The Dish That Put Rochester NY on the Map — And Landed Me in the New York Times

There’s a moment, right before it hits the table, when Chicken French announces itself. It’s the smell that gets you first — bright lemon cutting through rich, golden butter, the faintest whisper of white wine lifting off a hot skillet. Then comes the sound: that gentle, satisfied sizzle as thin, egg-battered cutlets settle back into their velvety pan sauce, soaking up every last drop of flavor. By the time the plate is in front of you — chicken nestled on a pretty tangle of linguine, scattered with fresh parsley, glistening under the light — you’re already sold.

If you grew up in Rochester, New York, you didn’t need to be sold. You already knew. Chicken French — or Chicken Francese, if you want to get Italian about it — is as much a part of Rochester’s identity as Xerox, Kodak, Wegmans, and the famous Nick Tahou’s Garbage Plate. It’s on the menu at white-tablecloth restaurants and neighborhood diners alike. It shows up at weddings, baptisms, and Sunday dinners. It is, without exaggeration, the dish of my hometown.

And a few years ago, it became the dish that brought the New York Times to my door.


A Little Dish With a Big History

To understand why Chicken French matters so much to Rochester, you have to understand where it came from — and how it got its confusingly un-French name.

The story starts in post-World War II New York City, where Italian immigrants brought with them a recipe for vitello francese: thin veal cutlets, dredged in flour, dipped in egg, sautéed in butter, and finished with a bright sauce of lemon and white wine. The name meant “veal in the French style” — a nod to the luxurious, buttery pan sauce that felt decidedly Parisian to Italian-American cooks eager to impress their new country. It became a staple on upscale Italian-American menus across the city, cousin to the piccatas and Marsalas that defined the era.

Eventually, the dish migrated north and west, to Rochester’s large, tight-knit Italian-American community. And that’s where things got interesting.

In 1967, a restaurant called the Brown Derby opened on Monroe Avenue in Brighton. Its chef, James Cianciola — known to regulars as Chef Vincenzo — began serving his own version of veal francese, and it quickly became the restaurant’s signature. Watch how they made it at the restaurant back in the day


Then came the 1970s, and with them, a wave of animal-rights protesters who picketed against veal outside restaurants across the country. Cianciola’s solution? Swap the veal for chicken. The result was, if anything, even better — more tender, more accessible, and just as soaked in that irresistible lemony butter sauce.

Chicken French was born. And Rochester claimed it entirely as its own.

No place has embraced chicken francese more warmly than Rochester, N.Y., a city with an illustrious history of great Italian-American cooking

Soon, the Brown Derby added artichoke French, haddock French, cauliflower French. Other restaurants followed. The dish spread through the city like the best kind of rumor, each kitchen adding its own touch — sherry instead of white wine, a handful of grated Romano in the egg wash, a shower of fresh parsley over the top. Today, food historians have half-jokingly suggested the dish should be renamed “Chicken Rochester.” The rest of the world calls it Chicken Francese. We just call it Chicken French.

And we know it’s ours.


The Phone Call I’ll Never Forget

Several years ago, I wrote about Chicken French on my blog — the history, the nostalgia, my recipe, the whole love letter. I adapted my recipe from “ROCgrandma” on AllRecipes and it was absolutely delicious! Seriously one of my favorite dishes ever.

I’m a food stylist, photographer and recipe developer based in New York City (and currently Texas), but I grew up in Rochester, and this dish has always been part of my personal food story. Writing about it felt like writing about home.

The single best use of boneless, skinless chicken breasts? This Italian-American staple, with its lemony, buttery pan sauce.

What I didn’t expect was a phone call from Julia Moskin, staff food writer at the New York Times Food section.

Julia was working on a story about Chicken Francese — what it is, where it came from, and why it had become such a phenomenon. She’d found my post and wanted to talk.

So we did: about the dish, about Rochester’s Italian-American history, about the way Chicken French shows up at every important meal in that city, from casual Tuesday dinners to black-tie wedding receptions. My sister Jenni, who has worked in Rochester’s restaurant industry for over 25 years, joined the conversation — she’d watched the dish evolve from the front of the house, seen every variation imaginable come across the pass.

When the story ran, it was on the front page of the New York Times Food section — both in print and online. My name was in it. My sister’s name was in it. And Julia’s recipe, the one that accompanied the piece, was declared the single best thing you can cook with a chicken breast.

I’ll be honest: I cried a little.

But the story wasn’t finished yet. By December 2018, the New York Times had mined its cooking data for the year’s most popular new recipes. Chicken Francese came in at number one. Number one. Out of every recipe the Times published that year, this buttery, lemony, deeply humble Italian-American dish from my hometown topped the list.

When I read that, I thought about every Rochester kitchen I’d ever stood in. Every Italian grandmother who made this without a recipe. Every chef who’d perfected his or her own version over decades of dinner service. Every Rochesterian who’d ever told an out-of-towner, “You have to try the Chicken French.”

We knew. It just took the rest of the world a little while to catch up.


Why You Need to Make This Recipe

Here’s the thing about Chicken French that surprises people who’ve never made it: it’s genuinely easy. Not “easy for an experienced cook” easy. Actually, truly, weeknight easy. Start to finish, you’re looking at 35 minutes.

The secret is the egg batter. Unlike a traditional flour-only breading, dipping the cutlets in beaten egg first creates a thin, protective coating that keeps the chicken moist and tender even as it browns. It’s the same technique used in Wiener schnitzel and fritto misto — a European tradition that American fried chicken never quite adopted, and honestly, a shame it didn’t.

The other revelation is the pan sauce. Once the chicken is browned, you wipe out the skillet, melt butter, add white wine and lemon juice, let it reduce to a syrupy gloss, then pour in chicken stock and cook it down to something silky and bright and deeply savory. You tuck the cutlets back in, let them warm through in the sauce, and that’s it. That’s the whole dish.

It’s also more forgiving than it looks. The cutlets and sauce can be made a few hours ahead and gently reheated — which makes it ideal for entertaining. Your guests will think you’ve been in the kitchen for hours. You haven’t.

A few things I always do: I add a pinch of grated Parmesan and a little fresh parsley directly to the egg wash — that’s the Rochester way, and it adds depth. I plate it on a nest of linguine so the pasta soaks up the extra sauce. And I always, always add the optional browned lemon slices. They’re beautiful, slightly caramelized, and utterly delicious.

Serve it with something starchy — pasta is traditional — or alongside broccoli or green beans if you want something lighter. Pour a crisp white wine: a Soave, a Chablis, a grüner veltliner. Or Champagne, which, as the Times noted, goes remarkably well with this.

Rochesterians might not agree, but I’ll allow it.


Rochester-Style Chicken French (Francese)

Featured in the New York Times, September 2018. Recipe by Julia Moskin; recipe serving suggestions and styling notes by Kristen Hess.

Yield: 4 servings | Total Time: 35 minutes


Ingredients

  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tablespoons whole milk
  • 1 teaspoon salt, plus more for seasoning
  • ½ teaspoon ground black pepper, plus more for seasoning
  • 2 tablespoons freshly grated Parmesan or Pecorino cheese (Kristen’s addition — the Rochester way)
  • 1 tablespoon freshly minced parsley, plus 3–4 tablespoons for finishing
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • ⅓ cup olive oil
  • ⅓ cup vegetable oil
  • 4 to 6 large boneless, skinless chicken cutlets, thinly sliced
  • 3 to 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 lemon, thinly sliced, seeds removed (optional but recommended)
  • ½ cup dry white wine
  • Freshly squeezed juice of 1 lemon, more to taste
  • 2 cups chicken stock

Instructions

1. Make the batter and prep the flour. In a wide, shallow bowl, whisk together the eggs, milk, salt, pepper, Parmesan, and 1 tablespoon parsley until fully combined. Place the flour in a separate bowl. Line a baking sheet with paper towels.

2. Heat the oil. In a wide skillet, heat the olive and vegetable oils over medium heat until shimmering.

3. Bread and fry the chicken. Working in batches, lightly dredge each cutlet in flour and shake off the excess. Dip into the egg batter, let the excess drip back into the bowl, then place in the skillet. Fry, turning once, until golden brown on both sides — about 4 minutes per side. Adjust the heat as needed so the cutlets brown slowly and evenly. Transfer to the paper-towel-lined pan. Repeat with remaining cutlets.

4. Wipe the pan. Remove the pan from the heat and carefully pour off the oil. Wipe it clean with paper towels, then return it to low heat.

5. Brown the lemon slices (optional). Melt 3 tablespoons of butter and scatter the lemon slices across the pan. Cook gently, stirring occasionally, until the slices are golden and beginning to caramelize at the edges, about 3 minutes. Remove and set aside.

6. Make the pan sauce. Add 3 tablespoons of butter to the pan along with the wine and lemon juice. Bring to a boil and cook until the liquid reduces to a syrupy glaze, about 3 to 4 minutes. Pour in the chicken stock, bring back to a boil, and cook until the sauce thickens, about 5 minutes. Taste and adjust with more lemon, salt, and pepper — it should be quite lemony and bright.

7. Finish and serve. Reduce the heat and nestle the cutlets back into the pan. Simmer very gently until the sauce is velvety and the chicken is warmed through, about 4 minutes, turning the cutlets occasionally so they’re coated all over. Lay the browned lemon slices on top. Sprinkle generously with fresh parsley and serve immediately, spooning plenty of sauce over each plate.


Kristen’s Tips

  • Plate it beautifully: Serve over a nest of linguine tossed with a little olive oil and butter. The pasta soaks up the sauce in the most glorious way.
  • Make it ahead: Brown the cutlets and make the sauce up to 3 hours in advance. Reheat gently on low heat before serving.
  • The sherry debate: Rochester restaurants are divided — sherry gives a slightly sweeter, more assertive sauce; dry white wine (I like Chablis or Pinot Grigio) keeps it crisp and clean. Try both and decide for yourself.
  • Make it your own: Try haddock French, shrimp French, or artichoke French using the same sauce. Once you master the technique, everything tastes better “French’d.”

Come Home to the Table

There’s something I love about a dish that carries a whole city inside it. Chicken French is that for me — every time I make it, I’m back in Rochester, at some long Italian dinner that stretches into the night, with a glass of wine and people I love and the smell of butter and lemon in the air.

I’m so proud that this recipe — and this little corner of upstate New York food history — made it to the front page of the New York Times. And I’m even prouder to share it with you here, in this space, where I get to write about food the way it deserves to be written about: as story, as memory, as something worth gathering around.

If you make this — and I hope you will — I’d love to know. Leave a comment below, reply on Substack, or tag me when you share it. Tell me how you served it, what wine you chose, whether you went sherry or white wine. Tell me if it took you somewhere.

For me, it always takes me home. 💛


About Me

Kristen Hess is a food stylist, photographer, recipe developer, and writer behind The Artful Gourmet. Find more recipes, food stories, and culinary inspiration on her Substack.

You can find more inspiring food stories and cooking videos on The Artful Gourmet Podcast and YouTube channel.


Tags: chicken french, chicken francese, Rochester NY food, Italian-American recipes, lemon butter chicken, easy chicken cutlet recipe, NY Times chicken francese, comfort food recipes, pasta recipes, dinner party recipes:

The Coziest Irish Stout Beef Stew (Slow-Braised with Guinness)

Irish Stout Beef Stew

Rich, slow-braised beef stew simmered with Guinness, carrots, potatoes, and savory spices. The ultimate cozy comfort food for chilly nights.

Jump to Recipe

March can be a funny month. Technically it’s spring… but outside it still feels like winter decided to overstay its welcome. Grey skies, chilly mornings, and just enough drizzle to make you want to stay indoors with the heater on.

Honestly? I don’t hate it.

There’s something quietly luxurious about a day when the only agenda is cooking something slow, cozy, and soul-warming while a movie plays in the background and the kitchen fills with the smell of something simmering on the stove.

One November several years ago for my birthday, my mom gifted me a gorgeous Wolfgang Puck cast-iron enamel braising pan, and I had been waiting for the perfect excuse to christen it with a big, bubbling pot of comfort food when I first made it. But since it’s St. Patrick’s Day today – I’m bringing this fav recipe back!

Irish Stout Beef Stew

Enter: Irish Stout Beef Stew.

Deep, rich, hearty, and exactly the kind of thing that makes a gloomy day feel like a warm hug.

I started with chunky cubes of beef chuck, browned until golden and caramelized.

Beef Stew Braising Base

Then came the aromatics—sweet onions and garlic sizzling in the pan—followed by carrots, potatoes, tomatoes, and a jar of Williams-Sonoma Beef Stew Braising Sauce, which brings a delicious blend of spices like cumin, paprika, curry, roasted red peppers, and chiles.

And of course… the magic ingredient.

Guinness Irish Stout

A bottle of dark Irish stout beer.
Guinness is my favorite here—it adds a deep, malty richness that transforms a simple stew into something truly special.

Beef Stew Simmering

Everything goes into the pot, slides into the oven, and after a few hours of slow braising the result is exactly what winter cooking should be:

A big pot of savory, hearty, melt-in-your-mouth goodness.

Serve it with thick slices of rye bread or Irish brown bread, plenty of butter (Kerrygold, always), and maybe another glass of stout.

Because if you’re going to stay in…
you might as well stay in well.

Irish Stout Beef Stew

Irish Stout Beef Stew
theartfulgourmet

The Coziest Irish Stout Beef Stew (Slow-Braised with Guinness)

Rich Irish stout beef stew braised with Guinness, carrots, and potatoes. A cozy winter comfort food recipe perfect with rye bread or Irish brown bread.
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours 15 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Servings: 8
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Irish
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup seasoned pan-searing flour (Wegmans or Wondra)
  • 4 tbsp canola oil, divided
  • 2 lbs boneless chuck beef, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 1 1/2 large onions, sliced
  • 2 tbsp minced garlic (3–4 cloves)
  • 1 tbsp Worchestershire sauce
  • 1 bottle Irish stout beer (such as Guinness)
  • 1 (8.5 oz) jar Williams-Sonoma Beef Stew Braising Sauce
  • 1 (14 oz) can low-sodium beef broth
  • 4 Roma tomatoes, finely chopped in a food processor
  • 2 cups baby carrots or large carrot chunks
  • 6 Yukon Gold potatoes, quartered into chunks
  • 1 pkg frozen baby peas
  • 1/4 cup starch or roux thickener mixed with water (optional)
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Fresh parsley, chopped, for garnish
  • Rye bread or Irish brown bread, for serving

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch Oven

Method
 

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Heat 2 tablespoons canola oil over medium-high heat in a large cast-iron enamel braising pan or Dutch oven.
  2. Dredge the beef cubes in seasoned pan-searing flour. Brown in the hot oil for about 5 minutes, turning to brown all sides. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside.
  3. Add sliced onions to the pan with the remaining 2 tablespoons oil and sauté about 5 minutes, until softened. Add minced garlic and cook 1 minute more.
  4. Add Worchestershire sauce and the Irish stout beer, stirring and scraping the pan to release the browned bits. Add the beef broth and simmer for a few minutes.
  5. Return the beef to the pot. Add chopped tomatoes, carrots, potatoes, the Beef Stew Braising Sauce, and salt and pepper to taste. Bring to a boil.
  6. Cover and transfer the pot to the oven. Braise for 1 hour.
  7. Remove the pot from the oven, stir, and reduce oven temperature to 300°F.
  8. If the stew needs thickening, stir in the starch or roux slurry until desired consistency is reached. (You can also mash a few potatoes to naturally thicken the stew.)
  9. Return the pot to the oven and braise 30 minutes to 1 hour longer.
  10. Add the baby peas during the last 5 minutes of cooking.
  11. Remove from oven and let the stew rest 15–20 minutes on the stovetop to thicken slightly before serving.
  12. Serve with rye bread or Irish brown bread, plenty of Irish butter (Kerrygold is my favorite), and a glass of Guinness or your favorite dark beer.

Notes

This rich Irish stout beef stew is the ultimate cozy comfort food. Tender beef chuck slowly braised with Guinness, carrots, potatoes, and savory spices in a Dutch oven until melt-in-your-mouth delicious.
Perfect for chilly nights, St. Patrick’s Day dinners, or anytime you crave a hearty homemade stew.
✔ Easy slow braise method
✔ Deep flavor from Irish stout beer
✔ Classic comfort food recipe

Recipe Tips

Use chuck roast for the most tender stew meat.
Guinness stout adds deep flavor but any dark stout works well.
• Mash a few potatoes into the broth for a naturally thicker stew.

Storage & Reheating

Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container up to 4 days.
Freezer: Freeze up to 3 months.
Reheat: Warm gently on the stovetop with a splash of broth.

Nutrition (Approximate)

Calories: ~420 per serving
Protein: 32g
Carbohydrates: 28g
Fat: 18g


📥 Download the Printable Recipe

Want to keep this cozy classic in your kitchen binder?

Click on the print button on the recipe card above for
Irish Stout Beef Stew so you can easily cook it again anytime,
or click the link below to download it.

👉 Download the Printable Recipe PDF

Perfect for:

• keeping in your recipe binder
• sharing with friends and family
• cooking without scrolling on your phone


🍲 More Cozy Cooking Stories

This stew isn’t just a recipe — it’s part of my winter cooking ritual.

I’m writing a companion essay on Substack about slow cooking,
comfort food, and why braises like this feel like a warm hug on a cold day.

👉 Stay tuned for the companion essay on Substack (coming soon!)

More recipes you might enjoy:

Retro 70s Chicken Divan

Beef Stroganoff Casserole

Amazing Macaroni + Cheese

Crockpot Mississippi Pot Roast + Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

Mississippi Pot Roast with Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

There’s something deeply satisfying about a recipe that asks very little of you and gives everything in return.

This Crockpot Mississippi Pot Roast is one of those quietly magical dishes — the kind that fills the kitchen with rich, savory aromas while you go about your day. It’s unfussy, comforting, and endlessly reliable, yet still feels special when it lands on the table.

I love pairing this slow-cooked classic with cheesy cauliflower mash — creamy, indulgent, and lighter than traditional potatoes — because comfort food should feel good and taste incredible. This is the kind of meal meant for cozy evenings, a good glass of wine, and music humming softly in the background.

Mississippi Pot Roast with Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

Comfort Food Done Right — Low Carb, Slow-Cooked & Full of Flavor.

Mississippi Pot Roast is the kind of recipe that feels like a warm hug on a cold day — rich, tender, and effortlessly delicious. Originating in Mississippi in the 1990s, this slow-cooker classic has become an internet sensation thanks to its simplicity and melt-in-your-mouth results.

But we’ve given it a special twist — pairing it with cheesy cauliflower mash to keep it low-carb, creamy, and irresistibly savory.

Mississippi Pot Roast with Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

🥘 What Is Mississippi Pot Roast?

Mississippi Pot Roast is a Southern favorite slow-cooked beef dish born in Ripley, Mississippi. Despite how modern it feels, it has a surprisingly recent origin story — first created in the 1990s by a home cook, Robin Chapman, who adapted her aunt’s pot roast and tweaked the seasoning to be less spicy — using ranch dressing seasoning, au jus gravy mix, butter, and pepperoncini (banana peppers). It was shared in a church cookbook and soon became a viral classic in home cook circles.

The name comes simply from the state it was first created in — but its popularity has spread far beyond the South thanks to blogs, cookbooks, food communities, and social media shares, earning it nicknames like “the roast that owns the internet.”

👩‍🍳 Why You’ll Love This Version

✔ Crazy easy, dump-and-go preparation in the crockpot

✔ Tender, flavorful beef that falls apart and shreds perfectly

✔ Low-carb with cheesy cauliflower mash instead of potatoes

✔ Perfect for weeknights or weekend comfort lunches

✔ Keto, Gluten-free and adaptable to many diets

Mississippi Pot Roast with Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

Mississippi Pot Roast with Cheesy Cauliflower Mash
theartfulgourmet

Crockpot Mississippi Pot Roast + Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

Comfort Food Done Right — Low Carb, Slow-Cooked & Full of Flavor.
Mississippi Pot Roast is the kind of recipe that feels like a warm hug on a cold day — rich, tender, and effortlessly delicious. Originating in Mississippi in the 1990s, this slow-cooker classic has become an internet sensation thanks to its simplicity and melt-in-your-mouth results.
But we’ve given it a special twist — pairing it with cheesy cauliflower mash to keep it low-carb, creamy, and irresistibly savory.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 8 hours
Servings: 4
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American

Ingredients
  

Mississippi Pot Roast
  • 3–4 lbs beef roast (chuck or outside round)
  • 10 oz beef broth
  • 6 pepperoncini peppers
  • 1/4 cup pepperoncini juice
  • 1 stick unsalted butter
  • 1 tsp dried Italian seasoning
  • 1/2 tsp onion powder
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/2 tsp dried dill
  • dash spicy seasoning (like Creole or Cajun)
Cheesy Cauliflower Mash
  • 1 head cauliflower, chopped
  • 2 tbsp cream or half and half
  • 2 tbsp unsalted butter
  • 1/2 cup shredded cheddar cheese
  • Garlic salt and pepper, to taste

Method
 

Prepare the Pot Roast
  1. Mix dried seasonings in a small bowl and rub all over the beef.
  2. Place roast in the crockpot.
  3. Add beef broth, pepperoncini peppers + juice, white balsamic vinegar, and butter on top.
  4. Cook on low for 8 hours (or high for 4–5).
Shred + Sauce
  1. Remove beef and shred with two forks.
  2. Optional: Stir cornstarch/xanthan gum into juices to thicken.
  3. Return shredded meat to juices.
Make Cheesy Cauliflower Mash
  1. Microwave cauliflower with cream + butter 12 minutes, stirring halfway.
  2. Blend with cheese until smooth.
  3. Season with garlic salt + pepper.
Serve
  1. Pile tender roast and pepperoncini over cheesy cauliflower mash and spoon extra sauce over top.

Notes

Serve with a hearty red wine like a Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah/Shiraz or Zinfandel, or a dark rich beer like Guinness. A brown spirit cocktail could also pair well with this hearty savory dish as well. 

Mississippi Pot Roast with Cheesy Cauliflower Mash

🍽️ Serving Suggestions

Mississippi Pot Roast is incredibly versatile — serve it over:

  • Classic mashed potatoes
  • Cauliflower rice
  • Egg noodles
  • Rice or crusty rolls or garlic bread
  • In sandwiches with melted provolone

🔁 Variations to Try

Classic Version: Use ranch and au jus seasoning packets instead of homemade seasoning.

Instant Pot: Pressure cook for about 1 hour with 1 cup beef broth (great for faster results).

Mississippi Chicken: Swap out beef for chicken breasts with similar seasonings for a lighter version.

Add Veggies: Toss in carrots and quartered potatoes for a heartier pot roast.

🔥 Pro Tips for the Perfect Roast

  • Don’t lift the lid! Slow cooking thrives on trapped heat — lifting the lid can toughen the meat.
  • Sear first (optional): Browning the beef adds flavor but isn’t necessary.
  • Adjust heat: The Pepperoncini adds tang, not intense heat/spice — add more juice if you like it hot and want a bolder flavor.
  • Thicken the gravy: A dash of cornstarch or Xanthan gum helps it thicken up and makes a richer sauce.

🍷 Perfect Wine Pairings

Mississippi Pot Roast is rich, buttery, and savory — which means it loves a wine with structure, warmth, and a little soul.

🍷 Cabernet Sauvignon (California or Washington)

Bold enough to stand up to the beef and butter, with dark fruit notes that complement the savory gravy.

🍷 Syrah / Shiraz

Peppery and plush — a natural match for the pepperoncini tang and slow-cooked richness.

🍷 Zinfandel

If you love a cozy, fruit-forward wine with a touch of spice, this is a beautiful pairing for comfort cooking nights.

🍷 Pinot Noir (Oregon or Burgundy-style)

For a softer, elegant option — earthy, smooth, and perfect if you want the meal to feel elevated yet relaxed.

Serving tip: Slightly warm reds (not over-chilled) work best here.

🎶 Music Playlist: “Slow Cooker Soul”

This recipe begs for music that feels warm, nostalgic, and a little soulful — something that makes the kitchen feel like a sanctuary.

Playlist Vibe:  Cozy • Classic • Soulful • Easygoing

Suggested Artists & Tracks:

  • Fleetwood Mac – Dreams
  • Van Morrison – Into the Mystic
  • Norah Jones – Come Away With Me
  • Carole King – It’s Too Late
  • Bill Withers – Lovely Day
  • Steely Dan – Deacon Blues
  • Diana Ross – Ain’t No Mountain High Enough
  • Hall & Oates – Sara Smile

Perfect for a Sunday afternoon or a slow winter evening.

This is the kind of recipe that becomes part of your rhythm — dependable, comforting, and always welcome. Whether you’re cooking for family, friends, or just yourself, Mississippi Pot Roast has a way of making the day feel softer and the meal feel intentional.

Pour a glass of wine, let the slow cooker do the work, and enjoy the simple pleasure of a home that smells like dinner is going to be really good.

Other recipes you might enjoy:

Hearty Beef Vegetable Soup

Keto Cheesy Bacon Chicken

Rock Star Chili

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