This slow cooker 3-ingredient Mississippi pot roast is one of those Sunday dinners that practically cooks itself and still makes everyone at the table go quiet after the first bite. The meat turns so tender it falls apart with just a fork, and the buttery, tangy sauce is rich enough that you’ll want to spoon it over everything on your plate. Mississippi pot roast is a relatively modern Midwestern-Southern mash-up that took off in home kitchens thanks to its simplicity: a good chuck roast, a handful of pantry staples, and time. Here we’re paring it down to three core ingredients while still delivering that ultra-flavorful, glossy sauce and pepper-studded look you’d expect.
Serve this pot roast straight from the slow cooker, with the shredded beef nestled in its golden, tangy butter sauce and pepperoncini scattered on top. It’s excellent over creamy mashed potatoes, buttered egg noodles, or steamed white rice to catch all the juices. On the side, think simple: a crisp green salad, roasted carrots, or green beans. Leftovers make fantastic sandwiches piled onto crusty rolls with a slice of provolone, or tucked into tortillas for a quick, rich beef taco. A light, bright side—like a vinegar-based slaw—balances the richness of the sauce nicely.
Slow Cooker 3-Ingredient Mississippi Pot Roast
Servings: 6

Ingredients
3 to 4 pounds boneless beef chuck roast, trimmed of excess surface fat
1 (16-ounce) jar whole pepperoncini peppers with brine
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into a few pieces
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste (optional, for seasoning the meat)
Directions
Pat the chuck roast dry with paper towels. If desired, season both sides lightly with kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper. (Keep in mind the pepperoncini brine will add saltiness, so go easy.)
Place the roast in the bottom of a large slow cooker (5- to 7-quart works well), laying it flat so as much of the surface as possible is in contact with the crock.
Pour the entire jar of pepperoncini peppers and their brine evenly over and around the roast. Nestle some of the peppers down along the sides so they’re partly submerged in the liquid.
Scatter the pieces of butter over the top of the roast. As the roast cooks, the butter will melt into the pepperoncini brine and beef juices, creating that glossy, tangy, golden sauce.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 8 to 10 hours, or on HIGH for 4 to 5 hours, until the roast is extremely tender and falls apart easily when pulled with a fork. For the most melt-in-your-mouth texture, the LOW setting is preferable.
Once the meat is fork-tender, use two forks to gently shred the roast directly in the slow cooker, pulling it into large, rustic chunks. Stir the shredded beef into the surrounding sauce so every piece is coated and glistening.
Taste the sauce and beef; if needed, adjust the seasoning with a pinch more salt or pepper. Leave some whole pepperoncini on top for serving—they add a nice visual pop and a mild, tangy bite.
Serve the shredded Mississippi pot roast hot, spooning plenty of the buttery pepperoncini sauce and peppers over each portion. Keep the slow cooker on WARM for serving so the meat stays tender and juicy.
Variations & Tips
To keep this true to a 3-ingredient recipe, the flavor comes from the interplay of beef, pepperoncini brine, and butter, but you can still customize within that framework. For a slightly richer, more traditional Mississippi pot roast flavor, you can add a packet of dry ranch dressing mix and a packet of au jus gravy mix—this will no longer be 3 ingredients, but it does deepen the savoriness and thicken the sauce. If you’d like a bit more heat, choose hot pepperoncini instead of mild, or stir in a few sliced jalapeños at the end of cooking. For a lighter version, you can reduce the butter to 4 tablespoons; you’ll have a slightly thinner sauce, but still plenty of richness. If you don’t eat beef, this method works surprisingly well with a well-marbled pork shoulder (Boston butt); cook on LOW 8 to 10 hours until it shreds easily. For thicker gravy, remove 1/2 cup of the hot cooking liquid, whisk in 1 tablespoon cornstarch until smooth, then stir it back into the slow cooker and cook on HIGH for 15 minutes until slightly thickened. Food safety notes: Always start with a fresh or fully thawed roast—never cook large cuts from frozen in the slow cooker, as they may stay too long in the temperature “danger zone.” Keep the lid on during cooking to maintain a safe, steady temperature. Leftovers should be cooled quickly, transferred to shallow containers, and refrigerated within 2 hours; they’ll keep safely in the refrigerator for up to 3 to 4 days, or can be frozen for up to 3 months. Reheat thoroughly until steaming hot before serving.