Pot Roast – fall apart beef, tender flavour infused vegetables and potatoes smothered in a rich gravy. It’s mouthwateringly good, yet simple to make, especially if you use a slow cooker. However, this beef pot roast recipe can be made in an instant pot, oven OR crockpot – pick which method works best for you!
Pot Roast
Confession: I wasn’t a fan of pot roast for most of my life. I just didn’t get it – the beef and vegetables were fine, but typically they are braised in just liquids that aren’t thickened in any way so the end result is like a watery broth.
Plenty of flavour in it, but when you pour it over the beef and vegetables, it doesn’t cling to it at all because it’s watery.
So I decided to change it and thicken the sauce using a touch of flour. So it’s more like a gravy. Now THAT’s a pot roast worthy of company, in my humble opinion!!!
If you love meltingly tender, slow cooked roast beef and deeply flavoured gravy, this pot roast recipe is for you!
How to make Pot Roast
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Season beef well with salt and pepper
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Sear beef aggressively – this is KEY for flavour in the broth and the beef!
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Sauté onion and garlic, then deglaze* the skillet or pot with red wine (or water or broth);
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Tip everything into a slow cooker, instant pot / pressure cooker or casserole pot for oven along with beef broth, carrots and celery;
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Sprinkle with dried rosemary and thyme then slow cook 8 hrs low, 55 min pressure cook on high, or oven 4 hours at 300°F/150°C;
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Add the potatoes partway through cooking and by the time the potatoes are cooked, the beef will be meltingly tender!
* Means simmering liquid and scraping bottom of pan to release the flavour stuck on the bottom of the pan from searing. It adds a ton of flavour into the cooking broth!
Best cut of beef for pot roast is chuck roast
The best beef for pot roast is Beef Chuck Roast. It’s an economical cut of beef that’s marbled with fat that needs to be slow cooked to breakdown the tough connective tissues so it becomes ultra tender to eat.
Chuck roast can be purchased in large pieces that are or aren’t rolled. You want to use rolled chuck roast for this recipe, otherwise the beef ends up all warped. Supermarkets and butchers should carry chuck roast that’s already rolled, otherwise, you can roll it yourself and tie with kitchen string or ask the butcher to do it for you.
It’s essentially a slow cooked Roast Beef!
The key point of difference with this pot roast recipe is that the braising liquid is thickened so it comes out like a deeply flavoured gravy rather than a watery broth which is how most pot roasts are made.
So it’s essentially a slow cooked Roast Beef that’s fall apart tender that comes with a gravy and tender flavour infused vegetables. Complete meal in one pot!
Because the beef needs to be mostly submerged in liquid while it slow cooks, you end up with lots and lots of liquid in the finished dish.
Which means, in my Pot Roast, you end up with lots and lots of very tasty gravy.
This is a sensational “problem” to have. Keep leftovers, drown your potatoes with them, toss through pasta (oh yes!!), serve it as a sauce for tomorrow night’s dinner. – Nagi x
PS Bread to mop your bowl clean wouldn’t go astray. Try these No Knead Dinner Rolls, a quick No Yeast Irish Bread or these moreish Cheese Muffins.
Watch how to make it
Note: My slow cooker looks like a pressure cooker because it’s a multi function slow cooker (but no, it’s not an Instant Pot!).
This pot roast recipe was originally published January 2018. Updated for housekeeping matters. No change to recipe – I wouldn’t dare! 🙂
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Pot Roast
Ingredients
- 2 kg / 4 lb beef chuck roast , rolled (Note 1)
- 1 tsp each salt and pepper
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 1 onion (large), cut into large dice
- 5 garlic cloves , peeled and smashed (Note 2a)
- 5 carrots , peeled and cut into 2.5cm/1" pieces
- 3 celery stalks , cut into 4 cm / 1.5" pieces
- 1 cup (250ml) dry red wine (sub with beef broth)
- 3 cups (750ml) beef broth , salt reduced
- 1/3 cup (50g) flour (plain / all purpose) (GF - Note 2b)
- 1 tsp dried rosemary
- 1 1/2 tsp dried thyme
- 750g / 1.5 lb potatoes , peeled and cut into 2.5 cm / 1" pieces
Instructions
- Pat beef dry with paper towels. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper all over.
- Heat oil in a skillet over high heat. Brown aggressively all over - a deep dark brown crust is essential for flavour base! Should take about 7 minutes.
- Transfer beef to slow cooker.
- In the same skillet, add onion and garlic. Cook for 2 minutes until onion is browned.
- Add wine, reduce by half. Transfer to slow cooker.
- Mix together flour and about 1 cup of the broth. Lumps is fine. Pour into slow cooker.
- Add remaining broth, carrots, celery, rosemary and thyme into slow cooker.
- Cover and slow cook on LOW for 5 hours. (45 min pressure cook on HIGH, Note 3a for Oven and Stove)
- Add potato, slow cook on LOW for 3 hours. (10 min pressure cooker on HIGH, Note 3b)
- Remove beef. Rest for 5 minutes, then slice thickly.
- Adjust salt and pepper of Sauce to taste.
- Serve beef with vegetables and plenty of sauce! Bread also terrific for mopping up sauce - try these No Knead Dinner Rolls, No Yeast Irish Soda Bread or these fabulous Cheese Muffins.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
More slow cooked beef recipes
Because nothing beats the flavour of beef cooked long and slow until it’s meltingly tender….
Life of Dozer
When the homeless man at the dog park isn’t at his car (usually off tending to the park grounds – best groundskeeper EVER!), I tie food to the boot of his van. Pot Roast, in this case!
And this is Dozer, trying to figure out if he can reach the bag. #SHAMELESS
John Gunning says
Hello again you beautiful woman.
I couldn’t resist this recipe. I’m a big fan of slow cooker recipes.
I made this to-day. In Australia butchers have no idea what a “beef chuck roast ” is. I settled for a 2KG ” Australian Topside Beef Roast”. Enormous!
I followed your instructions. Must say the initial browning is essential.
I should have made more flour and broth and I will next time considering the size of the meat.
The result was photogenic and my wife and son were very pleased with the result.
Photographs to follow
Nagi says
Butcher has no idea what beef chuck is??? But I am SO GLAD you enjoyed this with topside!!!!!! N xx
Ruth says
Happy new year Nagi and thank you so much for the new ebook.
So much work has gone into this and I really like the layout. Can’t wait to try them all.
Nagi says
You’re so welcome Ruth! N x
Diane says
The temperature here in Massachusetts is 8 degrees but with our windchill, feels like -18 … Mighty cold , coldest temps I’ve ever experienced! And in my fridge is a beef chuck roast waiting to be made tomorrow, another stay at home day! Perfect timing with your recipe post … I will make this tomorrow and I’m sure it will be just as tasty as your other recipes I have made. Thanks so much Nagi, enjoy your summer, I’m jealous 🙂 !!!
Nagi says
And that’s in FAHRENHEIT??!!!
Diane says
Yes it is! However, the thick ice coating on streets and walkways is beginning to melt slowly. Waiting for a sunny day for the sun’s rays to do its job! We are warming up to 36 degrees (F) today🤗! The pot roast was excellent…I added mushrooms and brussels sprouts …yummy! Downloaded your cookbook, thanks so much for sharing!
Espie Hartshorne says
Hello Nagi, we’re not far away from each other. Am from the top south of New Zealand.
We got similar recipe of slow cooking pot roast. I used bolar roast beef instead and dust with salt/pepper and flour and brown it. I used the same ingredients you have and also add some parsnip. Turned out so yummy and my husband loving it with lots of gravy.
Wishing you all the best for New Year 2018 and more new recipes for us subscribers.
Cheers
Nagi says
I’m visiting your beautiful country in early March! Hollyford Track. Can’t WAIT!! N xx
Eha says
I must admit that since I basically like my beef saying ‘moo’ I have never been a big friend of pot roast either. Remember visiting lots of old schoolfriends from Europe when in the USA and so oft being presented with the dish . . . well, perchance I just thought it a wee bit boring . . . . But must admit yours looks succulent! Since this weekend the temps are meant to climb to 44 C methinks we’ll try it a wee bit later, but make it we shall 😉 ! Being IT-wise – huh!!!! First WordPress stopped all my blog deliveries a few weeks back and I had to go ‘fishing’ every morning – today it will not even allow me that privilege and the ‘help’ people will not be on till Monday! Boo!!!!!
Nagi says
OMG Eha!!! You have me sniggering like a teenager reading your messages!!!!
faith says
Tell Dozer to hop up into the trunk/hatch area. He will have a much better chance of snagging that bag from that height and angle. I don’t blame him in the least; if I was a dog and smelled pot roast(s) cooking all day, i’d be half-crazed by the time we arrived at the dog park. My dogs would not only be tempted, they would get a small share for being such loving companions. I’ll bet that you give Dozer a taste of whatever you are cooking but I remember the brussels sprout episode along with the disgusted look on his face.
Looks like a perfectly wonderful dish, and yes we are freezing here in the midwest. Not much in the way of precip but maybe this weekend we will get some truly terrible weather. That pot roast looks perfect and I love using the crock pot so your recipe will probably be cooking all over America this weekend. Dogs of America, prepare yourselves for the true test of your obedience training!
Nagi says
Now now, don’t give him ideas!!!!!!!!
Robert M. Marullo (Bobby) says
Hi Nagi, Haven’t yapped with you for some time, so Merry Christmas (2017) and the Happiest and Healthiest New Year (2018). Please don’t get mad at me, but is their the slightest chance of modifying this recipe for stove top? If you can
I would truly appreciate it. Right now in Florida it’s 34 degrees. Can you believe that. Might has well as stayed in NYC, at least they have much better restaurants, especially Italian Restaurants.
Looks like you were teasing Dozer with that wonderful and charitable meal for that homeless man. Just so you know
if ever I become homeless, I’m moving to where you live, at least I know I will be feed well.
Love and Hugs to you and Dozer, God Bless!
Bobby PS: Photo of Pot Roast looks so good, I could lick the screen of my laptop….LOL
Nagi says
Hi Robert!!! How could I get mad at a message like that? 🙂 Stove directions added, just some minor tweaks – roll the beef a couple of times and use more water, slightly faster to cook too. And I don’t believe you – Florida, 34F? Nope. Can’t imagine it!!!!
Robert M. Marullo (Bobby) says
Hi Nagi, Thanks for the update on cooking stove top. Just so you know, when I see a good recipe, I don’t give a hoot as to the temperature out side, such as summer or winter. That’s why I am an advent stove top cooker. Going to Publix and get a great cut of pot roast and veggies to cook stove top tonight. Right now
in North Florida, Jacksonville to be exact, it is 41 degrees outside. Been living in heavy sweat pants and tops
for the past week. High’s in the low 50’s don’t help either, except eating a good recipe from your fabulous collections.
My furries, love to sleep all day on my beautiful electric blanket, me too!!!
Thanks again for all your wonderful recipes, even if they don’t help my waist line. Who cares!!!!
XXX, Bobby
Nagi says
Your furries are SO LUCKY!!!! 😂
Gary Hayes says
Hi Nagi, I have tried, and loved many of your recipes, but this pot roast really has my mouth watering, just by looking at your photos. I will try this recipe very soon.
Your photographs are truly professional looking, and your recipes are the best.
Nagi says
Thank you so much for the lovely compliment Gary! N xx
Gary Hayes says
You deserve a compliment, because of sharing such wonderful recipes online.
Eija Sipila says
I don’t have a slow cooker and no pressure coooker. So if one would make this in the oven, what would be proper tempeature to imitate the slow cooker and which time the first part. and then which the second? Would it need changes to fluid amount? Or should I forget this recipe?
Nagi says
Hi Eija! I added notes to the recipe for how to do it in the oven and stove too! I hope that helps! N xx
Gary Hayes says
Eija, I am not by any means a chef, but have always loved cooking, especially slow cooking, so if I were you, I would buy a quality slow cooker, either electric, or one you can use on a gas cooktop, as nothing comes close to the taste and texture of a long, slow cooked meal.
Eija Sipilä says
Thanks Gary. Is there a difference, if: You put your ingridients to a Dutch oven with lid on to the oven, 7 hours and low temperature.
Eija
Gary Hayes says
Hello Eija, As I said earlier, I am no chef, but if you want to cook this wonderful recipe, just buy an electric slow cooker and, if you follow the instructions to the letter, you will get an excellent result.
The fact that you need a slow cooker means the cheapest of cuts will be really tender, as slow cooking doesn’t lose any liquids, and keeps the flavour in the pot.
Slow cookers are inexpensive.
Josephine B says
Eija, I too am no chef, but if you want to cook this in a Dutch oven with lid on in your oven I’d try cooking it at 150C (approx. 300F.) for maybe around 4-5 hours. Just check at the 4th hour and you maybe able to see how much further you need to cook. Hope this helps you. I’ve not personally tried this, but have cooked others similar.
Nagi says
You rock Josephine! Nx PS I’ve added oven notes now.
Beth says
Just what we need here with temperatures below zero. Got to make that and I love that it has lots of gravy.
Nagi says
Hope you try it Beth – and LOVE IT! Stay warm – N x
Mike says
Looks really good
Nagi says
Thanks Mike! N x
Mary says
This looks absolutely scrumptious! I am a vegetable lover and with that gravy/sauce they look so unctuous – the meat looks lovely and soft but moist. I don’t have a slow cooker so will wait for Summer to be over then this recipe will go top of the pile.
Thankyou for the ebook of recipes – now stored in iBooks for later perusal. I love your ‘never fail’ recipes and appreciate how hard you work to give us all this pleasure. I can fully understand Dozer wanting to raid the homeless man’s bag!! 😂
Nagi says
Thanks Mary!! I imagine it is quite warm over there too?? 🙂 N x
Valerie Justus-Rusconi says
Nagi, this is what I made for Christmas dinner! I never thought to thicken the broth before, I usually pour it off after cooking and make a gravy out of it separately. I serve the meat on a platter, veggies in a bowl and the gravy in a boat. :>) I will have to try it your way and save myself the washing of yet another pot.
Nagi says
Oooh YUM!!! What a Christmas! N xx PS Actually, I like your gravy boat idea!
Deborah says
Nagi, my b/f and I love pot roast, so I will be making this! I’ll let you know how it goes.
I am going to add one small step to your instructions, which is to: Deglaze the pan I use to brown the beef for more of that flavor you mentioned in your post.
YUMMMMY!
Nagi says
Oooh YES to that Deborah! I do that with win! 🙂 N x
Judy says
Why not use a combination of russet and red potatoes? The russets will ‘melt’ and thicken the gravy (allowing you to skip the white flour), while the reds will hold its shape.
Nagi says
I should add this to the notes though, to let others see it, it’s a terrific idea and then it would be GLUTEN FREE!
Nagi says
Hi Judy! I must confess that I’m not the hugest fan of thickening liquids using broken down potato, I find it isn’t as smooth. I like doing it for soups! N x
April says
This looks delicious! I also add flour but I would like to know what kind of roast beef do you look for? My chuck roast beef always end up dry! I even tried picking ones with more marbling but still dry. When I make it on the stove-top it comes out perfect but in the oven or slow cooker, DRY! I’m not sure what I am doing wrong. I’m going to keep trying until I get it right.
Nagi says
Woah! Dry chuck??? Can I ask where you live??
April says
I live in the Washington DC area.
Tara says
I don’t even like pot roast and now you have ME thinking, “I need to make this!” Every recipe I’ve tried from you has been a hit so I know my husband will be a happy man.
Nagi says
Highest. Praise. EVER!!! 😂
Caro says
I have been eating pot roast since childhood and cooking it for many years. It would never have occurred to me NOT to add thickening as one would to make gravy. Maybe it’s because I am a U.S.
Southern cook
Nagi says
Southerners. Gravy. Amen. N x ❤️
Yasmin says
Hi Nagi
I have been waiting for you to post a slow cooker beef pot roast and can’t believe my luck 😃 To thicken the gravy can I use corn flour instead?
Thanks
Yasmin
Nagi says
Hi Yasmin! You sure can. 🙂 Start with 1 tbsp of cornflour. If at the end the gravy isn’t thick enough, add 1 tsp of cornflour mixed with a splash of water, stir into the liquid and heat up (the residual heat will probably be enough). It doesn’t need to be cooked out as much as flour so it’s easy to adjust at the end! N x
Marisa Franca @ All Our Way says
Oh, Boy! Does your roast ever look moist and juicy. I hope you had a great New Years and didn’t overindulge in the bubbly. And if you did — good for you!! I like a thicker juice than just a brothy gravy. And thank you for sending us a nice comfort food warming dish — Florida is supposed to be warm and we’re wearing our winter coats. 😢 I’m really excited about this year!! I’m getting good vibes — how about you?? Have a great week. 🤗
Nagi says
Of course I overindulged. Didn’t you? 😂