Every Sunday after church, my grandmother would put on a pot of these brown butter noodles, and the whole farmhouse would fill with the warm, nutty smell of toasted butter. This slow cooker version keeps that same old-fashioned Amish comfort but makes it even easier for busy days. With just four simple ingredients, you get tender egg noodles coated in a deep amber brown butter sauce that melts in your mouth. It’s the kind of recipe that proves you don’t need much more than time, patience, and a good knob of butter to make something unforgettable.
These noodles are rich and comforting, so they shine next to simple, homey dishes. Serve them alongside roast chicken, pork chops, or a pot roast with carrots and onions. A crisp green salad with a tangy dressing or some buttered green beans helps balance the richness. They also make a lovely bed for leftover shredded roast beef or turkey. If you’re keeping it simple, just add a dish of cottage cheese, sliced tomatoes in summer, or warm applesauce in winter, and you have a meal that feels straight out of a Midwestern farmhouse kitchen.
Slow Cooker Amish Brown Butter Noodles
Servings: 6
Ingredients
1 cup (2 sticks, 226 g) unsalted butter
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, plus more for serving
12 ounces wide egg noodles (about 8–9 cups dry)
Directions
Set your slow cooker to LOW and place the lid on so the crock warms while you brown the butter. This helps the noodles cook more evenly later.
In a heavy-bottomed saucepan or skillet, add the butter and set over medium heat. Let the butter melt completely, then continue to cook, stirring often with a heatproof spatula or wooden spoon.
Watch the butter closely as it foams and then begins to turn golden. Scrape the bottom of the pan as you stir so the milk solids don’t stick. After several minutes, you’ll see deep amber-brown specks forming on the bottom and the butter will smell nutty and toasty, like roasted nuts or caramel.
As soon as the milk solids are a deep golden brown (not black) and the butter is a rich amber color, immediately remove the pan from the heat to stop the cooking. This is your brown butter. If any bits look too dark, you can quickly pour the butter through a fine-mesh strainer into a heatproof bowl to leave the burned bits behind, but those evenly toasted specks are where the flavor lives, so don’t strain unless truly needed.
Stir the kosher salt and black pepper into the hot brown butter until dissolved and fragrant. This seasoned brown butter is your only sauce, so it should taste well-salted and peppery at this stage. Set aside while you prepare the noodles.
Lightly coat the warmed slow cooker insert with a thin film of butter (you can use a spoonful from your browned butter) to help prevent sticking. Add the dry wide egg noodles to the slow cooker in an even layer, gently shaking the crock so they settle in but do not pack tightly.
Slowly pour the warm brown butter mixture evenly over the dry noodles, using a spatula to scrape every last speck of the toasted milk solids into the slow cooker. With tongs or two large spoons, gently toss the noodles to coat them as evenly as possible in the brown butter. They will look dry at this point but will soften as they absorb the butter and their own steam.
Cover the slow cooker and cook on LOW for 1 hour. After 30 minutes, remove the lid briefly and gently toss the noodles again, pulling any drier noodles from the top down into the more buttery bottom. Replace the lid quickly so you don’t lose too much heat.
After 1 hour total, check the noodles. They should be tender but not mushy, with a glossy sheen from the brown butter and visible golden specks from the toasted milk solids and black pepper. If they seem a bit firm, toss again, cover, and continue cooking on LOW in 10–15 minute increments, checking frequently until they reach your preferred tenderness.
Once the noodles are tender, taste and adjust seasoning with more salt and black pepper if needed. The flavor should be deeply nutty, buttery, and pleasantly seasoned, with each noodle lightly coated rather than swimming in sauce.
Switch the slow cooker to WARM and serve the brown butter noodles straight from the crock. Give them a final gentle toss just before serving to redistribute the sauce and toasted bits so every spoonful has that Sunday-after-church flavor.
Variations & Tips
If your slow cooker tends to run hot or the noodles at the bottom seem to brown too quickly, you can add 1/4 cup of warm water or unsalted chicken broth halfway through cooking to create a little steam and help the noodles soften more gently. For a slightly creamier version that still stays close to the old Amish style, stir in 1/4 cup of heavy cream or whole milk right at the end and warm just until heated through (do not boil, as dairy can curdle). If you prefer a lighter hand with butter, you can reduce it to 3/4 cup, but understand that the full cup is what gives that classic, melt-in-your-mouth richness my grandmother swore by. You can also add a small handful of finely chopped fresh parsley at the end for color without changing the flavor too much. For extra protein, serve the noodles under shredded roast chicken or beef instead of mixing meat directly into the crock, which keeps the base recipe true to its four-ingredient simplicity. Food safety tips: Always brown the butter over controlled heat and remove it immediately once the milk solids turn deep golden; burned butter will taste bitter and should be discarded. Keep the slow cooker on LOW or WARM only; HIGH can overcook the noodles and dry them out. Do not leave cooked noodles sitting at room temperature for more than 2 hours; cool leftovers quickly and refrigerate in a shallow container. Reheat leftovers on the stovetop or in the microwave with a splash of water or broth, stirring often, until steaming hot throughout.