This slow cooker 4-ingredient Amish sage potatoes recipe is the kind of simple, handwritten treasure you’d expect to find tucked into an old church cookbook or, in my case, folded into my great aunt’s stained recipe file. It takes plain potatoes and bathes them in butter and fragrant dried sage until they turn velvety, tender, and deeply comforting. This style of dish comes straight out of rural Midwestern farmhouse cooking, where a few pantry staples and a good long simmer could turn humble ingredients into something special enough for Sunday dinner. The fragrant herbs really do take simple potatoes to a whole new level, without asking you to fuss over a thing.
These potatoes are rich and buttery, so they pair nicely with simple, honest food: roast chicken, baked ham, pot roast, or meatloaf all sit happily beside them. Add a green vegetable like steamed green beans, buttered peas, or a crisp lettuce salad to balance the plate. They also make a cozy base for leftover shredded chicken or beef spooned over the top, and any extra potatoes reheat well alongside eggs for a hearty farmhouse breakfast.
Slow Cooker Amish Sage Potatoes
Servings: 6

Ingredients
3 pounds russet or Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and sliced into 1/4-inch rounds
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, melted
2 tablespoons dried rubbed sage
2 teaspoons kosher salt (or 1 teaspoon table salt), plus more to taste
Directions
Lightly grease the inside of a 4- to 6-quart slow cooker with a bit of the melted butter to keep the potatoes from sticking.
Peel the potatoes and slice them into even 1/4-inch rounds. Try to keep the slices close in size so they cook at the same rate and stay tender without falling apart.
In a small bowl or measuring cup, stir the melted butter, dried sage, and salt together until the herbs are evenly distributed. The mixture will be fragrant and speckled with green sage.
Layer about one-third of the potato slices in the bottom of the slow cooker, spreading them out in an even layer. Spoon some of the sage butter over the potatoes, letting it drizzle between the slices.
Repeat layering the remaining potatoes and sage butter, finishing with a generous drizzle of butter and sage over the top so the surface looks lightly coated and flecked with green.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 5 to 6 hours, or on HIGH for about 3 hours, until the potatoes are very tender when pierced with a fork but still hold their round shape.
Once tender, gently stir from the bottom with a broad spoon to coat all the slices in the buttery sage mixture, being careful not to mash them. Taste and add a pinch more salt if needed.
Let the potatoes sit with the lid off for 5 to 10 minutes to allow the butter to thicken slightly into a velvety coating. Serve the potato rounds warm, spooning some of the herbed butter from the bottom of the crock over each portion so you see pale yellow slices studded with green sage flecks on the plate.
Variations & Tips
These potatoes are meant to be simple, but there are a few gentle ways to make the recipe your own while keeping the spirit of that old handwritten card. If you like a little pepper, add 1/2 teaspoon black pepper to the butter and sage mixture before pouring it over the potatoes. For a creamier, more scalloped texture, stir in 1/2 cup of warm whole milk or light cream during the last 30 minutes of cooking, then cover and let it meld; this will soften the slices a bit more and create a looser, richer sauce. If you prefer a stronger herbal note, you can increase the dried sage to 3 tablespoons, or add a pinch of dried thyme alongside the sage, but keep sage as the star to stay true to the Amish-style simplicity. For a slightly lighter version, you can reduce the butter to 3/4 cup; the potatoes will be a touch less velvety but still tender and flavorful. Food safety tips: Always start with clean, firm potatoes, discarding any with green patches or sprouting eyes. Peel away any green areas before slicing. Melt the butter gently and don’t let it scorch, as burned butter can give the whole dish an off flavor. Once cooked, keep the potatoes on the WARM setting for no more than 2 hours; after that, cool leftovers promptly and refrigerate within 2 hours of serving. Reheat leftovers thoroughly until steaming hot before eating, and use them within 3 to 4 days for best quality.