This 4-ingredient slow cooker pork is the kind of low-effort dinner that earns a permanent spot in a busy holiday weekend rotation. It has that old-school, vintage potluck feel many Midwest families know well: a budget-friendly pork roast, a sweet-savory sauce, and a long, hands-off cook that turns everything tender enough to shred with a fork. It is especially handy for Independence Eve, when the to-do list is already full and dinner needs to practically make itself.
Serve this saucy shredded pork on soft sandwich buns, over mashed potatoes, or spooned onto buttered egg noodles. For a simple holiday-weekend spread, pair it with coleslaw, baked beans, corn on the cob, potato salad, or a crisp green salad. Pickles on the side help cut through the richness, and if you are feeding a crowd, a tray of slider buns makes this especially easy to serve.
4-Ingredient Slow Cooker Vintage Independence Eve Pork
Servings: 8
Ingredients
3 to 4 pound boneless pork shoulder roast
Directions
1. Place the pork shoulder roast in the slow cooker. Sprinkle the dry onion soup mix evenly over the top.
2. Pour the barbecue sauce and cola over the pork, covering it as evenly as possible.
3. Cover and cook on low for 8 to 10 hours or on high for 5 to 6 hours, until the pork is very tender and easy to pull apart.
4. Shred the pork with two forks directly in the slow cooker, then stir it into the sauce. Let it sit for 10 to 15 minutes so the meat soaks up more flavor before serving.
Variations & Tips
Make it sweeter: If you like that classic vintage sweet-and-savory flavor, use a sweeter barbecue sauce or add a couple of tablespoons of brown sugar. This works especially well if you are serving the pork on buns for a crowd.
Make it smokier: Choose a smoky barbecue sauce or stir in a small spoonful of smoked paprika if you do not mind technically adding a pantry extra. It gives the pork more cookout flavor without any grilling.
Skim the fat: Pork shoulder makes wonderfully tender shredded meat, but it can release quite a bit of fat. If the sauce looks greasy, skim some off the top before shredding, or let the pork rest briefly so the fat is easier to remove.
Meal prep tip: This pork reheats beautifully, which is one reason I love making it before a busy weekend. Store leftovers in some of the sauce so the meat stays moist, then reheat gently on the stove or in the microwave.
Serving shortcut: For the easiest holiday-weekend dinner, set out buns, pickles, slaw, and chips and let everyone build their own sandwiches. It feels casual, feeds a group well, and keeps cleanup manageable.