Beef Pot Roast (Crock-Pot Style)

"This is a simple, hardy, slow cooked, pot roast that welcomes you home from a long day. Put it on in the morning, let it simmer all day, let those flavors mingle. Once home, forget about everything else as you enjoy this delicious comfort food. Even the clean up is easy."
 
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Ready In:
5hrs 5mins
Ingredients:
6
Yields:
1 meal
Serves:
4-6
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ingredients

  • 2 lbs boneless beef chuck roast, fat trimmed, thawed
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • nonstick cooking spray
  • 2 cups v 8 vegetable juice
  • 1 (1 1/2 ounce) package mccormick beef stew seasoning
  • 1 (16 ounce) bag frozen stew vegetables
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directions

  • Rub both sides of the chuck roast with flour.
  • Spray the insides (bottom and sides) of the crock with non-stick cooking spray.
  • Place the roast in the crock and press it down firmly so it rests snugly on the bottom.
  • In a separate bowl mix V-8 juice and the McCormick Seasoning until seasoning is dissolved.
  • Add frozen stew vegetables to the slow cooker.
  • Pour the vegetable juice/seasoning mixture over the roast. The liquid should just cover the contents of the pot. If it doesn't add a little water or vegetable juice.
  • Cover and cook on low heat setting for 8 hours, or on high heat setting for 5 hours.
  • Turn off, allow to cool in the crock for up to half an hour.
  • Serve with corn bread, buttered toast, or rolls.

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Reviews

  1. This recipe was so easy and so good. I used a larger top round roast for this and cooked it on low for about 12 hours (suited my schedule better). The roast was very tender. My family really liked this. The leftover roast and sauce was great as a sandwich. Thanks!
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I come from a very large family which attributed to my mother spending a great deal of her time in the kitchen cooking, cleaning, and preparing. I was fascinated at how she prepared wonderful dishes (especially desserts) without using a cookbook. We grew many of our own fruits and vegetables and my summers were spent washing jars and preparing fruit and vegetables for canning. I dreaded the mountains of green beans, tomatoes, peaches, etc., etc. that had to be picked, washed, peeled, snapped.... More than anything, I hated spending my summer washing jars! But now, I wouldn't trade that kind of upbringing for anything. I'm glad I learned how to do all those things because it's becoming a lost art. It really was a simpler time then and I'm a much better person for knowing how to do all those 'old fashioned' things. In my early years of learning to cook, I watched Julia Child on PBS every chance I got. I was so thrilled when I was about 11, my mother let me prepare Julia's Pastry Tarts. If I remember correctly they didn't turn out so well but it didn't matter. Oddly, today, I enjoy reading cookbooks and recipes even more than actually cooking. <img src="http://i26.photobucket.com/albums/c105/jewelies/picCdyPjI-1.jpg">
 
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