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Home Stews

Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff Stew

By:Nagi
Published:17 Feb '20Updated:18 Aug '23
420 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff is the stew version of traditional Beef Stroganoff. An incredible slow cooked beef that’s fall-apart tender smothered in a creamy Stroganoff sauce with buttery garlic mushrooms, it’s made with economical stewing beef yet tastes like a million bucks!

Close up of ladle scooping up Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff

Beef Stroganoff

You know that anything that involving the words “slow cooked” and “beef” is going to be a winner. And this one is a ripper!

It’s the slow cooked version of classic Beef Stroganoff. Besides the fact that it takes 8 hours in a slow cooker instead of 15 minutes on the stove, this stew version of Stroganoff differs from the traditional version in a few ways:

  • Fall apart tender chunks of beef rather than thin strips that are just cooked so they’re juicy inside;

  • Made with economical stewing beef rather than good to high quality well marbled steak (essential for a really great traditional Beef Stroganoff); and

  • Deeper flavour in the sauce – owing to the long cook time. You can’t shortcut this kind of flavour!

This slow cooked beef melts in your mouth and the depth of flavour in the sauce is magnificent!

Slow Cooked Beef with Stroganoff Sauce served over mashed potato

What you need for Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff

Here’s what you need to make this incredible slow cooked beef dish! It’s the same ingredients as traditional Beef Stroganoff except using economical stewing beef and more sauce so the beef is submerged while slow cooking!

Use Chuck Beef or other economical stewing beef. Do not waste your money on pricier cuts like sirloin!

Best cut of beef for SLOW COOKER Beef Stroganoff

This recipe needs to be made with economical stewing cuts that need to be cooked for a long time to become tender, such as:

  • chuck beef
  • boneless beef ribs
  • beef cheeks
  • gravy beef

In contrast, traditional Beef Stroganoff, which is cooked quickly on the stove, is best made with pricier cuts suitable for cooking as steaks, such as boneless rib eye/scotch fillet and sirloin.

Just a few notes on some of the other ingredients:

  • Sour Cream – this is what makes Stroganoff Sauce creamy. It’s added at the end so there’s no risk of it splitting during the slow cooking time;

  • Dijon Mustard – for flavour and thickening, a traditional ingredient in Beef Stroganoff Sauce; and

  • Flour – thickens the sauce. See recipe notes for gluten free option!


How to make Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff

This is pretty much made just like traditional Beef Stew – entirely hands off for most of the cook time!

How to make Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff
  1. Brown beef aggressively. The better the browning, the better the flavour in the sauce and on the beef!

  2. Sauté the onion and garlic, mix in the flour;

  3. Add everything into the slow cooker (or pot);

  4. Slow cook 8 hours on low or 5 hours on high (see recipe for stove and IP/pressure cooker);

  5. Sauté mushrooms in garlic and butter;

  6. Whisk the sour cream with some of the liquid in the slow cooker – this will ensure you don’t end up with sour cream specks in the sauce (can’t mix vigorously otherwise the beef crumbles!);

  7. Stir mushrooms and sour cream into sauce;

  8. Serve over mash, pasta, egg noodles or even rice!

Here’s what it looks like straight out of the slow cooker.

Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff in a slow cooker, ready to be served

And the beef…..fall apart….. juicy…..sucked up all the flavour of that Stroganoff Sauce…

Close up showing fall apart slow cooked beef smothered din Beef Stroganoff sauce

I’ve made this as a stew but it could just as easily be transformed into a chunky soup with potatoes and vegetables. That way, it would also be a meal in one, rather than preparing noodles or mash to serve it over.

I’ve popped notes in the recipe for how to make it into a soup – you just add extra liquid to make the sauce slightly thinner which also increases volume so you can add more “stuff” into it. 😇

Otherwise, if you’re sticking with the Slow Cooked Beef Stroganoff Stew as written, serve it over one of these:

  • pasta or wide egg noodles (traditional);

  • mashed potato (also common for Stroganoff);

  • rice; or

  • low carb alternatives: Creamy Cauliflower Mash or Cauliflower Rice

Enjoy! – Nagi x

PS Also, for chicken lovers – > CHICKEN Stroganoff. Because I sauce this good can smother many things.


Watch how to make it

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Close up of ladle scooping up Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff

Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff

Author: Nagi
Prep: 15 minutes mins
Cook: 8 hours hrs 30 minutes mins
Mains
Russian(ish), Western
4.87 from 138 votes
Servings6 – 8 people
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. The slow cooked version of Beef Stroganoff! Fall apart beef smothered in a creamy Stroganoff sauce with buttery garlic mushrooms, it's made with economical stewing beef yet tastes like a million dollars!
3 cook methods provided: stove, slow cooker or pressure cooker/instant pot
* Recipe update: pursuant to some readers having difficulties with flour lumps, the steps have been updated to make it easier!

Ingredients

  • 1.75kg/ 3.5lb beef chuck or other stewing beef , cut in 4cm / 1.5” cube (Note 1)
  • 1.5 tsp each salt and pepper
  • 2 tbsp oil
  • 20 g/ 1 tbsp butter , unsalted
  • 1 large onion , halved then sliced into 1 cm / 2/5″ slices
  • 4 garlic cloves , minced
  • 7 tbsp flour , plain / all purpose
  • 4 tbsp Dijon Mustard
  • 1 litre / 1 quart beef stock/broth , reduced salt
  • 1 1/2 cups sour cream , full fat best

Garlic Butter Mushrooms:

  • 3 tbsp/ 45 g butter , unsalted
  • 700 g / 1.2 lb mushrooms , sliced into 0.5cm thick slices
  • 3 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 1/2 tsp salt and pepper

Serving:

  • Pasta, wide egg noodles, mashed potato
  • Chives for garnish
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Season beef – Pat beef dry then sprinkle with all the salt and pepper.
  • Brown beef – Heat 1 tbsp oil in a large heavy based pot or skillet* over high heat. Add beef in a single layer (not squished) and brown aggressively all over – 4 minutes or so. Remove and repeat with rest of beef, adding more oil as needed.
  • Sauté aromatics – Let the pot cool down a bit then return to stove. Melt half the butter, then cook garlic and onion for 3 minutes until softened.
  • Add flour – Sprinkle the flour across the surface, then stir. Add the mustard, and stir – it will look gluey, that's ok, it will dissolve.
  • Add stock – While stirring, pour in about half the beef stock then mix so the flour mixture dissolves into the liquid. It will thicken quite quickly into a gravy-like consistency .Switch to a whisk if needed, to make it lump free. Then add remaining stock, stir well, scraping the bottom of the pot, and bring to simmer. Cook using chosen method below.

SLOW COOKING – choose method:

  • Slow cooker: Transfer all liquid into slow cooker. Add beef, then slow cook 8 hours on LOW or 5 hours on HIGH.
  • Stove: Add beef into pot. Cover with lid and adjust heat to low/medium low so the it's simmering gently. Simmer 2 hrs (check at 1.5 hrs) until beef beef falls apart easily.
  • Instant pot: SKIP FLOUR, follow Note 5 Gluten Free option. 40 minutes on high, same method as slow cooker.
  • Other pressure cookers: 40 minutes on high, same method as slow cooker.

GARLIC BUTTER MUSHROOMS:

  • Melt half the butter in a large skillet over high heat. Add half the mushrooms and cook until almost golden (~3 minutes). Add half the garlic, salt and pepper, cook until golden. Remove, repeat with remaining butter, mushrooms and garlic.

FINISHING STEW:

  • Mix sour cream with 1.5 cups of liquid from slow cooker (Note 2), then gently stir into stew – careful, the beef is delicate!
  • Gently stir in mushrooms.
  • Serve over noodles, pasta or mashed potato, sprinkled with chives!

Recipe Notes:

* Only if you’re planning to transfer to slow cooker! If cooking on stove, must use pot.
1. Beef – use economical stewing cuts that need to be cooked for a long time to become tender such as:
  • Chuck
  • Boneless beef ribs*
  • Gravy beef or other beef labelled as “stewing beef”
  • Beef cheeks**
* Use ribs if you want to show off. It is the most well marbled all throughout, not a speck of dry anywhere (unlike chuck where there are some spots that are less juicy than others)
** If 200g/7oz or less, cook whole so it looks like this beef cheeks recipe but with Stroganoff Sauce. Chopped cheeks twist and skew once slow cooked – looks better to serve whole (or at most, halved).
Other beef cuts ok to use – great for slow cooking but not as juicy all the way through as there are more lean patches:
  • Brisket
  • Blade roast
Best to buy big piece and cut your own. Try not to buy the tiny little pre cut stewing beef – they will cook too quickly.
2. Sour Cream – mixing with sauce from stew prior to adding into pot/slow cooker ensures you don’t end up with sour cream specks in the sauce. You can’t mix stew vigorously because the beef will fall apart!
3. Instant Pot  – Some readers have experienced the “Burn” notice using the IP because the sauce is borderline too thick for the IP. To eliminate this chance completely, SKIP THE FLOUR and use the Gluten Free option in Note 5 instead (cornflour slurry added at end to thicken).
All pressure Cookers (including IP and Australian Breville Fast-Slow Cooker) – you can do the sautéing in the same pot. Note that it will take longer though because it doesn’t get as hot as using stove and you can’t use as large a pot/pan!
4. Sauce thickness – stove method might need a touch of extra water to thin sauce, depends how heavy your pot lid is (heavier = less evaporation). 
5. Gluten free option (and for Instant Pot) – skip the flour. Hold back 1/4 cup beef broth, mix with 3 tbsp cornflour/cornstarch. After whisking sour cream with stew liquid, add the cornflour mix into the sour cream, then pour all that into the stew. Simmer 5 minutes to thicken (slow cooker 10 minutes, IP saute function 5 min).
6. Storage – as with all stews, it’s even better the next day… and the next! Leftovers will keep 4 to 5 days in the fridge, and freeze for 3 months (thaw gently and stir gently, remember beef is fall apart tender!
If you have lots of leftovers, transform into a pie with puff pastry (so it will look like this) OR mashed potato (see method used for Cottage Pie or Shepherd’s Pie).
7. Nutrition per serving, stew only (ie not noodles or mash).

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 666cal (33%)Carbohydrates: 12g (4%)Protein: 59g (118%)Fat: 44g (68%)Saturated Fat: 19g (119%)Cholesterol: 204mg (68%)Sodium: 1474mg (64%)Potassium: 1626mg (46%)Fiber: 2g (8%)Sugar: 3g (3%)Vitamin A: 281IU (6%)Vitamin C: 5mg (6%)Calcium: 64mg (6%)Iron: 7mg (39%)
Keywords: Beef Stew, slow cooked beef, slow cooker beef stroganoff, stroganoff stew
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

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420 Comments

  1. Martin Miller says

    October 9, 2024 at 4:34 am

    5 stars
    Delicious. Will definitely be making that again.

    Reply
  2. SHARON ROCHOW says

    October 5, 2024 at 12:51 pm

    Has anyone tried greek yoghurt As a substitute for sour cream?

    Reply
  3. Steve says

    September 14, 2024 at 4:58 pm

    5 stars
    Great meal, real easy to cook in the slow cooker. Next time I’ll cook the onions & garlic remove them from the pan then make the roux then add the onions back for a simmer, the flour mix got hooked up in the onions and I had to whisk frequently while slow cooking. Couldn’t stop taking spoonfuls while cooking – delicious.

    Reply
    • Mark Anderson says

      October 17, 2024 at 10:44 pm

      5 stars
      This is an easy excellent recipe. Added an extra onion that I finely diced to absorb and thicken the sauce. Added a little extra meat and made into 2 dishes. One with pasta and other with mashed creamy potatoes. Hard to tell which was better.

      Reply
  4. Stella says

    September 9, 2024 at 11:21 am

    5 stars
    I chopped up some T-bone steaks I had kicking around the freezer and decided to try this recipe in my pressure cooker to keep the meat tender. What a stroke of luck that Nagi had a stroganoff recipe – even without the sour cream (which I totally forgot), this was amazing!! I don’t generally like beef very much, but this is delish. My two-year-old actually asked for seconds, and he hates everything!

    Reply
  5. Helen says

    September 6, 2024 at 2:06 pm

    God love 🥰 him, you took too long mum I was tired 😴

    Reply
  6. Lisa says

    August 14, 2024 at 7:21 pm

    5 stars
    Such a delicious recipe, one of the best stroganoff’s I’ve ever had!

    Despite the apparent updated recipe over the flour lumps, I still had huge lumps after adding flour and mustard. I was also confused because it says to use half the butter then never instructs what to do with the rest. In the end I used all of it and it made no difference. The lumps still persisted.

    I was worried at first, but I used the slow cooker method and by the time it was done, the lumps were gone. So that was a relief. I do think something is amiss in those steps though. Mine was really thick so I might even reduce the flour next time, and it might help the lumps.

    I also misread how much sour cream I needed so I only had a 300ml pot but that was plenty in the end.

    Anyway, I’m glad the lumps worked themselves out and it was so delicious. It made so much and I froze a heap for hubby to have while I’m away this weekend.

    Thanks, Nagi for yet another great recipe. I will forever be baffled about the lumps, but I will certainly make it again knowing they will disappear.

    Reply
  7. Kerstin says

    July 23, 2024 at 6:55 pm

    5 stars
    I have lost count how many times I have made this, but it is the only Beef Strog I will ever make. It is amazing and a big hit with everyone who’s tried it.

    Reply
  8. Tracy says

    June 9, 2024 at 6:41 pm

    5 stars
    Deliciousness again 😋 I was worried about lumps in the roux, the flour stuck to the onions and didn’t blend well. It all worked out in the end though

    Reply
  9. Rachel says

    June 3, 2024 at 10:10 am

    5 stars
    Nagi!! This is delicious! I made it in my slow cooker and it has turned out perfectly! So delicious, rich, creamy! My whole family gave it 5 stars! I even took the leftovers to my parents to try, even more delicious on day 2! Thank you!

    Reply
  10. Natalie says

    May 26, 2024 at 4:28 pm

    4 stars
    I’m only part way through making this at the moment, but I had to comment to say that even with the apparently updated instructions, I found it impossible to break up the lumps of flour. I ended up fishing out as much of the onion as I could before using my stick mixer on the sauce. I actually wonder if something is missing from the instructions because it fails to say what to do with the 2nd half of the butter.
    If I were to make this again, I’d cook the onions and garlic in the first half of the butter before taking them out of the pot and setting aside with the beef. I’d then use the 2nd half of the butter with the flour and stock to make a roux, because I don’t usually have trouble with lumps, so can only assume that the presence of the onion makes it impossible to break up the lumps properly in this case.

    Reply
    • Jasmine says

      August 12, 2024 at 11:50 pm

      5 stars
      She does tell what to do with it- it’s in the garlic butter mushrooms segment. Did you use a whisk?

      Reply
    • Tracy says

      June 9, 2024 at 6:39 pm

      Mine was lumpy too and I was thinking of trying the same but it ended up smooth in the end so I didn’t sweat it too much. I think I will try taking out the onion and doing the roux separately next time though.

      Reply
  11. Terri Wilson says

    May 21, 2024 at 11:28 am

    5 stars
    We made this recipe with beef cheeks and it was absolutely amazing. My husband especially commented on how thick and silky the sauce was. Very easy staple ingredients as well with so much flavour! Will be a regular on our dinner menus.

    Reply
  12. Carolyn says

    May 11, 2024 at 10:17 pm

    5 stars
    Another amazing recipe. We went with the fast slow cool option for 5 hrs cooking and the beef was super tender. Served with a potato and parnsip mash, A huge hit. Lots of flavour. The gravy though was runny. Would add some more flour probably next time

    Reply
  13. Suzy McGregor says

    May 5, 2024 at 5:26 pm

    5 stars
    OMG delicious. Really a hit at home. Sour cream gave it a thick creamy texture. I topped on egg fettuccine. Nice and saucey. I cooked in slow cooker and the house smell was gorgeous . Thank you once again for a beautiful meal from Adelaide Sth Australia

    Reply
  14. Tim says

    April 27, 2024 at 4:13 pm

    5 stars
    Brilliant. Again. Always.

    Reply
  15. Jake says

    April 22, 2024 at 5:43 pm

    4 stars
    I did the slow cooker version. The flavours were great and adding the mushrooms per instructions really helped to save their texture. Four stars for me because it ended up very saucy. I think adding about half the Sour cream would have been a better consistency for me. Maybe worth trying and then adding more later if you want?

    Reply
  16. Janet Meerman says

    February 1, 2024 at 11:58 pm

    Made this tonight, absolutely delicious, served with mash potato. My husband looked at me when he had his first taste and said “beautiful, Nagi?” Nagi your recipes are the best.

    Reply
  17. Keri says

    January 2, 2024 at 1:38 pm

    5 stars
    Thank you for sharing this recipe. My family devoured it! It was quick to put together with ingredients on hand and resulted in a very flavourful dish. For reference, cooked in slow cooker, added sautéed mushrooms one hour before cooking time ended. Once cooked, added the sour cream and maintained on low while preparing egg noodles. Very yummy and definitely a make again dish!

    Reply
  18. Jen says

    November 29, 2023 at 6:08 pm

    5 stars
    Delicious and very easy recipe. It makes a lot. I froze some and it was just was good when defrosted. I used the suggested cuts of meat

    Reply
  19. Molly Snyder says

    November 27, 2023 at 9:50 am

    When do you pour the beef broth in?

    Reply
  20. anne says

    November 23, 2023 at 11:11 am

    Been making your recipes for years. 1st one that I thought the directions were horrible. Luckily, I’m an experience cook. So I made it happen. Also, found a bit bland.

    Reply
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