This slow cooker 4-ingredient depression era fried onion macaroni comes straight out of the kind of summers my great aunt used to talk about, when money was tight but no one went hungry. Every Friday, she’d stretch a pound of elbow macaroni and a few onions into a pot of pure comfort. The onions are slowly cooked down in butter until they’re sweet, deeply golden, and almost jammy, then tossed with tender macaroni and a bit of starchy cooking water so everything turns a rich amber color. It’s simple, humble food, the kind that kept Midwestern farm families going through hard times and still feels like a hug at the end of a long week.
Serve this macaroni straight from the slow cooker with a big spoon and let folks help themselves. It pairs nicely with sliced garden tomatoes, cucumber salad, or simple steamed green beans for a light summer supper. For something heartier, add a plate of pan-fried sausage or baked ham on the side. A sprinkle of black pepper and maybe a little extra melted butter over each bowl brings out the sweetness of the onions. Leftovers reheat well and make a cozy lunch alongside a crisp green salad or a dish of cottage cheese, just the way many Midwestern tables have seen it for generations.
Slow Cooker Fried Onion Macaroni
Servings: 6

Ingredients
1 pound (16 oz) dry elbow macaroni
3 large yellow onions, thinly sliced (about 2 to 2 1/2 pounds total)
1/2 cup (1 stick, 8 tablespoons) unsalted butter, cut into pieces
2 teaspoons kosher salt, divided (plus more to taste)
Directions
Peel and thinly slice the onions into long, even strands. The thinner you slice them, the more easily they will soften and caramelize in the slow cooker.
Scatter the sliced onions evenly in the bottom of a 5- to 6-quart slow cooker. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of the salt over the onions.
Dot the butter pieces evenly over the onions so they melt down into all the layers as they cook.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook the onions on LOW for 6 to 7 hours, stirring once or twice if you are nearby. The onions are ready when they are very soft, reduced in volume, and a deep golden, caramelized color with a rich, sweet aroma.
When the onions are nearly done, bring a large pot of water to a boil on the stove. Salt the water generously, then add the elbow macaroni.
Cook the macaroni until just tender (al dente), usually 7 to 9 minutes, or according to the package directions. Stir occasionally so the pasta doesn’t stick together.
Before draining the macaroni, carefully dip out about 1 cup of the hot starchy pasta water and set it aside. This will help the onions and macaroni come together into a silky, saucy mixture.
Drain the macaroni well in a colander, shaking off excess water. Do not rinse the pasta; you want the starch to help everything cling together.
Turn the slow cooker to WARM or LOW. Give the caramelized onions a good stir, scraping up any browned bits from the sides and bottom of the crock with a wooden spoon.
Add the hot drained macaroni to the slow cooker on top of the onions. Sprinkle the remaining 1 teaspoon salt over the pasta.
Pour in about 1/2 cup of the reserved pasta water to start. Using a large spoon, gently fold the macaroni and onions together until every elbow is coated with the buttery, golden onion mixture. Add more pasta water a little at a time if the mixture seems dry; you want it glossy and lightly saucy, not soupy.
Taste and adjust seasoning with a little more salt if needed. If you like, you can also add a small knob of extra butter at this point for an even richer finish.
Cover and let the macaroni sit on WARM for 10 to 15 minutes so the flavors meld and the pasta absorbs some of the onion butter, stirring once or twice. It should take on a uniform amber color throughout.
Serve the fried onion macaroni right from the slow cooker, making sure each scoop has plenty of caramelized onion strands mixed in with the tender elbows.
Variations & Tips
This recipe is meant to reflect the kind of simple cooking families leaned on when options were few, but you can still make it your own while keeping the spirit of those times. If you don’t have unsalted butter, use salted butter and reduce the added salt slightly, tasting as you go. A grind of black pepper or a pinch of paprika stirred in at the end gives a little warmth without changing the character of the dish. For a more filling meal, you can stir in a cup or two of leftover cooked meat—such as chopped ham, browned ground beef, or shredded roast chicken—right after mixing in the macaroni. If you need to stretch it even further, add an extra 4 to 6 ounces of cooked macaroni and a splash more pasta water. For a slightly lighter version, replace half the butter with a neutral oil, though the flavor will be a bit less rich. If you prefer a stovetop approach, you can slowly fry the onions in butter in a large skillet over low heat until deeply golden, then combine with hot cooked macaroni and a little pasta water in a pot or the same skillet. Food safety tips: Keep the slow cooker covered while the onions cook so they stay at a safe, steady temperature; use the LOW setting and avoid leaving the cooker on WARM for more than 2 hours after the dish is finished. Refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours of serving in a shallow container so they cool promptly, and reheat only what you plan to eat, warming it until it is steaming hot throughout. Discard any macaroni that has been left out at room temperature longer than 2 hours to avoid foodborne illness.