This oven-baked Amish-style beef and sweet potato casserole is the kind of practical comfort food that turns a handful of pantry and refrigerator staples into a hearty one-dish meal. It follows the simple, no-fuss tradition of layering ingredients in a baking dish and letting the oven do the work, with condensed French onion soup adding deep savory flavor to beef chuck while sweet potatoes soften and soak up the juices as everything bakes together.
Serve this casserole with buttered green beans, a crisp side salad, or simple steamed peas to balance its richness. Warm dinner rolls or crusty bread are also excellent alongside for catching the flavorful onion-beef gravy, and if you want a fuller Sunday-style supper, applesauce or a small dish of pickled beets makes a fitting sweet-tart contrast.
Oven Baked 5-Ingredient Amish Beef and Sweet Potato Casserole
Servings: 6
Ingredients
2 pounds beef chuck, cut into 1 1/2-inch cubes
Directions
1. Preheat the oven to 325°F and lightly grease a 9x13-inch baking dish.
2. Spread the raw beef chuck cubes evenly in the baking dish, then scatter the sweet potato chunks, sliced onion, and baby carrots over the top. Season with the salt and black pepper.
3. Spoon the condensed French onion soup over the top and spread it as evenly as possible so it coats the meat and vegetables.
4. Cover the dish tightly with foil and bake for 2 hours, or until the beef is tender and the sweet potatoes are soft.
5. Remove the foil, check that the beef is fork-tender, and let the casserole rest for 10 minutes before serving so the juices settle slightly.
6. Spoon the casserole onto plates or serve it straight from the baking dish while hot.
Variations & Tips
Add a little liquid if needed: If your condensed soup seems especially thick, stir in 1/4 to 1/2 cup water before spreading it over the casserole so there is enough moisture to help the beef braise and the vegetables cook evenly.
Make it more traditional: For a plainer old-fashioned version, skip extra seasonings beyond salt and pepper and let the onion soup carry the flavor. This keeps the dish very much in the spirit of simple Amish-inspired casserole cooking.
Use potatoes instead of sweet potatoes: If you prefer a more savory profile, swap the sweet potatoes for russet or Yukon Gold potatoes cut into chunks of similar size. They will absorb the oniony broth nicely and give the casserole a more classic beef stew character.
Brown the beef for deeper flavor: Although this recipe is designed for convenience with raw beef going straight into the dish, you can quickly brown the beef cubes in a skillet first for a richer, more developed flavor and better color in the finished casserole.
Cut evenly for best texture: Try to keep the beef and sweet potato pieces close in size so everything finishes cooking at the same time. Uneven chunks can leave some bites too firm while others become overly soft.