These slow cooker peach BBQ ribs are the kind of low-effort, high-payoff dinner that feels made for a packed weekday or an easy summer get-together. The sweet peach filling melts into barbecue sauce and seasoning as the short ribs cook low and slow, creating a sticky, savory-sweet glaze with almost no hands-on work. It’s a playful shortcut recipe with that classic Midwestern potluck energy: simple pantry ingredients, big flavor, and a result that tastes like you planned way further ahead than you actually did.
Serve these ribs with creamy coleslaw, baked beans, corn on the cob, potato salad, or a simple green salad to balance the rich sauce. They also pair well with cornbread or toasted rolls for soaking up the extra peachy barbecue juices, and for drinks, iced tea, lemonade, or a crisp light beer fit the summer cookout vibe perfectly.
Slow Cooker 4-Ingredient Peach BBQ Ribs
Servings: 6
Ingredients
3 to 3 1/2 pounds frozen beef short ribs
Directions
1. Lightly coat the inside of the slow cooker crock with nonstick spray if desired for easier cleanup, then add the frozen beef short ribs in an even layer.
2. Spoon the peach pie filling over the ribs, then pour in the barbecue sauce and sprinkle the onion soup mix over the top.
3. Cover and cook on LOW for 8 to 9 hours or on HIGH for 5 to 6 hours, until the ribs are very tender and the meat easily pulls from the bone.
4. Carefully transfer the ribs to a serving platter, spoon the sauce over the top, and serve hot.
Variations & Tips
Use thawed ribs for best texture: For the safest and most reliable slow cooker result, thaw the short ribs in the refrigerator first if you can. Starting from frozen is the shortcut idea here, but thawed ribs will cook more evenly and spend less time in the temperature danger zone.
Make the sauce smokier: If you like a deeper barbecue flavor, use a smoky barbecue sauce or add a small pinch of smoked paprika. It gives the sweet peaches a little more balance and makes the finished dish taste more cookout-inspired.
Cut the sweetness if needed: Peach pie filling can vary by brand, so if your barbecue sauce is also very sweet, add a splash of apple cider vinegar or a little hot sauce before cooking. That small adjustment brightens the sauce without adding extra work.
Shred for sandwiches: If the ribs become fall-apart tender, pull the meat from the bones and pile it onto toasted buns for easy sandwiches. A scoop of slaw on top makes this especially good for casual summer dinners or game-day leftovers.
Skim the fat before serving: Beef short ribs release quite a bit of richness as they cook, so if the sauce looks oily, let it rest for a few minutes and skim off excess fat before spooning it over the meat. The finished sauce will taste cleaner and look glossier on the plate.