
Every kid has strong opinions. Wyatt has developed a complete food theory by age twelve that involves sausage, confidence, and absolutely zero bell peppers. Clara has decided that sheet pan dinners are only good if there’s enough bell pepper to taste them and almost no sausage. These are not compatible positions.
The sheet pan compromise doesn’t solve this. It just lets them both eat what they actually want on the same tray.
Wyatt piles his corner with sausage and potatoes. He tried one of Clara’s bell peppers once—just one, and he made a face—but he tried it. Clara snuck an extra piece of sausage onto her corner when she thought I wasn’t looking. They ate at the same table, from the same sheet pan, and nobody had to make two dinners.
That’s the real win. Not that everyone’s happy. Just that everyone ate, nobody’s fighting, and the pan goes straight in the dishwasher.
How to Make Sheet Pan Sausage and Veggies
Prep everything. Slice smoked sausage into coins, dice potatoes into bite-sized pieces, chop broccoli into florets, and cut bell peppers into strips. Toss everything on a large sheet pan with olive oil, smoked paprika, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Spread in a single layer—crowding steams instead of roasts.
Roast hot. 425°F for 25–30 minutes, tossing halfway through. The potatoes should be golden and crispy on the edges, the sausage should have that caramelized snap, and the vegetables should be tender with a little char. If the potatoes aren’t done when the veggies are, remove the veggies and give the potatoes another 5–10 minutes.
Customize the zones. This is the compromise part. Arrange the sheet pan in zones—sausage-heavy on one side, veggie-heavy on the other. Each kid serves from their preferred zone. Everyone eats from the same dinner, nobody makes a scene, and I only have one pan to wash.
Serve as-is or with a grain. We eat this straight off the sheet pan most nights. Over rice or with crusty bread on fancier evenings. A drizzle of hot honey or a squeeze of lemon over everything at the end is Maggie’s touch.
If sheet pan dinners are your thing, my Sheet Pan Honey Garlic Chicken is another one-pan wonder. For more easy weeknight meals, try my Easy Sloppy Joes or my One-Pot Chicken and Rice — both are done in about thirty minutes.

Sheet Pan Sausage and Veggies
Ingredients
- 1 lb smoked sausage (kielbasa), cut into 1/2-inch rounds
- 1 lb baby potatoes, halved or regular potatoes cut into 1-inch chunks
- 2 cups broccoli florets
- 1 large bell pepper, cut into strips any color
- 1 medium zucchini, cut into half-moons optional
- 1 small red onion, cut into wedges
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- 1/2 teaspoon Italian seasoning
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
- fresh parsley for garnish optional
Instructions
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Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C). Line a large sheet pan with parchment paper or foil for easy cleanup.
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Cut the sausage into rounds, halve the potatoes, chop the broccoli, slice the peppers, and cut the zucchini and onion.
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Toss all vegetables and sausage with olive oil, garlic powder, smoked paprika, Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper until everything is well coated.
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Arrange everything in a single layer on the sheet pan. Don't overcrowd — use two pans if needed. Keep potatoes and sausage toward the hotter edges.
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Roast for 25-30 minutes, flipping everything once halfway through. Potatoes should be golden and fork-tender, sausage should have crispy edges, and broccoli should be slightly charred at the tips.
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Let cool for a minute (the pan is hot!), then serve straight from the tray. Put out dipping sauces — ketchup, ranch, or nothing at all.
Recipe Notes
Don't skip the smoked paprika — it gives everything a subtle campfire flavor. Cut everything the same size so it cooks evenly. Parchment paper releases better than foil. Leftover sausage rounds are great in scrambled eggs the next morning.
Common Questions
More Recipes You’ll Love
- Skillet Cabbage and Sausage
- Maggie’s Smash Burger Tacos (The Viral Recipe Done the Old-Fashioned Way)
- Maggie’s Wonton Lasagna
- Wyatt’s “Better Than the Restaurant” Air Fryer Chicken Tenders
What I Use for This Recipe
A couple things from my kitchen that make this one easier.

For every stew, pot roast, and soup that needs low-and-slow love. The pot I reach for on Sundays.

Pancakes slide right off. Eggs never stick. The pan the kids are actually allowed to use.

Stop guessing. Best twelve dollars I ever spent on my kitchen.
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