This slow cooker 4-ingredient Amish sausage and gravy is the kind of rich, stick-to-your-ribs farmhouse breakfast my brother begs for every Sunday. It’s inspired by the hearty, no-fuss cooking you find in Amish and rural Midwestern kitchens: simple ingredients, long gentle cooking, and big flavor. Ground pork sausage slowly simmers in a creamy, peppery gravy until it’s thick, bubbling, and spooned straight from the slow cooker for a mouthwatering morning feast. With only four ingredients and almost no hands-on work, it’s ideal for busy weekends or feeding a hungry crowd.
Serve this sausage and gravy ladled generously over hot split buttermilk biscuits, thick slices of toasted country bread, or crispy hash browns. It’s also excellent over buttered toast points if you’re using what you have on hand. Round out the meal with scrambled or fried eggs and a side of fresh fruit or sliced tomatoes to balance the richness. A pot of strong coffee or black tea is the perfect companion to this deeply savory, creamy dish.
Slow Cooker 4-Ingredient Amish Sausage and Gravy
Servings: 6
Ingredients
2 pounds bulk pork breakfast sausage
4 cups whole milk
1 cup all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper, plus more to taste
Directions
Brown the sausage: In a large skillet over medium-high heat, crumble the pork breakfast sausage and cook, stirring often, until well browned with some crispy edges and no pink remains, about 8–10 minutes. Break it into small, bite-sized crumbles as it cooks. Do not drain the drippings; you’ll need them for flavor and to help thicken the gravy.
Transfer to slow cooker: Scrape the browned sausage and all the rendered drippings into the insert of a 4- to 6-quart slow cooker, spreading the sausage out in an even layer.
Make the flour-milk slurry: In a large bowl or pitcher, whisk the all-purpose flour and freshly ground black pepper together. Slowly pour in the whole milk while whisking constantly until the mixture is completely smooth with no visible lumps of flour. This step helps the gravy thicken evenly in the slow cooker.
Combine and stir: Pour the milk-flour mixture over the sausage in the slow cooker. Use a wooden spoon or heat-safe spatula to stir everything together, making sure the sausage is evenly distributed and no pockets of dry flour remain along the edges.
Slow cook until thick and bubbly: Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 4–5 hours, or on HIGH for 2–3 hours. Stir once or twice during cooking if you’re nearby. The gravy is done when it’s thick, creamy, and gently bubbling around the edges, with large crumbles of sausage suspended in the white gravy and plenty of visible black pepper specks.
Adjust seasoning and consistency: Stir the gravy well. Taste and add a bit more freshly ground black pepper if you like it extra peppery. If the gravy is thicker than you prefer, whisk in a splash or two of additional milk until it reaches your desired consistency. If it’s a bit thin, leave the lid off and cook on HIGH for another 15–20 minutes, stirring occasionally, to reduce slightly.
Serve warm: Turn the slow cooker to WARM for serving. Ladle the rich sausage gravy over hot biscuits, toast, or potatoes and serve immediately, making sure each portion gets plenty of sausage crumbles and creamy gravy. Leftovers can be cooled and refrigerated, then gently reheated with a splash of milk to loosen.
Variations & Tips
For a slightly lighter version, swap half of the whole milk for 2% milk; the gravy will still be creamy, just a bit less rich. If you prefer a spicier farmhouse-style breakfast, use hot pork breakfast sausage or add extra freshly ground black pepper at the end. For a more traditional Amish-style seasoning profile without adding extra ingredients, choose a plain or mildly seasoned sausage rather than one with maple or strong herbs, which can dominate the simple, comforting flavor. If you need to hold breakfast for a while—say, for a brunch crowd—keep the slow cooker on WARM and stir every so often, adding a splash of milk if it thickens too much. You can also make the sausage the night before, refrigerate it, and combine it with the flour and milk in the slow cooker in the morning to save time; just plan on adding an extra 30 minutes of cooking if starting from cold. To serve a larger group, the recipe doubles easily in a larger slow cooker; simply keep the same cooking times and stir a few extra times to ensure even thickening.