This is what Mom always made when she wanted to impress guests. The onion gravy is so good you will want to drink it

This slow cooker 5-ingredient smothered beef roast is exactly the kind of dish Midwestern moms pulled out when company was coming over: unfussy, deeply comforting, and all about that silky onion gravy. It’s a classic pot roast-style recipe that leans on a generous amount of onions and a simple pantry gravy base to create a rich, almost drinkable sauce that soaks into every slice of beef.

Slow cooker beef roast with onion gravy in a serving dish
Slow cooker beef roast with onion gravy in a serving dish
The slow cooker does the work while you go about your day, and by dinnertime you have tender, sliceable roast blanketed in caramelized onion gravy that tastes like it cooked on the back of the stove all Sunday long.

Serve the smothered beef roast sliced thick, spooning plenty of the onion gravy over the top. It’s wonderful over creamy mashed potatoes, buttered egg noodles, or a bed of rice to catch every bit of the sauce. Add a simple green vegetable—like steamed green beans, roasted Brussels sprouts, or a crisp salad—to balance the richness. Warm dinner rolls or crusty bread are perfect for mopping up the extra gravy, which is half the reason to make this in the first place.

Slow Cooker Smothered Beef Roast
Servings: 6

Ingredients
3 to 3 1/2 lb beef chuck roast, excess fat trimmed
2 large yellow onions, thinly sliced (about 6 cups)
1 (10.5 oz) can condensed cream of mushroom soup
1 (1 oz) packet dry onion soup mix
1 cup low-sodium beef broth or water
Directions
Layer the sliced onions in the bottom of a 5- to 6-quart slow cooker, spreading them out evenly. This onion bed will keep the meat off the bottom and turn into the base of your gravy.
Sliced onions layered in a slow cooker
Sliced onions layered in a slow cooker
Place the chuck roast on top of the onions. If one side is fattier, place that side facing up so the fat can baste the meat as it cooks.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the condensed cream of mushroom soup, dry onion soup mix, and beef broth or water until mostly smooth. It doesn’t need to be perfect, but you want the soup mix evenly distributed.

Gravy mixture being whisked in a bowl
Gravy mixture being whisked in a bowl
Pour the soup mixture evenly over the roast, making sure some of it seeps down over the sides and into the onions. Use a spoon to nudge a few onions up around the edges and on top of the meat so they’ll caramelize in the sauce.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 8 to 10 hours, or on HIGH for 4 to 5 hours, until the beef is very tender and can be easily pulled apart with a fork. Low and slow will give you the best texture and deepest onion flavor.
Cooked beef roast in slow cooker with rich onion gravy
Cooked beef roast in slow cooker with rich onion gravy
Once cooked, carefully transfer the roast to a cutting board, letting the onions and gravy stay in the slow cooker. Slice the beef across the grain into thick slices or large chunks, removing any large pieces of fat as you go.
Stir the onions and gravy together in the slow cooker. The onions should be very soft and golden, and the sauce thick, glossy, and deeply brown from the slow cooking. Taste and adjust seasoning with a pinch of salt or black pepper if needed, keeping in mind the soup mix is already salty.

Sliced beef roast on a cutting board
Sliced beef roast on a cutting board
Return the sliced beef to the slow cooker, nestling it back into the onion gravy. Spoon the sauce over the top so every piece is well-coated. Cover and let it sit on WARM for 10 to 15 minutes so the flavors meld before serving.
To serve, lift out thick slices of beef and spoon plenty of the caramelized onion gravy over the top, making sure each portion gets a generous amount of onions and sauce.

Variations & Tips
For a slightly more old-fashioned, company-worthy flavor, you can brown the chuck roast first: pat it dry, season lightly with salt and pepper, and sear it in a hot film of oil in a skillet until deeply browned on both sides, then transfer to the slow cooker on top of the onions. This adds a roasted, beefy depth to the gravy but isn’t strictly necessary.

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