dough gummy before the center cooks through.
- Sharp cheddar — Sharp cheddar melts cleanly and gives you enough bite to stand up to the biscuit. Pre-shredded works in a pinch, but block cheese melts smoother and usually gives a better pull.
- Garlic butter — This is what turns them from basic stuffed biscuits into something worth making again. Brush it on before baking so it bakes into the crust and seasons the outside all the way through.
Building and Baking the Breakfast Bombs So They Stay Sealed
Flattening the Biscuit Without Tearing It
Press each biscuit into a 4 to 5 inch round with your hands or a rolling pin, keeping the center slightly thicker than the edges. If the dough gets too thin, it won’t hold the filling and can split at the bottom when the cheese melts. A light dusting of flour helps if the biscuit feels sticky, but don’t overwork it or the dough gets tight and hard to stretch.
Filling and Sealing the Dough
Spoon the sausage, egg, and cheddar mixture into the center, then gather the edges up and over the filling. Pinch the seam firmly, then pinch again from a different angle so there isn’t a weak spot. If the dough won’t meet cleanly, you’ve used too much filling, and it’s better to remove a spoonful than to force the seal.
Brushing and Baking to Deep Gold
Place the bombs seam-side down on parchment, then brush the tops with the garlic butter mixture. Bake until the biscuits are deeply golden and the bottoms feel set when lifted with a spatula, about 18 to 20 minutes. If the tops brown too fast before the centers are done, the oven is running hot; cover loosely with foil for the last few minutes.
How to Adapt These Breakfast Bombs Without Losing the Good Part
Make Them Gluten-Free
Use a gluten-free biscuit dough that’s meant for baking, not a dry mix you have to guess with. The texture will be a little more delicate, so chill the filled bombs for 10 minutes before baking to help the seams hold. They won’t brown quite the same way, but the filling stays just as satisfying.
Swap in Bacon or Ham
Cooked bacon or diced ham works when you want a different breakfast flavor, but neither brings the same richness as sausage. Bacon gives a saltier, smokier bite, while ham makes the filling leaner and a little lighter. If you use either one, taste the filling before stuffing so you can adjust the pepper.
Add Vegetables Without Making Them Watery
Cooked peppers, onions, or spinach can go in, but they need to be cooked down first. Raw vegetables release moisture inside the biscuit and make the bottom soft. Keep the total mix-in amount modest so the bombs still close cleanly.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The biscuit softens a little in the fridge, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: These freeze well. Cool completely, wrap individually, and freeze for up to 2 months.
- Reheating: Reheat in a 325°F oven or air fryer until warmed through. The microwave works for speed, but it softens the crust, so finish in a hot pan or toaster oven if you want the outside crisp again.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Cheesy Sausage Breakfast Bombs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat oven to 375°F and line a sheet pan with parchment paper for easy release and cleanup.
- Flatten each biscuit into a 4–5 inch circle with a thicker center so it can hold the filling.
- Mix cooked breakfast sausage, scrambled large eggs, and sharp cheddar together, seasoning with salt and black pepper to taste, until evenly combined.
- Place 2–3 tablespoons of the sausage-egg-cheese mixture in the center of each biscuit, forming a mound.
- Pull the dough edges up and around the filling, pinching tightly to seal into a ball so no filling leaks.
- Place each sealed biscuit bomb seam-side down on the sheet pan to help it keep its round shape.
- Mix garlic butter by stirring melted butter with garlic powder and chopped fresh parsley, then brush generously over the tops.
- Bake at 375°F for 18–20 minutes until deeply golden, with a crisp-looking biscuit exterior and visible sheen from the garlic butter.