Beef chuck roast rewards a little know-how: how to choose it, cook it, store it, and substitute in a pinch. Browse 99 recipes to cook with it.
Beef chuck roast is the cut from the shoulder of the steer, the classic pot-roast and braising piece. It is what most people picture when they say "pot roast," and it is the cheap, hard-working cut that turns into the most tender thing on the table.
The shoulder does a lot of work, so it is full of connective tissue and collagen. That is exactly why it braises so well: given time and moisture, the collagen melts into gelatin and the meat goes silky.
Try to cook it fast or pull it early and it fights back, tough and chewy. Chuck is a slow cut, and the slowness is the whole point.
Braising is the home for chuck. Brown the whole roast hard on all sides first, then set it in liquid (broth, wine, tomatoes, beer) that comes partway up the meat, and keep it at a bare simmer around 200°F (93°C).
Low and covered is the rule, whether that is a 300°F (150°C) oven, a slow cooker on low for 8 hours, or a pressure cooker that does the same job in about 90 minutes.
The meat is ready when a fork twists in it with no resistance, usually around 195 to 205°F (90 to 96°C) internal, well past the temperatures you would ever take a steak.
This is the cut behind the deeply browned Spanish Pot Roast and the long-simmered Indonesian Beef Rendang, where hours of cooking concentrate everything. Cut into cubes, the same chuck is the backbone of a good Old Fashioned Beef Stew.
For the general braised-roast method, see beef roast, pot roast.
Chuck has a rich, beefy flavor that stands up to bold company: red wine, tomatoes, onions, garlic, bay, and a long list of warm spices. A spoonful of something acidic near the end, vinegar or a squeeze of lemon, lifts the whole braise out of heaviness.
The biggest mistake is impatience. Chuck passes through a tough, dry stage on its way to tender, so a roast that seems done at the 2-hour mark but still resists the fork simply needs another hour. Pull it then and it will be stringy.
The second mistake is letting the liquid boil hard. A rolling boil squeezes the meat and turns it grainy; you want lazy bubbles, no more.
For braising and pot roast, the closest swaps are other tough, collagen-rich cuts. Brisket works, though it is leaner and benefits from extra liquid. Short ribs are richer and more marbled, excellent but pricier.
Beef shin or oxtail braise beautifully and give an even more gelatinous result, ideal for stews where body matters. Pork shoulder behaves almost identically if you are not set on beef.
What does not substitute is a lean roast like beef eye of round roast. It has none of the collagen chuck relies on, so it goes dry and stringy in a braise rather than tender.
Look for a chuck roast with plenty of fat and connective tissue running through it; the marbling and silverskin you would trim off a steak are what make a braise succeed. A blade roast with the line of gristle down the middle is a good sign, not a flaw.
Color should be bright to deep red. Figure on about ½ pound (225 g) per person, since chuck shrinks as its fat and collagen render.
Keep raw chuck on the bottom shelf of the fridge and cook within three to five days, or wrap it tight and freeze for up to a year.
Braised chuck actually improves overnight in the fridge, where it keeps three to four days and the flavors settle, so it is a good make-ahead.
Where to find beef chuck roast: Beef chuck roast is usually found in the meats section or aisle of the grocery store or supermarket.
Food group: Beef chuck roast is a member of the Beef Products US Department of Agriculture nutritional food group.
| Amount | Weight |
|---|---|
| 1 piece, cooked, excluding refuse (yield from 1 lb raw meat with refuse) | 258 grams |
| 3 ounce | 85 grams |
There are 99 recipes that contain this ingredient.
Nothing is better than a bowl of warm chili in a cold day. It's cozy and warm you up.
Tender braised beef chuck roast with basil, garlic, and onions in savory pan drippings. Simple Dutch oven pot roast that simmers low and slow for 2.5 hours.
A Chicago style beef for your slow cooker. Super easy and tastes great.
An easy savory pot roast for your slow cooker. Cooked with carrots, potatoes and garlic with horseradish. Truly a one pot main dish for dinner.
A simple classic American style pot roast. Cooks slowly creating a complete one pot meal.
Serve with steamed rice and pair with spiced ale or imperial brown ale.
Spanish pot roast, a chuck roast browned and slow-braised in tomatoes, red wine, and beef stock with peppers, Spanish onion, and warm cumin and paprika. Fork-tender beef in a rich, smoky sauce.
This is a very basic beef stew. It’s easy, delicious and inexpensive to make. While there are hundreds of variations of this traditional recipe, it’s hard to improve on this version’s savory and comforting goodness.
Slow-braised shredded beef chuck in a spicy, tangy sauce with taco sauce, brown sugar, vinegar, and chili powder, piled high on soft buns. Feeds eight hungry people and takes about 4 hours.
Slow cooker beef chuck roast simmered all day with black-eyed peas, carrots and green chiles, finished with a hit of hickory liquid smoke. Set it and forget it for 9 to 10 hours.
Ho'o Kanaka Stew, a traditional Hawaiian beef and vegetable stew thickened with poi. Salt pork, chuck, cabbage, and tropical staples in one rustic pot.
Southern pot likker chili built on collard-green broth with smoked chuck, ground beef, pintos, chipotle, habanero, and a splash of beer. Long-simmered, deeply smoky, bowl-licking good.
Chinese pot roast with beef chuck braised in stir-fry sauce and burgundy wine with mushrooms. A tender, Asian-style pot roast with glossy mushroom gravy.
Beef bourguignon braises floured chuck in a full bottle of Burgundy with bacon, cognac and herbs until the meat falls apart. Finished the classic way with browned pearl onions and sauteed mushrooms.
Belgian carbonnade braises beef chuck and smoked ham in dark beer with onions, carrots, and herbs, finished with scotch, vinegar, and toasted walnuts. Deep stew flavor in every spoonful.
Have some fun making and enjoying this scrumptious crockpot dish.
Have some fun making and enjoying this scrumptious crockpot dish.
Grilled chuck roast marinated overnight in red wine vinegar, thyme, and bay leaf with a microwave pre-cook for even doneness. A budget cut turned into tender charcoal-grilled beef.
Grandma's pot roast cooks a chuck roast with carrots, potatoes, and onions in one dish until everything turns fork-tender. A classic Sunday-supper beef dinner with built-in gravy from the savory pan juices.
Slow cooker pot roast with beef chuck rubbed in seasoned salt, paprika, and pepper. Set it and forget it for 8 to 10 hours until fork-tender. Just seven simple pantry ingredients.
Beef Barbecue: tender shredded chuck roast oven-braised in a tangy ketchup, Worcestershire, and brown sugar sauce. Three-hour cook delivers fork-shred meat for sandwiches or buns.
Three-ingredient foil-wrapped pot roast with onion soup mix and mushrooms, baked low and slow until fork-tender. A hands-off beef chuck roast that makes its own gravy in the packet.
Pressure cooker pot roast with beef chuck browned and cooked in beef stock with aromatics for one hour, then finished with fresh vegetables in the flavorful broth. Fork-tender roast in a fraction of the time.
Pot roast of your choice is a flexible Dutch oven method for fork-tender chuck roast. Browned hard, braised low with aromatics, and finished with a skimmed pan sauce you can thicken to gravy. Classic Sunday supper.
Nine bean soup simmered with beef chuck roast, turkey leg, tomatoes, chili powder, and small pasta. A hearty, slow-cooked bean soup with two meats for deep, rich flavor.
Elva's carne guisada with beef chuck braised in a cumin-spiced gravy with Rotel tomatoes, onion, and bell pepper. Tex-Mex comfort food ready in 40 minutes.
Pot roast with dill gravy is a Scandinavian-inflected Sunday supper: chuck roast braised with dill seed and onions, then finished in a creamy sour cream and dill pan gravy. Deeply savory with a Nordic twist.
Fork-tender chuck pot roast browned and slow-simmered with dill and a splash of vinegar, then finished with potatoes, carrots, zucchini, and a tangy sour cream gravy. A one-pot Sunday dinner.
Slow cooker BBQ beef sandwiches with shredded chuck roast in a tangy tomato sauce, brown sugar, and mustard. Fork-tender and crowd-ready on buns.
Zesty pot roast: a 4-pound beef chuck braised low in tomato soup, water, and vinegar for hours, then finished with applesauce stirred into the sauce. A vintage Americana take on Sunday pot roast.
Slow cooker family pot roast with chuck, celery, onions, cream of tomato soup, beef bouillon, and sage. A 9-hour hands-off Sunday roast that thickens into rich gravy.
Pot roast with sour cream gravy: chuck roast braised with vinegar and dill, paired with potatoes, carrots, and zucchini. The Eastern European-leaning Sunday dinner that finishes with a tangy sour cream sauce.
Slow cooker tangy barbecue beef sandwiches with chuck roast braised in a vinegar-spiked sauce until fork-tender, then shredded and piled on buns.
It's hard to go wrong with a combination of beef roast, hot green chile and beer. The beef was falling-apart tender with a hint of spiciness. Of course make sure to have enough beer to serve with the roast :)
Tender beef chuck marinated overnight in a sweet-tangy sauce with apricot preserves, teriyaki, and red pepper flakes, then pressure cooked on a bed of onions until fall-apart tender. Big Texas flavor, minimal hands-on time.
Cubed beef chuck slow-baked in burgundy wine and French onion soup until fork-tender with a thick, rich gravy. Serve over buttered noodles for an effortless dinner.
Pot Roast Caribe braises a 3-pound chuck roast in a mole-inspired sauce with cocoa, chili, cumin, cinnamon, ground almonds, and orange zest. Caribbean-style pot roast for 6-8.
Apple juice pot roast braises beef chuck low and slow with caramelized onions, sweet potatoes, and a tangy ketchup-thyme gravy. Old-school Dutch oven Sunday supper that fills the house with sweet-savory aroma.
Pennsylvania Dutch sauerbraten with chuck roast bacon-larded, vinegar-marinated for days, then pot-roasted with cloves and allspice for an almost-black sweet-sour gravy.
Italian-style pot roast is a beef chuck braised for three hours with soffritto, tomato paste, red wine, and Italian herbs. Sliced beef plus pasta sauce over spaghetti, feeds eight.
Beer-braised oven pot roast with chuck beef, chili sauce, and aromatic vegetables. Roasts uncovered first for browning, then covered in beer until fork-tender.
Pot roast in savory cheese sauce made with beef chuck braised in cream of cheddar soup, tomato sauce, mushrooms, and Italian herbs. Fork-tender and rich with cheesy gravy.
LONGHORN CHILI WITH ANCHO, MOLE AND CUMIN... and Bacon!!!!
A 5-pound chuck roast braised low and slow with tomato sauce, garlic, and thyme, finished with sauteed mushrooms and tangy sour cream gravy. Serve over buttered noodles.
Hickory-smoked chuck roast studded with garlic and marinated overnight in vinegar, Worcestershire, and basil. Grilled low over indirect heat with soaked wood chips for deep smoky flavor.
Beef chuck roast marinated overnight in red wine, a full cup of garlic, lemon juice, basil, and dry mustard, then grilled over medium coals until smoky and tender. Feeds six hungry people.
Nothing beats a succulent pot roast dinner and this recipe proves just that.
Hearty Kentucky stew with beef, chicken, okra, succotash, and curry powder that's been feeding Derby Day crowds and church suppers across the Bluegrass State for generations.
Yankee pot roast: browned beef chuck slow-simmered with bay leaves until fork tender, then finished with potatoes, carrots, and onions. The New England Sunday supper classic.
Texas-style chunky chili made with diced beef chuck, no beans, simmered low for 2 hours with chili powder, cumin, jalapeno, and tomatoes. Bold, beefy, and authentic.