Slow cooker Amish clove beef is the kind of old-fashioned company meal that earns its place in a regular rotation because it is simple, economical, and full of deep flavor. Studding a beef heel roast with whole cloves gives the meat a gentle warm spice that perfumes the cooking juices as it slowly braises, a technique that reflects the practical, subtly seasoned style often associated with Amish home cooking. With only a handful of ingredients and the steady heat of the slow cooker, this roast turns tender enough for an easy, comforting supper.

This beef is especially good served with buttery mashed potatoes, egg noodles, or a scoop of rice to catch the savory juices. For vegetables, I like green beans, glazed carrots, or simple buttered corn, and if you are feeding company, a basket of warm dinner rolls and a crisp apple or cabbage slaw round out the meal nicely without competing with the clove-scented roast.

Slow Cooker 5-Ingredient Amish Clove Beef

Servings: 6 to 8

Finished Amish clove beef roast sliced on a platter with cooking juices
Finished Amish clove beef roast sliced on a platter with cooking juices

Ingredients

1 beef heel roast, about 3 to 4 pounds

24 to 30 whole cloves
1 packet onion soup mix, about 1 ounce
1 cup water
2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar

Directions

1. Pat the beef heel roast dry with paper towels. Press the whole cloves evenly into the surface of the roast on all sides, spacing them out so the flavor distributes well as the meat cooks.

2. Place the clove-studded roast into the slow cooker. Sprinkle the onion soup mix evenly over the top, then pour the water and apple cider vinegar around the meat.

3. Cover and cook on low for 8 to 9 hours or on high for 5 to 6 hours, until the beef is very tender and can be sliced or pulled apart easily with a fork.

4. Transfer the roast to a cutting board or platter and let it rest for 10 minutes. Remove any exposed whole cloves before slicing. Spoon some of the cooking juices over the meat before serving.

Variations & Tips

Sweeter finish: If you enjoy a more old-fashioned sweet-savory profile, add 2 tablespoons brown sugar or a few spoonfuls of apple butter to the slow cooker. That slight sweetness pairs naturally with clove and makes the gravy taste a bit richer.

Gravy option: For a thicker sauce, strain the cooking liquid into a saucepan after the roast is done and simmer it with a cornstarch slurry until it reaches gravy consistency. This is especially useful if you plan to serve the beef over potatoes or noodles.

Best cut note: A heel roast becomes wonderfully tender in the slow cooker, but a chuck roast also works very well if that is easier to find. Choose a roast with some marbling so the long cooking time produces moist, flavorful slices.

Clove caution: Whole cloves are meant to flavor the roast and should be removed as you find them before serving. Pressing them in firmly helps them stay in place during cooking, but I still like to count roughly how many went in so I can check for them while slicing.