Perfect Pot Roast and Gravy
This simple recipe for perfect pot roast in the slow cooker is my go-to recipe for Sunday dinners. And that gravy! Oh my, it is a game-changer.
This is the only “pot roast” recipe I make!
Slow Cooker Pot Roast
Slow cooking pot roast is the best way to achieve fall-apart tender meat and perfectly cooked veggies.
If you don’t have a slow cooker, you can use a heavy cast iron pot (make sure it has a lid) in the oven at 350 degrees for about 3 hours.
Browning the roast beforehand can be an annoying step (I get it!), but it adds amazing flavor to the roast and vegetables.
For perfectly cooked roast, set the browned roast on a bed of onions in the slow cooker insert, surround with large carrot pieces (baby carrots won’t do as well here) and pour over the savory broth mixture. Cover and cook on low heat for 8 to 9 hours.
Best Cut of Meat for Pot Roast
Tougher cuts of meat (with a good amount of marbling) are the best choice for pot roasts because they withstand the longer, slower cooking method without drying out.
The specific cuts most recommended for pot roast are:
- chuck roast
- arm roast
- round roast
- rump roast
I almost always use a chuck or arm roast. We raise our own beef out on the back 20 acres of our property, and we have loads of both of these types of roasts in our freezer.
In my experience, bone-in OR boneless roasts work well. Just keep in mind with a bone-in roast that the weight on the package accounts for the bone as well.
Your house is going to smell amazing!
Perfect Gravy for Pot Roast and Potatoes
Not only are you getting a recipe for the best pot roast known to mankind, but I’m also giving you a bonus gift: the most perfect gravy on the planet.
So much hyperbole, I know. But it’s valid, I promise.
The gravy starts with a traditional roux of butter and flour. The key is to cook the butter and flour until it starts to turn golden in spots. This creates a flavor boost that is extraordinary with the drippings from the pot roast.
Add the drippings gradually and don’t stop stirring! Cook for several minutes until the gravy is thick and luxurious.
FYI: I prefer cooking the potatoes separate from the pot roast, carrots and onions. This is my go-to recipe for perfect mashed potatoes.
Tried-and-True Family Favorite
This is the only pot roast (and gravy) I’ve made for years. Why mess with perfection? The flavor is incredible, and the recipe is so easy to make.
Hundreds of you love it, too…here are just a handful of rave reviews. (Scroll down to read more – including adaptations for the Instant Pot.)
Donald: I cooked your pot roast recipe with mashed potatoes for family members and they raved about it. It was perfect. Thanks! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Lauren: I have made this delightful pot roast along side the carrots w mashed potatoes, rolls & salad a couple times in the past few weeks. Each time I make it, my husband says “Oh, THIS IS MY FAVORITE!” I always use chuck, it never fails. Sometimes I will crank the crock pot up to high for a little while just to start things off or finish things up. This meal is delicious & comforting…just the best meal to make for loved ones. (Especially wonderful to take the chill off on a cold winter day or night.) Thank you, Mel ❤️
Mallory: I’ve made this twice now. We love it! Thanks for the recipe. Never thought to add allspice to a roast. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
What to Serve With This
One Year Ago: Video Tip: How to Make Perfect Pie Crust
Two Years Ago: Easy 10-Minute Caramel Sauce
Three Years Ago: Green Lentil Soup with Curried Brown Butter
Perfect Pot Roast and Gravy
Ingredients
Roast:
- 3 to 5 pound chuck roast, trimmed of extra fat
- Coarse kosher salt and pepper
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 to 2 large yellow onions, sliced in thick rings
- 3 cloves garlic, smashed
- 1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce
- 3 cups low-sodium beef broth
- 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
- ¼ teaspoon allspice
- ¼ teaspoon dried thyme
- ½ to 1 teaspoon coarse kosher salt
- ¼ to ½ teaspoon black pepper
- 1 bay leaf
- 6 to 7 large carrots, peeled and cut into 2- or 3-inch pieces
Gravy:
- 6 tablespoons butter
- 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour (about 1/3 cup)
- 3 to 4 cups juices/drippings from roast
Instructions
- Season the roast on all sides with a few pinches of salt and pepper.
- Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until hot and rippling. Add the roast, and brown on all sides, about 1-2 minutes per side.
- Place the onions in the bottom of a 7-or 8-quart slow cooker, toss the smashed garlic on top, and transfer the roast to sit on top of the onions and garlic.
- In the same skillet, reduce the heat to medium and add the tomato sauce, scraping up the yummy browned bits from the bottom of the skillet. Add the beef broth, Worcestershire sauce, allspice, thyme, salt and pepper (use less salt and pepper if you used regular beef broth and not low-sodium). Add the bay leaf.
- Pour the mixture over the roast. All slow cooker sizes are different but it helps if the meat is mostly covered with liquid (or at least the liquid comes up nearly to the top of the meat).
- Nestle the carrots around the roast.
- Cover and cook on low 8-9 hours until the meat is very tender.
- Transfer the meat, carrots, and onions to a platter and tent with foil.
- Remove the bay leaf and pour the drippings/juice from the slow cooker into a large measuring cup (or into a fat separator if you want to pour off excess fat).
- For the gravy, melt the butter in a medium pot until sizzling. Stir in the flour and cook for 30 seconds or so. If you have the time, cook for several minutes, stirring constantly, until the mixture turns a golden brown.
- Whisking vigorously and constantly (we don't want lumps in our gravy!), gradually add 3 to 4 cups of the pot roast juices, until the desired consistency of gravy is reached.
- Continue stirring quickly while the gravy comes to a simmer. Cook, stirring constantly, for 2 to 3 minutes until the gravy has thickened. Season to taste with additional salt and pepper, if needed.
- Serve immediately with the pot roast and vegetables (and mashed potatoes, of course!).
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe (thanks to my friend Amy W. for long ago giving me the tip about allspice – yum!)
I have made this before and it was unbelievably good! I think the Allspice was the perfect addition and I felt I could taste a big difference having seared the meat beforehand.
I am having my family over for dinner this weekend and want to know if I can double this recipe. I do have a bigger slow cooker, but do I need to adjust the time of how long it cooks? Will this work, or is it unwise to try to put up to 10 lbs. of meat and veggies in at once?
Thanks for providing recipes that allow me to impress my family 🙂
Yes, you could definitely double – I’d try to make sure the roast is in as even layer (single layer) as possible and probably cook it for the longer amount of time. Good luck!
Could you do this without browning the roast first? It tastes so yummy with it browned, but it takes so much longer to get it into the crock pot to get it going! Just curious. Thanks!
Nevermind… I can’t read! :-/ I just saw in your post about the browning it. I make this a lot and am always annoyed at having to brown it, but it does make it taste so good. Maybe one day, I will be brave enough to try it without browning (just to try the difference), but for now, I will stick with browning it. Sorry to bug you! Have a good weekend!
The only bad thing about this recipe has been the torture of having to spend the entire day smelling it cooking and not be able to eat it yet! Best pot roast ever! (I also call it pot roast…haha)
Would you dare try this in an instant pot? How would you adapt it?
I’m working on an IP version, but yes, I think it should work – I’d just wait and add the carrots after the roast cooks (maybe 60 mins high pressure?) and then pressure cook another 4-5 mins? They’ll get way overcooked if they stay in with the roast the whole time.
Would you brown it first? Use the saute function on the IP for a few or what would you do exactly, Just 60 mins on high pressure?
We adore this recipe! I made this for Christmas Day dinner and it was so delicious and it’s really a no fail recipe. The carrots are just fantastic and the gravy is sublime. Another winner, Mel! Thank you so much!
Hi Mel! I have sort of a tall shaped roast, so even with adding an extra cup of beef broth the liquid only comes about 1/2 – 2/3 up. Think it will be okay? Any tips? i’m super excited to try this, my first pot roast…
Also wanted to add that in Canada pretty sure “chuck” roast is called “blade” roast…. it’s shoulder area, right? Nowhere could I find something labelled chuck roast.
Cross rib roast isn’t actually from the rib section, but from the shoulder or chuck, as it merges into the rib. It is tasty and used as a pot roast, rather than an actually roasted roast beef. This is excellent in this recipe.
Hi Mel. Your recipes are truly amazing and I can’t thank you enough for all the times your blog has saved me!!
If I wanted to cook this pot roast in the oven, what temperature would I cook it at and for how long?
I would probably suggest 225 or 250 for 3 hours? That’s just a starting point! Keep an eye on it so it doesn’t dry out. 🙂
I made this and followed the recipe as written…it was FABULOUS!!! My boyfriend had seconds and then proceeded to lick his plate clean! I served it with mashed potatoes and it was the perfect dinner. Definitely a keeper…thanks Mel!
This is a perfect simple pot roast. I used unsalted butter for the gravy and then salted to taste. I also halved this for my family of four (9&7 year olds). Used my 4 quart slow cooker. Just enough with leftovers. I’ve tried a lot of pot roast recipes. This one wins based off the ability to use the drippings for gravy. I am not sensitive to salt but so many recipes are overly salty and you can’t make a gravy with the drippings. Thanks my youngest was dancing in his seat and my oldest gravy hater actually ate the gravy this time.
I also have a 4 quart crockpot. I halved all of the ingredients, using a 2.5 lb. roast. I think my cooker could hold up to a 3 lb. roast. It came out great!
We especially loved the gravy. I used 2 full cups of drippings in my “half recipe”.
A really delicious recipe – a keeper for sure!
Thank you for this amazing recipe. I followed it exactly and it turned out fabulous. This will be my go to pot roast recipe from now on. Thanks!
This pot roast was so tender and moist. It’s a great meal to make when you want to impress but don’t want to spend lots of time in the kitchen.
Could I put this together the night before and just take it out of the fridge and plug it in? I’m strapped for time in the AM
I think that would work!
Is it possible to make this in the instant pot?
I haven’t tried it – mostly because the carrots would get overcooked in the pressure cooker – but you could definitely cook the meat in the instant pot.
How long would you keep it in the Instant Pot?
Do you mean how long would you cook it in the IP? I’d probably say about 55 to 60 minutes high pressure (for the meat – that amount of time would overcook the veggies).
Hi Mel! I’m wanting to make this recipe but I’m stuck on 1 ingredient-the 8oz can of tomato sauce. I’m in Australia & typically tomato sauce means ketchup & most definitely does not come in cans!! Is it a pasta sauce or pureed tomatoes, like pasatta? Help!!
Hi Laura – I think it would be more like pureed tomatoes.
I used a frozen lamb roast that was probably only 2 lbs. So I didnt brown the roast, just threw all the ingredients in and kept spices and liquid amounts the same, for 6 hours on low. It came out fantastic!!! The gravy was amazing too even though all I had was AP wheat flour!!! Another winner – my husband just assumes that everything delicious I make now comes from your blog!!
How tender are your carrots. We prefer ours not too tender. I want/plan to try this (maybe Monday) but historically when I add veggies to my pot roasts they end up over cooked and mushy…which is why I’ve only done it a couple times. I’ve heard adding the carrots/potatoes etc. in the last hour or two is better in this case. Thoughts? Siggestions?
Hi Ty, you could definitely add the carrots later. I’d say when making it per the recipe, the carrots are tender-soft but not mushy. If you want yours a little more crisp-tender, I’d definitely add them later.
Thanks! Made it for dinner tonight. It turned out fabulous. I put the carrots in part way. Gravy was delicious!
Btw I survived our nor’easter today making/prepping multiple recipes from your site – can’t wait to try the others this week
Glad you stayed safe with the crazy weather in your area, Ty! Thanks for the report on the roast (and carrots!).
Made this for mt family. Easily fed a family of 5 with addition of some homemade biscuits. Gravy came out so flavorful. Didnt use bay leaf.
This looks so yummy. How would this recipe be converted for the pressure cooker?
I’m not sure, mostly because the carrots will be overcooked if they cook at high pressure for as long as the roast does (probably 75 minutes high pressure)…they could possibly be added halfway through if the pressure is quick released but I haven’t tried it yet.
Delicious! We were hosting an early dinner, and I didn’t want to wake up early, so I had mine on high for about 5 hours and it turned out fantastic. When pot roast is done right, it is one of my favourites.
Hello! I have a little 1.5 lb chuck roast and am curious how to best adjust this recipe for it. Or, would a different recipe be best? The slow cooker I use is quite huge and I wonder if my little roast might be better served with a different cooking method? Any suggestions you can provide would me much appreciated. I know my husband would love this recipe.
Hey Christa – I think the size of your roast might be too little for your slow cooker…there’s a good chance it could burn. Do you have a pressure cooker?
Hi!
Thanks for your reply. I don’t have a pressure cooker, but I just used your recipe as a guide and did it all it in my dutch oven on the stove top. It worked out great! I used your list of ingredients, but I did adjust the amounts and I just simmered it all for a few hours, until the roast was super tender and yum. The carrots were great — I mashed half of them with the potatoes. All the extra (and extra delicious) gravy is sitting in my freezer. My husband, toddler and I were all pleased with the meal. Thanks!
Look at you! Way to go on making it work; I’m so happy it was delicious!
My wife and I made this for our friends when we had them over for dinner. It was a huge hit. I was nervous to try a new recipe for the first time and have our friends come over but it was amazing. We had a lot of leftovers and so we made that into a shepherds pie. Those onions had so much flavor! This is my new go-to recipe for roasts! Thanks, Mel!
I made this earlier this week and it was great – I’ll never use another method again. I too had the problem of not having enough liquid to almost cover the roast once it was on top of the uncooked onions. I moved the onions to the sides of the roast so the roast was sitting on the bottom of the slow cooker and the onions were nestled around it. It worked out just perfectly. Another keeper
I made this for dinner tonight and it was fantastic! Really loved it with the garlic Parmesan mashed potatoes. And this is by far the easiest, most delicious gravy I have ever made. Thank you, Mel!
Hi Mel! I just made this today for the first time and noticed that in the recipe you said that its helpful if the liquid mostly covers the roast. I only used one yellow onion but by the time the roast was sitting on top of those, the liquid only barely made it to the bottom of the roast. I didn’t know if I should just add water or double the ingredients in the liquid or just leave it? What would you suggest?
Hey Merryn – that might be due to the shape of your slow cooker vs mine. What size/shape is yours? I’d probably suggest doubling the liquid ingredients so the roast doesn’t dry out.
And there it is. The last crock pot roast recipe I will ever need. So delicious. I am with you 100% on the carrots. My favorite part. Thanks, Mel.
Yesssss! That makes me happy.
What type of slow cooker do you use? I find that when I do roasts in mine they are dry and yucky!!
I have this one and I love it!
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003BG0SPM/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I made this Saturday and it was delicious. When additional people came by for dinner I seasoned and browned two pork tenderloins and added them to the pot for the last two hours of cooking time. They came out moist, tender and tasty. The gravy was fantastic and I was never good at making gravy. Thanks for sharing this recipe,
Wow, you are one flexible host! I love that!
This was hands down the best tasting roast I have ever prepared!! It was so tender and delicious- the gravy was wonderful too w your roasted garlic mashed potatoes. Thank you so much for sharing this recipe! This will be a new Sunday dinner staple for sure.
Hi Mel! Should I adjust the cooking time if I only have a 2 lb roast? Thank you!!
I’d probably keep it the same, maybe decrease by 30 minutes or so, if any.
Pot roast and mashed potatoes bring back such great memories of grandma’s house from when I was little! Though I’m not the biggest fan of the slow cooker, I must admit it takes a lot of extra work and time out of the equation. Thanks for the tip about the allspice. I can’t wait to try it out!
Hey Mel! Your Sunday roast was our Wednesday dinner this week! My husband and I have been married for 12 years and I’ve literally only made a pot roast twice in that time. I got so burned out on them growing up! So it is a HUGE compliment to you that I immediately put this recipe on the menu. We recently moved, and I haven’t a clue where my slow cooker is and because I use my electric pressure cookers so often, I haven’t bothered looking for it! So for those who were wondering about cooking it in the pressure cooker, here’s how I did it. Seared it, set the roast on a plate, deglazed the pot with broth and tomato sauce, and then just dumped the rest of the ingredients inside with the roast. I cooked it at high pressure for 90 minutes with a full natural release. It was amazing! Maybe I had a lot of bad roasts growing up, but this was so tender and juicy, and my daughter went crazy over the gravy. Thanks Mel! There will now be more pot roasts in my future! (My husband thanks you and also says this was the best roast he’s ever had)
Love the pressure cooker notes. Thanks, Marci!
Oh my gosh – for the first time ever my gravy turned out perfect!! Thanks Mel!
Has anyone tried this without the bay leaf?
I made Mel’s beef stew recipe once and I believe it was the bay leaf that we hated in the stew. Was going to leave it out unless anyone had disastrous results omitting it….
Hi Mel,
For years, I made pot roast with my grandma’s recipe. I thought it was the best recipe of the world. No, I was wrong, your recipe is highly better (sorry grandma !). My husband agree with me and my 3 little girls too.
Thank you very much.
Our family recently moved to England and will be living in a hotel for a little while until we find a home here. We’re grateful our hotel has a full kitchen and as soon as I saw this post I knew it would be just what we needed for dinner – a little taste of home in a new place. I immediately went out to search for and buy a slow cooker and pick up the ingredients for this meal. It was our dinner tonight and it was a hit with everyone! There’s nothing like the smell of something delicious in the slow cooker when you come home after a long day looking for a home. The gravy is amazing, life-changing stuff and I know this meal will become a permanent part of our dinner rotation. Thanks for the great recipe!
Well, you are amazing for cooking meals like this in a hotel! I’ve done the hotel living thing and know how tough it can be; good luck on your move!
I never comment, but this converted my husband to roast! I made it thinking he would have something else for dinner but he tried it, ate it all and said he would eat that every week. Amazed!! It is all about that gravy. Best gravy ever. So thank you for putting roast back on my menu after 8 years away.
Ok, that’s the best thing I’ve heard all week! Yay for pot roast converts!
Thank you, thank you for the countless recipes I have used from your site! I have never commented, but was feeling ungrateful today as I saved yet two more recipes from your collection without you knowing. You are amazing!
Thank you, Leslie!
In the slow cooker as we speak and it smells divine!! If it tastes as good as it smells, we are all in for a delicious treat!!
Just to report back…last nights supper was delicious!!!!! The allspice trick added a ton of flavor..I’m already looking forward to the leftovers!!
I can’t wait to try this. And I completely agree with you…the carrots are the best part of pot roast!
Mel, it’s been forever! Thanks for all the great recipes I don’t have a slow cooker. I know, I know :)- Anyway, will this work with my Le Creuset ? The recipe looks delicious and I can’t wait to try it !
Thanks !
Linda
It probably would but I haven’t had good luck (think: dry roast) baking in a pot. Try googling a traditional pot roast recipe to get a good idea for time/temp.
Low and slow (275 for 4 hours) and liquid covering the roast.
Follow Mel’s instructions through starting the slow cooker.
Ooh can’t wait to try this with a pinch of allspice! In the past few months I’ve looked at your site for the perfect Sunday roast recipe and I’m so happy it’s here! I love putting my cut up potatoes in tin foil on top of the meat so when we get home from church they’re perfectly cooked and we mash them up real quick to have on the side!
Great idea!
My son is allergic to tomatoes. Would it be ok to eliminate the tomato paste or would I need to replace it with something? Thanks!!
It will have a different flavor but I think eliminating it would probably be fine – just increase the broth by another cup.
What kind of crock-pot do you use, Mel?
I use my Instant Pot when I need a 6-quart slow cooker but if I need bigger, like for this recipe, I have the Hamilton Beach 8-quart (oval).
When do you put it in the crockpot if you want it for Sunday lunch? Do you put it in all night, or just get up “extra” early?
We don’t eat until 5:30 or so on Sundays so I start cooking it in the morning. You could try cooking it on high for less hours; that may work.
Oh divine! Carrots with pot roast are one of my family’s favorites too. Yum! This is definitely going on our Sunday menu this week. Thanks Mel!
This looks perfect! I think the extra flavor in the meal outweighs the inconvenience of browning!. I’m looking forward to another terrific meal thanks to you!
I grew up in a Pot-Roast-and-potatoes-for-dinner-after-church-on-Sunday family as well, and as a kid I actually despised this meal. Now that I am a big girl, I love it. My husband, however, does not. This is the man who will eat almost anything on the planet. WEIRD. I am so excited to try your version!! It is making my stomach growl. I am super excited about your allspice trick. I am determined to make a convert out of him! I might have to change up my menu plan for the week. Thanks Mel!
That is weird, Melanie! I wonder what it is about it that he despises. If this gravy can’t convert him, I quit.
I love this post !! I grew up in a family where roast and mashed potatoes and gravy were Sunday absolutes!! And I quite honestly have done almost the exact same thing with my family !! Now that I am an avid reader of your blog I have changed up Sunday dinner on more occasions than I used to … And I have met with some opposition from some very ‘spoiled’ children who really believe that roast and mashed potatoes (and hot rolls and corn and salad ) are the only acceptable Sunday dinners… My recipe is super similar and I can’t wait to try the Allspice !! Maybe even today….. because I served chicken cordon bleu casserole yesterday … And this just looks so good right now for a fall Monday night dinner !! I’m off to fire up my frying pan and my crock pot !! Thanks Mel !! I think we mayneed some lemon bars too …. And just so you know I have a freezer full of pumpkin chocolate chip cookies thanks to my 14 year old son. I made a batch on Friday afternoon and they were gone by Saturday. So Saturday night he made a double batch because he wanted more. We love you Mel !!!
I love YOU, Helen! 🙂
Thanks Mel!! So we had this tonight and it was as good as I thought it would be … and more!! The gravy was amazing!! The allspice addition is definitely a keeper and we all loved the big chunks of onion… I usually cut them small… I will be doing it this way from now on!! Never thought my pot roast could be improved upon…. but I should have known if anyone could give me a way to make it better it would be you !! 🙂
Yay! This makes me so happy, Helen. 🙂
I’d like to add that arm roast rivals the chuck roast for pot roast! I believe they tie for the best. I use the rump for shredded beef sandwiches. I’ve tried browning the roasts and not browning the roasts before putting them in the crock pot, and we notice no difference. Although, I do covet the All Clad slow cooker with built in searing capabilities. 🙂
I am the biggest whiner about searing before slow cooking. Heh Thanks my insta pot I can sear it and then switch to slow cook. Oh yeah baby!! I cannot wait to make this. I’m notorious for dry chewy ruined pot roast so this is going to be redemption! Thank you, thank you!
Does the Instant Pot slow cook??? How, oh, how did I miss this???
Yes! I love that it does both. I have cooked a roast both ways – about 45 minutes on pressure, or 6-8 hours on slow cook. At least with my Instant Pot, the low setting on the slow cooker is TOO LOW. I always have to pressure cook afterwards! Now I just use normal and it’s fine.
Have you tried this in a pressure cooker? Thanks to you, I received an Instant Pot last month for my birthday and the fam requests meals from it every day now because everything is so so so tender.
I haven’t Kelly since we love it in the slow cooker so much but I bet it would be amazing if you could figure out just the right timing.
Yes, if anyone can figure out a pressure cooker way I would love to hear it too!
I have not been having great results with the pressure cooker- (Instant Pot)- I can’t get the timing down just right. It must be me- I love the machine, and the first time I used it, I had fall-apart pork roast on my hands- first time ever! (My slow cooker has never been a slow cooker. I have only ever had dry, hard, boiled meat out of it in 10 years… So, needless to say, I have never really had the “slow cooker experience.” I haven’t been able to replicate fall apart meat in the IP, either- somehow, I’ve managed to overcook everything. Do you have any suggestions for me, please??? 🙂
Thank you!!
Hey Amy – the cooking time charts at hippressurecooking.com have helped me SO much with the Instant Pot! The key is not to over cook, like you mentioned, so knowing how fast certain meats cook is key. And yes, the Instant Pot can also slow cook!
I use the hippressurecooking chart as well and often do a quick search to see if others have suggestions, but I’ve never had an issue with hippressurecooking times.
I’ve also not had an issue with cooking all kinds of meat from boneless chicken breasts (1 cup water and Mel’s 8 min per pound guideline for whole chicken) to round steak with tomatoes and mushrooms to pot roast (almost same technique as Mel’s above except 40 min quick release then carrots in for 5-10 minutes quick release.
I’m wondering if those who had bad results are not using enough liquid? For the beef I make sure the liquid is mostly covering the meat.
Hippressurecooking has some great videos as well.
I was checking out this page to get an idea of what to serve with the Perfected Pot Roast that is finishing up in my Insta Pot right now! This recipe comes from the book Mel suggested (at Christmas for kitchen gift ideas) for the best Insta Pot recipes. Everything in this cookbook is Mel-Quality, if you ask me. I was able to get it at the library while waiting for my used copy from amazon to arrive.
The cookbook is called Great Food Fast by Bob Warden.