Serve these tender drumsticks and buttery potatoes straight from the slow cooker with a simple green side—steamed green beans, buttered peas, or a tossed salad with a tangy dressing all work nicely. A pan of warm dinner rolls or a slice of crusty bread is perfect for soaking up the savory juices. If you like a little color on the plate, add some sliced fresh tomatoes or a scoop of coleslaw. Finish with something modest and homey, like applesauce or a dish of canned peaches, and you’ll have a supper that feels like a Sunday meal any night of the week.
Slow Cooker Amish Drumstick & Potato Dinner
2 pounds russet potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced (about 1/4 inch)
3 tablespoons salted butter, cut into small pieces
2 1/2 pounds chicken drumsticks (about 8–10 pieces), skin-on
1 packet (1 ounce) dry onion soup mix
Lightly grease the inside of a 5- to 6-quart slow cooker with a bit of butter or cooking spray so the potatoes don’t stick.
Peel the potatoes and slice them into thin rounds, about 1/4 inch thick. Spread the sliced potatoes evenly in the bottom of the slow cooker, making a flat, even layer.
Dot the potatoes with the small pieces of salted butter, tucking them here and there across the surface so they melt down into the potatoes as they cook.
Pat the chicken drumsticks dry with paper towels. This helps them season more evenly and keeps excess moisture out of the slow cooker.
Arrange the chicken drumsticks in a single layer directly on top of the sliced potatoes. Nestle them in so they cover most of the potatoes, as if you’re tucking them into a soft bed.
Sprinkle the dry onion soup mix evenly over the tops of the drumsticks and the exposed potatoes. The mix will season the chicken and melt down into the potatoes, creating a rich, savory broth.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 6 to 7 hours, or on HIGH for 3 to 4 hours, until the chicken is very tender and the potatoes are soft when pierced with a fork.
Once done, taste a potato and, if needed, add a little salt and black pepper to the potatoes and cooking juices. The onion soup mix is salty, so you may not need much.
To serve, gently lift the drumsticks out first, then spoon the buttery potatoes and savory juices onto each plate. Serve hot, straight from the slow cooker.
For a creamier version, pour 1/2 cup of chicken broth or whole milk over the potatoes before adding the butter and chicken; this will create more sauce, though it does technically add another ingredient beyond the core four. If you like a bit of color and texture, you can broil the cooked drumsticks on a baking sheet for 3–4 minutes to brown the skin, then return them to the potatoes. To lean into traditional Amish-style flavors, add a pinch of dried thyme or parsley along with the onion soup mix, or scatter a few thin onion rings over the potatoes before arranging the chicken. If you need to stretch the meal to feed more people, add one extra potato and a couple more drumsticks, keeping the same layering method and checking for tenderness toward the end of the cooking time. Leftovers reheat well; store them together so the potatoes can continue to soak up the savory juices, and warm gently on the stovetop or in the microwave with a spoonful of water if they seem dry.
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