This 4-ingredient poor man's tax deadline oven beef bake is the kind of dish I lean on when the paperwork is piled high and my patience is running low, but I still want something hearty waiting in the wings. It comes straight out of the frugal, make-do Midwestern cooking I grew up with, where a cheap cut of beef, a simple starch, and a good long bake could feed a family without fuss. Everything hides under a rich, dark, caramelized sauce, so the beef is almost concealed until you dig in with a spoon. You can assemble it in minutes earlier in the day, slide it into the oven, and let it quietly bubble away while you wrestle with forms and figures, knowing supper is taking care of itself on a shoestring budget.
Serve generous spoonfuls of this bubbling beef bake straight from the metal pan, letting that dark, sticky sauce run over the edges of the plate. It’s especially good alongside a simple green vegetable—steamed green beans or peas, or even a crisp lettuce salad if you’re feeling virtuous after a long day of numbers. A slice of soft white bread or a warm dinner roll is perfect for wiping up the caramelized juices. If you’ve got it, a jar of pickles or some tangy coleslaw brings a little brightness that cuts through the richness and makes this humble dish feel like a complete, comforting supper.
4-Ingredient Tax Deadline Beef Bake
Servings: 4-6

Ingredients
2 pounds inexpensive beef stew meat or chuck, cut into 1-inch cubes
1 cup uncooked white rice (long grain or medium grain)
1 (10.5-ounce) can condensed cream of mushroom soup
1 1/2 cups beef broth (canned or from bouillon)
Directions
Preheat your oven to 325°F (165°C). Lightly grease a metal 9x13-inch baking pan or similar shallow metal roasting pan; the metal helps create that dark, caramelized edge.
Spread the uncooked white rice evenly over the bottom of the prepared pan. This will soak up the juices and thicken the sauce as it bakes.
Scatter the beef cubes evenly over the rice in a single layer. The meat doesn’t need to be browned first; it will slowly cook and stay tender under the sauce, mostly hidden until serving.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the condensed cream of mushroom soup and the beef broth until smooth and well combined. The mixture will be thin—that’s what you want so it can soak into the rice and around the beef.
Pour the soup and broth mixture evenly over the beef and rice, making sure everything is moistened. Gently tap the pan on the counter to help the liquid settle down into the rice and around the meat.
Cover the pan tightly with heavy-duty aluminum foil, crimping the edges so steam can’t escape. This sealed, steamy environment is what turns the rice tender and the beef soft while the top slowly darkens and caramelizes underneath.
Place the covered pan on the center rack of the preheated oven and bake for 2 1/2 to 3 hours, until the beef is very tender, the rice has absorbed most of the liquid, and the top is bubbling with a dark, glossy, caramelized sauce around the edges.
Carefully remove the foil—watch for hot steam—and check the rice and beef. The rice should be tender and the sauce thick and rich. If the top isn’t as dark as you’d like, return the uncovered pan to the oven for another 10–15 minutes to deepen the color and caramelization.
Let the beef bake rest for about 10 minutes before serving. This short rest allows the bubbling sauce to settle into a thick, rich layer over the concealed beef and rice, making it easier to spoon out hearty portions.
Variations & Tips
For a little more flavor without adding extra ingredients, you can season the beef cubes lightly with salt and pepper before layering them over the rice; just keep it simple so the 4-ingredient spirit stays intact. If you have a different condensed cream soup on hand—like cream of celery or cream of onion—you can swap it for the cream of mushroom for a slightly different taste while still keeping the ingredient count the same. To stretch the meal even further on very lean weeks, use 1 1/2 pounds of beef and add an extra 1/4 cup of rice; the dish will be a bit more rice-forward but still satisfying. If you like a darker, almost sticky top, remove the foil for the last 20 minutes of baking and let the edges really caramelize in the metal pan. Leftovers reheat well, and the flavors deepen overnight, so this is a fine dish to make in the morning and rewarm gently in the oven for supper if tax day runs longer than you planned.