This slow cooker 4-ingredient Amish-style evaporated milk potato dish is the kind of humble, comforting food that makes a weeknight feel special. It’s inspired by the simple, thrifty cooking traditions found in Amish farm kitchens: minimal ingredients, long gentle cooking, and a focus on hearty, stick-to-your-ribs sides that can double as a main. Here, you pour evaporated milk over raw baby potatoes right in the slow cooker, add just two pantry staples—salt and butter—and let time do the rest. The starch from the potatoes mingles with the milk to create a rich, velvety sauce that clings to every bite, making this a family supper that tends to disappear faster than anything else on the table.
Serve these creamy Amish-style evaporated milk potatoes straight from the slow cooker alongside simple proteins like roast chicken, pan-seared pork chops, or baked ham. A crisp green salad or steamed green beans will balance the richness nicely, and a loaf of crusty bread or warm dinner rolls is perfect for soaking up the extra sauce. If you’d like to turn this into a one-bowl supper, top each serving with sliced hard-boiled eggs or a scoop of leftover shredded roast meat and a sprinkle of fresh herbs.
Slow Cooker Amish Evaporated Milk Baby Potatoes
Servings: 6

Ingredients
2 1/2 pounds small baby potatoes, scrubbed and left whole (or halved if large)
1 (12-ounce) can evaporated milk
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
Directions
Rinse the baby potatoes under cool water and scrub off any dirt. Pat them dry with a clean kitchen towel. Leave them whole if they are bite-sized; if some are larger than 1 1/2 inches, cut those in half so they cook evenly.
Lightly grease the inside of a 4- to 6-quart slow cooker with a small dab of butter or a quick spray of cooking oil to help prevent sticking and make cleanup easier.
Place the raw baby potatoes in an even layer in the bottom of the slow cooker. They should sit snugly but still in a single layer or only slightly mounded.
Scatter the remaining butter pieces evenly over the potatoes. Sprinkle the kosher salt over the top so it seasons the potatoes and the cooking liquid.
Slowly pour the can of evaporated milk over the raw potatoes in the slow cooker, making sure the milk drizzles down through the gaps between the potatoes. The potatoes will not be fully submerged; that’s fine, as they will release moisture while cooking.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 4 1/2 to 5 1/2 hours, or on HIGH for 2 1/2 to 3 hours, until the potatoes are very tender when pierced with a fork. Avoid lifting the lid during the first couple of hours so the heat and steam stay consistent.
Once the potatoes are tender, gently stir from the bottom with a broad spoon, turning the potatoes over so they are coated in the thickened evaporated milk and butter sauce. Taste the sauce and add a pinch more salt if needed.
Let the potatoes sit on the WARM setting for 10 to 15 minutes before serving; this resting time allows the sauce to thicken slightly as the starch from the potatoes continues to mingle with the milk.
Serve the potatoes hot straight from the slow cooker, spooning plenty of the creamy sauce over each portion.
Variations & Tips
To keep the spirit of the original 4-ingredient, pantry-staple recipe, treat these ideas as optional tweaks you can add once you’ve tried the base version. For a peppery kick, add 1/2 teaspoon of freshly ground black pepper along with the salt. If you’d like a slightly richer sauce, stir in 1/4 cup grated Parmesan or a small handful of shredded cheddar during the last 10 minutes of cooking, just long enough to melt. Fresh herbs aren’t traditional but are lovely if you have them on hand—sprinkle chopped parsley or chives over the finished dish for color and brightness. You can also add sliced onions or a few smashed garlic cloves under the potatoes before pouring in the evaporated milk; they’ll soften into the sauce and add gentle sweetness and aroma. For a complete one-pot meal, tuck a few browned sausage links or diced cooked ham around the potatoes at the beginning of cooking so the meat flavors the sauce as everything simmers together.