This Slow Cooker Poor Man’s Potatoes and Drippings is the kind of food my grandparents talked about when they described getting through the hard times. It’s built on three things most families could manage to find: potatoes, a little fat from saved meat drippings, and an onion for flavor and sweetness. Everything goes into the slow cooker and transforms into tender, golden-brown potato chunks that soak up every bit of savory richness, with caramelized edges and a creamy interior. It’s humble, filling, and deeply comforting—the sort of dish that could be eaten night after night because it was cheap, dependable, and tasted like home.
Serve these potatoes straight from the slow cooker with plenty of the drippings spooned over the top. They’re hearty enough to be a main dish with a simple side of cooked greens (like cabbage, collards, or spinach) or a crisp salad for freshness. If you have it, a fried or poached egg on top turns this into a full meal, and a slice of crusty bread or a biscuit is perfect for soaking up the extra juices. For a more substantial plate, pair the potatoes with any leftover meat you have on hand, such as roasted chicken, pork, or sausage.
Slow Cooker Poor Man’s Potatoes and Drippings
Servings: 4
Ingredients
2 1/2 pounds russet or Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch chunks
1 large yellow onion, thinly sliced
1/3 cup solid meat drippings (cooled bacon grease, beef drippings, or pork fat), plus more to taste if needed
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt (or to taste)
1/2 teaspoon black pepper (optional, but traditional if available)
2–4 tablespoons water or broth, only if needed to prevent scorching
Directions
Prepare the potatoes by peeling them and cutting them into roughly 1-inch chunks. Aim for pieces that are as even as possible so they cook at the same rate. Rinse briefly under cold water and pat dry with a clean towel to remove excess surface starch, which helps them brown a bit better in the drippings.
Slice the onion into thin half-moons. The onion is doing double duty here: it stretches the dish and adds natural sweetness that balances the richness of the fat. In hard times, that little bit of onion made a big flavor difference.
Grease the slow cooker crock lightly with a small amount of the meat drippings to help prevent sticking. This also gives flavor right from the start. If your drippings are very firm from the refrigerator, you can scrape out what you need with a spoon.
Layer half of the potatoes in the bottom of the slow cooker in an even layer. Sprinkle with about half of the salt and a pinch of pepper if using. Scatter half of the sliced onions over the potatoes. Repeat with the remaining potatoes, salt, pepper, and onions, forming simple layers that will soften and meld together as they cook.
Dot the top of the layered potatoes and onions with the remaining meat drippings, distributing the fat as evenly as you can. You want small spoonfuls scattered across the surface so it melts down through the potatoes as they cook, coating everything and creating those rich, savory drippings in the bottom of the pot.
Check the bottom of the slow cooker: if your drippings are very thick or you’re worried about scorching in a hot-running slow cooker, drizzle 2–4 tablespoons of water or broth around the edges. You’re not looking to submerge the potatoes; just enough liquid to keep a little moisture in the bottom until the potatoes start releasing their own.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 6–7 hours, or on HIGH for 3–4 hours. About halfway through the cooking time, gently stir from the bottom up to coat the potatoes in the melted drippings and redistribute the onions. Replace the lid quickly so you don’t lose too much heat.
Near the end of cooking, check a few potato pieces by piercing them with a fork. They should be very tender, with some pieces beginning to break apart. The edges will look slightly golden and glossy from the fat, and the broken pieces will be soft and creamy, almost like mashed potatoes clinging to the chunks around them.
Taste and adjust seasoning with more salt and pepper if needed. If the potatoes seem a little dry, you can stir in an extra spoonful of drippings while they’re still hot. Gently fold rather than mash so you keep some chunks intact while letting the softer pieces create a naturally thick, rich coating.
Serve the potatoes straight from the slow cooker, making sure each portion gets some of the rich drippings from the bottom. They should appear as tender golden-brown chunks with glistening, savory fat and caramelized bits of onion clinging to them, with a few broken pieces revealing that soft, creamy interior that made this simple dish so satisfying night after night.
Variations & Tips
To stay true to the spirit of this dish, think in terms of stretching what you have rather than adding lots of extras. If you have leftover cooked meat (such as bits of bacon, ham, or roast beef), you can chop a small amount and tuck it into the layers with the onions for more protein and flavor. A clove of garlic, thinly sliced, can be added with the onions if you like a deeper savory note. For a slightly crisper edge, you can transfer the finished potatoes to a baking dish and run them under the broiler for a few minutes to brown the top. If you need to reduce saturated fat, swap part of the meat drippings for a neutral oil, but keep at least some drippings for flavor and authenticity. For a vegetarian twist that keeps the same feel, use butter or a mix of butter and oil in place of meat drippings and season generously with salt and a splash of soy sauce or a sprinkle of nutritional yeast to mimic some of that savory depth. Food safety tips: Always store meat drippings in a covered container in the refrigerator and use within a week, or freeze for longer storage; discard if they smell sour or off. When handling the drippings, keep them chilled until you’re ready to add them to the slow cooker to minimize time in the temperature “danger zone.” If you add any meat to this dish, be sure it is fully cooked and has been stored properly (refrigerated within 2 hours of cooking). Leftover potatoes and drippings should be cooled quickly, refrigerated within 2 hours, and eaten within 3–4 days; reheat thoroughly until steaming hot before serving.