These Slow Cooker 4-Ingredient Tuscan Garlic Potatoes are the kind of dish that shows up at a backyard cookout and vanishes before you can blink. My neighbor first brought a crock full of these to our Memorial Day cookout, and people were literally hovering over the slow cooker, scraping out the last scoop. Tender golden potato rounds simmer in a creamy garlic sauce with Tuscan-style sun-dried tomatoes and spinach, so it feels a little fancy but is honestly as simple as tossing four ingredients into the slow cooker and walking away. It’s a great make-ahead side for busy family nights, potlucks, or anytime you want something comforting with hardly any fuss.
Serve these Tuscan garlic potatoes straight from the slow cooker on the warm setting so the sauce stays creamy and the edges keep that gentle bubble. They pair beautifully with grilled chicken, steak, or burgers at a cookout, and they’re just as good alongside baked pork chops or roasted sausage on a chilly night. Add a crisp green salad or steamed green beans to balance the richness, and a loaf of crusty bread or warm dinner rolls to mop up every bit of the garlicky cream. For a full spread, set them out with a simple fruit salad and corn on the cob and let everyone help themselves.
Slow Cooker 4-Ingredient Tuscan Garlic Potatoes
Servings: 8

Ingredients
3 pounds small golden potatoes, sliced into 1/4-inch rounds
2 cups refrigerated garlic Alfredo or garlic Parmesan cream sauce
1 cup oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes, drained and chopped
4 cups fresh baby spinach, loosely packed
Directions
Lightly grease a 5- to 6-quart slow cooker crock with nonstick spray or a thin swipe of oil to help keep the potatoes from sticking.
Rinse the small golden potatoes and pat them dry. Slice into 1/4-inch rounds so they cook evenly and soak up the creamy garlic sauce.
Add the sliced potatoes to the slow cooker. Pour the garlic Alfredo or garlic Parmesan cream sauce evenly over the potatoes, using a spatula to scrape every bit of sauce from the container.
Sprinkle the chopped, drained sun-dried tomatoes over the sauced potatoes. Gently stir everything together in the slow cooker until the potatoes are well coated and the tomatoes are tucked throughout.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on HIGH for 3 to 3 1/2 hours or on LOW for 5 to 6 hours, until the potatoes are very tender when pierced with a fork and the sauce is bubbling around the edges.
Once the potatoes are tender, remove the lid and add the fresh baby spinach on top. Use tongs or a large spoon to gently fold the spinach into the hot potatoes and sauce until the leaves are coated and begin to wilt.
Cover again and cook on HIGH for an additional 10 to 15 minutes, just until the spinach is fully wilted and the sauce is lightly bubbling on the surface. Do not overcook at this point or the spinach can turn too dark and the sauce may separate.
Give the potatoes a final gentle stir, taste, and adjust the seasoning if you like with a pinch of salt and pepper (optional, not counted in the four base ingredients). Switch the slow cooker to WARM for serving, and set the crock right on the table or buffet so everyone can scoop from the creamy, bubbling potatoes while they’re hot.
Variations & Tips
For picky eaters, you can chop the sun-dried tomatoes very finely so they blend into the sauce more, or reduce the amount to 1/2 cup for a milder flavor. If anyone in your family isn’t a spinach fan, stir in only 2 cups of spinach so it’s less leafy, or swap it for chopped kale that can hold up a bit longer if you’ll have the slow cooker on warm for a while. To make it extra cozy, sprinkle a handful of shredded mozzarella or Parmesan over the top during the last 10 minutes of cooking so it melts into the sauce. For a slightly lighter version, you can use a lighter Alfredo sauce or mix half Alfredo and half milk, but know the sauce will be a bit thinner. If you need this to be vegetarian, simply choose a garlic Alfredo sauce that doesn’t contain meat-based stock or rennet. Food safety tips: Keep the potatoes refrigerated until you’re ready to slice them, and don’t leave the finished dish at room temperature for more than 2 hours (or 1 hour if it’s very hot outside at a cookout). When reheating leftovers, warm them thoroughly to at least 165°F, stirring so the sauce heats evenly. Store leftovers in a covered container in the refrigerator and use within 3 to 4 days. If the sauce thickens too much when reheating, stir in a splash of milk or cream to loosen it back up.