25 Instant Pot Side Dishes for Brunch Your Guests Will Actually Talk About
Fast, flavorful, and shockingly stress-free — your pressure cooker is the brunch MVP you never knew you needed.
Brunch is supposed to be the relaxed meal. The one where you sip coffee and actually enjoy your guests instead of sprinting between a screaming skillet and a sheet pan threatening to smoke up the whole kitchen. And yet somehow, Sunday after Sunday, brunch turns into a full-scale production that leaves you frazzled before the first mimosa is poured.
Here’s the thing though: your Instant Pot can genuinely change that. Not in a “life-hack” marketing way, but in a very real, measurable, you-will-actually-sit-down-before-the-food-gets-cold way. Pressure cooking locks in flavor at speed, frees up your stovetop and oven, and holds food warm while you handle everything else. For brunch sides in particular, it’s almost unfairly useful.
I’ve tested all of these recipes during actual brunches — some for four people, some for twelve — and I’m giving you the full picture: what works, what plays well together on a table, and what your guests are going to ask for the recipe on before they leave. Let’s get into it.
Why the Instant Pot Makes a Genuinely Great Brunch Companion
Brunch side dishes tend to fall into two camps: things that need to be warm and creamy (grits, polenta, oatmeal), and things that need a little pressure to get tender fast (potatoes, beans, root vegetables). The Instant Pot is, conveniently, exceptional at both. And while your oven is busy with a frittata or a pan of cinnamon rolls, the Instant Pot handles two or three sides completely hands-off.
There’s also a texture argument to be made. Pressure cooking does something to starchy dishes — creamy grits get silkier than anything you’d get from babysitting a stovetop pot, beans turn velvety without any overnight soaking, and sweet potatoes reach that perfectly tender-but-not-mushy state in about eight minutes. According to nutrition research on pressure cooking, the sealed environment also helps preserve water-soluble vitamins that stovetop boiling tends to leach out — so you’re actually getting more nutritional value from vegetables cooked under pressure.
FYI, you don’t need any special brunch-specific accessories. A standard 6-quart Instant Pot handles every recipe in this list. The Instant Pot Duo 7-in-1 is what I use daily, and it’s held up across hundreds of batches. If you want a bigger capacity for larger gatherings, the 8-quart version gives you more wiggle room, but it’s not necessary for any of these recipes.
Prep your aromatics (garlic, shallots, herbs) the night before brunch and store them in small bowls in the fridge. Your morning cook time drops by a solid 10 minutes and you’ll feel like a professional who has their life together.
The Creamy Side Dishes That Steal the Show
1. Southern-Style Cheesy Grits
If you’ve only ever had grits from a box, I need you to understand that Instant Pot stone-ground grits are a completely different experience. Stone-ground grits cooked under pressure turn impossibly creamy, with a rich corn flavor that packs into every spoonful. Add sharp cheddar and a knob of butter off the heat, and you have the anchor side dish that goes with virtually everything else on this list. Get Full Recipe
2. Pressure Cooker Polenta with Parmesan
Polenta usually requires standing at the stove for 40 minutes, stirring constantly, questioning your life choices. The Instant Pot version takes five minutes under pressure, a quick stir, and you’re done. Finish it with good Parmigiano-Reggiano and a drizzle of olive oil. It’s the Italian cousin of grits and equally crowd-pleasing at a brunch table.
3. Steel-Cut Oats with Brown Butter and Honey
Steel-cut oats on the stovetop take 30 to 40 minutes and require watching. In the Instant Pot, it’s four minutes under pressure with a natural release, and the texture is genuinely better — chewy, slightly nutty, with each grain holding its shape. Set up a toppings bar with toasted walnuts, fresh berries, and a drizzle of honey and let guests customize their own bowls.
If you’re building out a full brunch spread, these slow cooker brunch recipes make brilliant companions to your Instant Pot dishes — run one appliance per dish and you’ve got a spread without breaking a sweat.
4. Creamy White Bean Dip
Brunch appetizers often get forgotten until someone arrives early and stands awkwardly in the kitchen. This white bean dip solves that. Dry cannellini beans go straight into the pot with garlic and a bay leaf — no soaking required — and pressure cook in about 35 minutes. Blitz them with olive oil, lemon zest, and roasted garlic, and you’ve got a spreadable, protein-rich side that works on toast, alongside eggs, or with crudites.
5. Instant Pot Ricotta
I know this sounds extra, but homemade ricotta takes about 20 minutes total and the texture is so far beyond anything from a plastic tub that it’s worth doing at least once. The Instant Pot keeps the temperature consistent so the curds form evenly. Serve it warm with a swirl of honey and some crusty bread and watch it disappear in minutes.
Savory Vegetable Sides That Actually Have Flavor
6. Garlic Butter Mashed Sweet Potatoes
Sweet potatoes are genuinely one of the best things to pressure cook. Eight minutes on high pressure and they’re perfectly tender — no peeling before cooking, no watching the water boil, no nothing. Mash them with garlic-infused butter, a pinch of smoked paprika, and a splash of cream. The smoked paprika is non-negotiable; it balances the sweetness in a way that makes this savory rather than dessert-adjacent.
7. Lemon-Herb Fingerling Potatoes
These take six minutes in the Instant Pot and come out tender throughout with a slightly waxy texture that’s ideal for a brunch table. Toss them while hot with a lemon-herb vinaigrette — fresh parsley, chives, Dijon mustard, a little white wine vinegar. They’re good warm, but honestly equally good at room temperature, which makes them ideal for buffet-style serving.
8. Braised Leeks with Thyme
Leeks don’t get nearly enough credit at brunch. Pressure-braised with a little white wine, chicken stock, and fresh thyme, they turn silky and mellow with a faint sweetness that pairs beautifully with eggs. They’re also visually striking on a table — long, pale golden, glossy from the braising liquid. This one impresses people disproportionately to the effort it requires.
9. Spiced Carrot Mash
Carrots mashed with warm spices — cumin, coriander, a hint of cinnamon — might sound like it belongs on a Thanksgiving table, but at brunch it works brilliantly alongside savory egg dishes. The Instant Pot gets the carrots fork-tender in five minutes. Stir in tahini instead of butter for a plant-based version that’s actually more interesting. Tahini adds an earthy depth that butter simply doesn’t.
10. Instant Pot Beets with Orange Zest
Roasting beets in an oven takes an hour or more and makes your kitchen smell like dirt for a while. Pressure cooking them takes 20 minutes and the flavor is actually more concentrated. Peel them after cooking (the skins slip off easily), slice, and dress with olive oil, orange zest, and a little red wine vinegar. They add a jewel-toned pop of color to any brunch spread.
Speaking of vibrant, produce-forward cooking, these Instant Pot recipes with fresh spring vegetables are full of ideas for seasonal produce that pressure cooks beautifully. And if you want something green and bright alongside your beets, these slow cooker meals with asparagus, peas, and greens pair perfectly with the heavier sides.
Grain and Bean Sides Worth Making
11. Herbed Farro with Toasted Almonds
Farro has a satisfying chew and a slightly nutty flavor that makes it more interesting than plain rice as a brunch grain side. The Instant Pot cooks it in ten minutes flat. Toss it warm with chopped fresh herbs (parsley and basil work well together), lemon juice, olive oil, and a handful of toasted almonds for crunch. Farro is also high in fiber and protein compared to most refined grains, making it one of the more nutritionally solid options on this list.
12. Black Bean Sofrito
Dry black beans, no soaking, cooked under pressure in about 25 minutes with onion, garlic, cumin, and dried oregano. The result is deeply flavorful, creamy beans that work as a side for egg dishes, alongside avocado toast, or spooned over the polenta from earlier. This is one of those sides that tastes like it cooked all day.
13. Quinoa Pilaf with Herbs and Lemon
Quinoa in the Instant Pot comes out perfectly fluffy with zero guesswork — no watching the pot, no under- or over-cooking. Toast it briefly on the saute function first for extra depth of flavor, then pressure cook with vegetable broth. Finish with lemon juice, chopped herbs, and a small handful of dried cranberries if you want a sweet-savory note. For guests with dietary restrictions, this is a complete protein source that happens to be gluten-free as well.
14. Lentil Dal with Warm Spices
Red lentils cook to a silky, spoonable consistency in the Instant Pot in about 10 minutes under pressure. Add a proper tempering of mustard seeds, curry leaves, and turmeric bloomed in ghee or coconut oil, and this goes from a simple side to something genuinely memorable. Serve it alongside eggs, with naan on the side, and watch the texture-contrast thing happen in a very satisfying way.
When making grain dishes like farro or quinoa ahead of brunch, undercook them by 30 seconds. They finish perfectly when you reheat with a splash of stock just before serving, and they won’t turn mushy if sitting.
The Egg and Cheese Sides That Round Out the Table
15. Pressure Cooker Egg Bites
These are the Instant Pot recipe that gets the most attention at any brunch I’ve hosted. Eggs, cheese, and mix-ins of your choice go into a silicone egg bite mold — the Dash silicone egg bite mold fits perfectly in a 6-quart pot — and pressure steam for eight minutes. The result is a custardy, almost souffle-like texture that’s impossible to replicate in a standard oven. Make a big batch and keep them warm on the “Keep Warm” setting.
16. Savory Parmesan Bread Pudding
This is the side dish that makes people lean over and ask “wait, what IS this?” Day-old sourdough or brioche, custard made with eggs and cream, good Parmesan, and fresh thyme — pressure cooked in a baking dish set on the trivet. It comes out soft in the center, slightly set at the edges, deeply savory, and it holds on the warm setting for up to two hours. It’s also a brilliant use for bread that’s past its prime.
17. Creamy Instant Pot Mac and Cheese
Hear me out — mac and cheese at brunch, especially with a crowd that includes kids or anyone who just wants to eat something straightforward, is never a bad call. The Instant Pot version uses a pasta-to-liquid ratio that creates a naturally creamy sauce without any roux. Use sharp white cheddar and a pinch of smoked paprika, and it reads as an elevated side rather than a weeknight afterthought.
Fruit and Sweet Sides for Balance
18. Poached Pears with Vanilla Syrup
Pears poach in the Instant Pot in four minutes under pressure, which means you can have an elegant, French-bistro-style fruit side ready in under fifteen minutes total. Use a lightly sweetened vanilla-spiced liquid and let them cool slightly before serving. They’re stunning on a cheese board, excellent alongside savory egg dishes, and genuinely impressive for about twelve minutes of actual effort.
19. Cinnamon-Spiced Applesauce
Homemade applesauce sounds like something your grandmother makes, but pressure-cooked applesauce — eight minutes, fresh apples, cinnamon, a squeeze of lemon — is a completely different animal from the jarred kind. It’s chunky if you like texture, smooth if you blend it, and it works as a side alongside pork hash, on pancakes or French toast, or just in a small bowl as its own thing.
20. Stewed Peaches with Brown Sugar and Ginger
Fresh peaches or even frozen ones work here. A five-minute pressure cook with brown sugar, fresh ginger, and a splash of vanilla transforms them into a jammy, deeply fragrant compote. Spoon them over the ricotta from earlier, stir them into oatmeal, or just serve them warm in small bowls. The ginger keeps them from being too sweet.
If you want to take the sweet side of your brunch further, the Instant Pot desserts you didn’t know you needed has some genuinely clever recipes that work double duty as dessert or a sweet brunch side. The Instant Pot Easter desserts collection is also worth bookmarking if you’re planning a holiday brunch specifically.
Savory Hash and Hearty Sides
21. Chorizo and Potato Hash
Start this one on the saute function to brown the chorizo, then add diced potatoes, bell peppers, smoked paprika, and chicken stock. Pressure cook for four minutes and you have a one-pot hash that’s smoky, spicy, and satisfying in exactly the way brunch food should be. Crumble a little queso fresco on top. You’re welcome in advance. Get Full Recipe
22. Corned Beef Hash from Scratch
If you’ve been making hash from a can, this is your turning point. Corned beef brisket pressure cooks in about 90 minutes (make it the day before and just reheat), then gets shredded and crisped with potatoes and onions on the saute function. The difference in flavor is so significant it’s almost unfair to compare them.
23. Shakshuka Sauce
The sauce base for shakshuka — tomatoes, peppers, onion, cumin, smoked paprika — pressure cooks in five minutes and develops a depth of flavor that normally requires 40 minutes of simmering. Make the sauce in the Instant Pot, switch to saute, crack in the eggs, and finish with a lid on for two minutes. It’s a full centerpiece side or main that the pot handles entirely. According to Food Network’s healthy Instant Pot recipe guides, the combination of tomatoes and bell peppers provides an excellent source of vitamins C and A, which makes this one of the more nutritionally strong brunch dishes you can offer.
24. Spiced Chickpea and Spinach Side
Dry chickpeas, no soak, pressure cook for about 40 minutes until genuinely creamy and tender. Toss with wilted spinach, garlic, cumin, and lemon. This side does double duty as a protein-forward option for vegetarian or vegan guests, and it pairs with virtually everything else on this list. The chickpeas cooked from dry will have a completely different texture than canned — plumper, creamier, with more flavor absorbed from the cooking liquid.
25. Pressure Cooker Sausage and Gravy
Classic Southern sausage gravy, made start to finish in the Instant Pot. Brown the sausage on saute, deglaze, add milk and flour, and let the pot do the rest. It’s rich, peppery, and exactly what people expect when they see biscuits on the table. Serve it with store-bought or homemade biscuits and accept the compliments graciously.
Kitchen Tools That Make These Recipes Easier
The gear I actually use and genuinely recommend — not because it sounds good in an article, but because it’s sitting on my counter right now.
Physical Tools
Digital Resources
How to Run Multiple Instant Pot Dishes for a Full Brunch Spread
The most common question I get about Instant Pot brunch cooking is how to coordinate everything so it’s all ready at the same time. The honest answer is that it’s easier than stovetop juggling because the “Keep Warm” setting is genuinely reliable for most of these dishes.
Here’s a practical framework: start with whatever needs the longest cook time (beans, brisket, steel-cut oats with natural release), and work backward. Egg bites and grain dishes can be made the day before and reheated. Fruit sides can be done the morning before guests arrive and held at room temperature. The creamy sides — grits, polenta, mac and cheese — should be the last thing you make, about 20 minutes before everyone sits down.
IMO, the best move for a large brunch gathering is to own two Instant Pots. Not glamorous advice, but if you regularly host ten or more people, a second pot costs less than an oven repair and gives you far more flexibility. For smaller gatherings, one 6-quart Duo is plenty.
If you want to build out a full weekly system around the Instant Pot beyond just brunches, these Instant Pot meal prep recipes for the whole week and this comprehensive 25-recipe Instant Pot meal prep plan are worth reading.
Make your grain-based sides (farro, quinoa, oats) the night before and store them in the fridge in the Instant Pot insert itself. Morning of, add two tablespoons of stock, reseal, and run on the warm setting for 15 minutes. They’ll taste freshly made.
Quick Reference: All 25 Instant Pot Brunch Side Dishes
Here’s the full list at a glance — find the one that fits your spread, then scroll back up for the details.
Southern Cheesy Grits
Stone-ground, silky, finished with sharp cheddar and butter.
VegetarianParmesan Polenta
Five-minute pressure cook, finished with Parmigiano and olive oil.
VegetarianSteel-Cut Oats
Brown butter, honey, customizable toppings bar.
Vegan OptionWhite Bean Dip
No-soak, lemony, great with toast and crudites.
VeganHomemade Ricotta
Warm with honey and crusty bread. Genuinely impressive.
VegetarianSweet Potato Mash
Garlic butter, smoked paprika, perfectly savory.
Gluten-FreeLemon-Herb Potatoes
Fingerlings, vinaigrette, holds well at room temp.
VeganBraised Leeks
White wine, thyme, visually elegant.
VegetarianSpiced Carrot Mash
Cumin, coriander, tahini option for vegan guests.
Vegan OptionOrange-Dressed Beets
Jewel-toned, 20-minute cook, stunning on a table.
VeganHerbed Farro
Almonds, lemon, fresh herbs. High fiber and protein.
VeganBlack Bean Sofrito
No-soak, deeply flavorful, pairs with everything.
VeganQuinoa Pilaf
Fluffy, herby, gluten-free complete protein.
GF & VeganRed Lentil Dal
Silky, spiced, with a ghee tempering.
Vegan OptionPressure Steamed Egg Bites
Custardy, customizable, holds warm beautifully.
VegetarianSavory Bread Pudding
Sourdough, Parmesan, thyme. The conversation starter.
VegetarianInstant Pot Mac and Cheese
Sharp white cheddar, smoked paprika. Crowd favorite.
VegetarianVanilla Poached Pears
Elegant, four minutes, goes with cheese or eggs.
Vegan OptionCinnamon Applesauce
Fresh apples, eight minutes, completely homemade.
VeganGinger Stewed Peaches
Brown sugar, vanilla, jammy and fragrant.
VeganChorizo Potato Hash
Smoky, spicy, crumbled queso fresco finish.
Gluten-FreeCorned Beef Hash
Brisket from scratch. This one changes everything.
GF OptionShakshuka Sauce
Tomatoes, peppers, eggs finished in the pot.
VegetarianChickpea and Spinach
No-soak, lemony, vegan protein powerhouse.
VeganSausage Gravy
Classic Southern, peppery, serve with biscuits.
Crowd PleaserFrequently Asked Questions
Can I make Instant Pot side dishes the night before brunch?
Yes, and for several of these it’s actually the smarter move. Grain dishes like farro, quinoa, and steel-cut oats reheat beautifully with a splash of stock or water. Bean dishes actually improve overnight as the flavors meld. Save creamy dishes like grits and polenta for the morning since they don’t hold their texture as well after refrigeration and reheating.
How do I keep Instant Pot sides warm during brunch service?
The Keep Warm setting on most Instant Pot models holds food between 145 and 172 degrees Fahrenheit, which is safe and effective for up to four hours for most dishes. For egg-based dishes, two hours is the practical limit before the texture starts to change. Creamy starchy dishes like grits may need a splash of liquid stirred in after a long hold time.
What size Instant Pot do I need for brunch side dishes?
A 6-quart handles every recipe in this list with room to spare for gatherings of up to eight. For twelve or more guests, an 8-quart gives you more flexibility, particularly for whole grain or bean dishes where you want to make a larger batch. Two 6-quart pots running simultaneously is often more practical than one oversized unit.
Are Instant Pot side dishes good for guests with dietary restrictions?
Genuinely yes — it’s one of the reasons I recommend so many bean and grain dishes here. Recipes 4, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 24 are fully vegan. Most others can be made dairy-free with simple swaps (plant-based butter, oat milk in the grits). Having a few naturally gluten-free options like the beets, sweet potato mash, and chickpea dishes means everyone at the table can eat comfortably.
Can I use a slow cooker instead of an Instant Pot for these recipes?
Some of them, yes — particularly the bean dishes, the braised leeks, and the fruit sides. But you lose the time advantage that makes this list practical for brunch. A slow cooker version of cheesy grits takes four to six hours versus eight minutes under pressure. If you want slow cooker brunch ideas specifically, the slow cooker brunch recipes guide covers all of that.
The Bottom Line
Brunch is supposed to be the enjoyable meal. The whole point is that you’re not rushing, not sweating over the stove, not missing the conversation because you’re managing four burners and a smoking oven. These 25 Instant Pot side dishes give you a real path to that version of brunch — the one where the food is genuinely good, you were genuinely present, and your guests actually want to come back next Sunday.
Start with two or three that appeal to you. See how the Instant Pot handles them, get a feel for your timing, and build from there. The grits and egg bites alone are enough to make people think you’ve leveled up your hosting game overnight — and technically, you have.
Pick your first recipe, add it to your weekend plan, and let the pot do the work it was designed to do.



