This is my stripped-down, Sunday-slow-cooker version of the kind of sticky, fall-apart roast my dad used to baby all day in the oven. The best part: it uses just four ingredients and the slow cooker does all the work while you live your life. You start with a big, gelatinous slab of beef chuck roast (all that connective tissue turns silky), coat it in a simple sweet-savory mix, and let it go low and slow until it’s glazed in a glossy amber layer with a bit of charred bark around the edges. It’s perfect for busy weekends when you want something that tastes like you fussed, but you absolutely did not.
Serve thick slices or big chunks of the roast over buttery mashed potatoes, egg noodles, or steamed rice to soak up the sticky juices. A crisp green salad or simple roasted vegetables (like carrots, green beans, or broccoli) help balance the richness. Leftovers are amazing piled on toasted buns with a little coleslaw, or tucked into tacos with pickled onions. A light, fruity red wine or a cold beer pairs nicely, but honestly, this is just as at home on the table with iced tea and a pan of dinner rolls.
Dad’s 4-Ingredient Sunday Slow-Cooker Roast
Servings: 6
Ingredients
3–4 lb beef chuck roast (well-marbled, thick slab)
1 cup barbecue sauce (thick, smoky-sweet style)
1/2 cup low-sodium beef broth
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
Directions
Pat the beef chuck roast dry with paper towels. This helps it develop that glossy, sticky bark instead of steaming in excess moisture.
In a small bowl, whisk together the barbecue sauce, beef broth, and brown sugar until the sugar is mostly dissolved and the mixture is smooth.
Place the chuck roast into the slow cooker, fatty side up if it has a clear fat cap. Pour the sauce mixture evenly over the top, turning the roast once or twice to coat all sides, then leave it fat-side up so it self-bastes as it cooks.
Cover and cook on LOW for 8–10 hours, or until the roast is very tender and a fork slides in easily. Avoid lifting the lid during the first several hours so the slow cooker maintains a steady temperature and the sauce can slowly reduce and thicken.
During the last 30–60 minutes of cooking, gently spoon some of the thickened sauce from the bottom of the slow cooker over the top of the roast. This helps build that sticky, amber glaze and encourages a slight charred bark around the edges.
For an extra bark-like finish (optional but great if you have an extra minute): carefully transfer the cooked roast to a foil-lined baking sheet, spoon some of the sauce over the top, and broil on high for 3–5 minutes, watching closely, until the surface is caramelized and lightly charred in spots. Return it to the slow cooker and pour any pan juices back over the meat.
Let the roast rest in the slow cooker, uncovered, for about 10 minutes so the sauce thickens slightly and clings to the meat. Skim off any excess fat from the surface with a spoon if you like.
Serve the roast in big chunks or slices, spooning plenty of the sticky, glossy sauce from the slow cooker over the top. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days, reheating gently with a splash of water or broth to loosen the sauce.
Variations & Tips
If you want a little kick, stir 1–2 teaspoons of crushed red pepper flakes or hot sauce into the barbecue sauce mixture (this technically adds a fifth ingredient, so think of it as optional). For a slightly less sweet version, reduce the brown sugar to 2 tablespoons and use a tangier barbecue sauce. You can also swap the beef chuck roast for a similarly marbled pork shoulder (Boston butt) and follow the same directions; just be sure to cook until the meat is fully tender and shreds easily. If your slow cooker tends to run hot, check for doneness around the 7-hour mark so the sauce doesn’t over-reduce and burn at the edges. Food safety tips: Always start with a fully thawed roast; frozen meat can keep the slow cooker in the temperature “danger zone” (40–140°F) too long. Keep the lid on as much as possible so the cooker maintains a safe, steady temperature. Cook on LOW rather than WARM to ensure it reaches at least 145°F internally (beef chuck will be much higher by the time it’s tender). Refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours of cooking, and reheat to at least 165°F before serving again. If you’re prepping this the night before, you can whisk the sauce and store it in a jar in the fridge, but wait to place the meat in the slow cooker until just before cooking so raw meat isn’t sitting in the insert in the fridge (most manufacturers don’t recommend chilling the ceramic insert).