This oven baked Amish-inspired beef and kohlrabi bake is the kind of simple, cozy dinner that works beautifully on a busy weeknight or a slow Sunday afternoon. Using just a handful of ingredients, the raw beef arm roast bakes low and slow under a creamy layer of soup and vegetables until everything turns tender and savory. It has that practical, old-fashioned comfort food feel that makes one pan do all the work while your kitchen starts to smell like home.

Serve this hearty bake with buttered egg noodles, mashed potatoes, or thick slices of crusty bread to soak up the creamy pan juices. A simple green bean side, sweet corn, or a crisp lettuce salad balances the richness well, and if you want to lean into the comfort-food vibe, warm applesauce or pickled beets make great old-school pairings.

Oven Baked 4-Ingredient Amish Beef and Kohlrabi Bake

Servings: 6

Finished baked beef and kohlrabi in a rustic baking dish
Finished baked beef and kohlrabi in a rustic baking dish

Ingredients

1 beef arm roast, about 3 to 4 pounds

2 cans cream of chive soup, undiluted
3 medium kohlrabi bulbs, peeled and cut into chunks
1 medium onion, sliced

Directions

1. Preheat your oven to 325°F and lightly grease a large baking dish or roasting pan. Spread the kohlrabi chunks and sliced onion across the bottom of the dish to make a bed for the roast.

2. Place the beef arm roast on top of the vegetables. Pour the undiluted cream of chive soup evenly over the roast, letting some run down onto the vegetables.

3. Cover the dish tightly with foil or a lid and bake for 3 to 3 1/2 hours, or until the beef is fork-tender and the kohlrabi is soft.

4. Remove the dish from the oven and let the roast rest for 10 to 15 minutes. Slice or shred the beef, spoon the vegetables and sauce over the top, and serve hot.

Variations & Tips

Add herbs: If you have them on hand, a little dried thyme or parsley sprinkled over the top before baking adds extra flavor without changing the simple character of the dish.

Make it ahead: You can assemble everything in the baking dish the night before, cover it, and refrigerate it. The next day, let it sit at room temperature for about 20 minutes while the oven preheats before baking.

Swap the vegetable: If kohlrabi is hard to find, turnips or peeled rutabaga give you a similar hearty texture and work nicely with the creamy soup and roast.

Thicken the sauce: For a thicker gravy-like finish, uncover the dish for the last 20 minutes of baking so the sauce can reduce a bit around the roast and vegetables.

Slice against the grain: Beef arm roast gets especially tender when cooked low and slow, but slicing against the grain makes every serving even easier to eat and gives the dish a more polished look on the plate.