Fall crockpot recipes were practically invented for days like the ones I remember growing up, when the temperature dropped overnight and you woke up knowing dinner needed to be something warm and filling. My grandma had a saying that a good stew should practically cook itself, and she was right. This hearty fall crockpot beef stew does exactly that.
There is a particular kind of satisfaction in loading up the crockpot before 9 in the morning and then going about your whole day while the kitchen slowly fills with the smell of beef, red wine, and rosemary. That was the rhythm of Betty’s farmhouse every October and November without fail. The whole house would settle into that low, slow aroma by early afternoon, and by the time everyone came through the door for dinner, the table was practically already set in spirit. This beef stew carries all of that with it. Grab your crockpot because your kitchen is about to smell incredible.
Why This Hearty Beef Stew Belongs in Your Fall Recipe Box
Betty grew up watching her mother build flavors slowly and patiently, and that philosophy shows up in every one of her fall crockpot recipes. This beef stew is a good example of what happens when solid ingredients and low, steady heat are given enough time to work together. The result is a bowl that tastes like it required far more effort than it actually did.
- Set it in the morning and come home to dinner already done, with no hovering or stirring required for most of the day
- The combination of red wine, tomato paste, and beef broth builds a broth with real depth and body, nothing watery or flat
- Beef stew meat turns genuinely fall-apart tender over 8 hours on LOW, no special technique needed
- Carrots, potatoes, and celery make this a full one-pot meal with protein and vegetables together in one bowl
- The recipe works year-round but shines in fall and winter when you want something that warms you from the inside out
- Leftovers taste better the next day as the flavors continue to develop overnight in the refrigerator

Key Players in This Recipe
Beef stew meat (2 lbs, cut into 1-inch cubes) is the foundation of the whole dish. I always choose well-marbled pieces because that fat renders slowly and keeps the beef juicy and tender throughout the long cook. Leaner cuts tend to dry out and turn stringy over 8 hours, so it is worth selecting carefully at the butcher counter.
Beef broth (4 cups, low-sodium) forms the base of the cooking liquid. In my kitchen, I prefer low-sodium broth so I can control the salt level myself rather than ending up with an overly salty stew. A good quality broth makes a noticeable difference in the final flavor of the dish.
Dry red wine (1 cup) is what separates a good beef stew from a great one. It adds body, acidity, and a depth of flavor that broth alone cannot replicate. The alcohol cooks off entirely during the long slow cooking process, leaving only the rich, savory notes behind. I have used cabernet sauvignon and merlot both with good results.
Tomato paste (2 tablespoons) acts as a flavor intensifier and natural thickener. It adds a subtle sweetness and rounds out the acidity of the wine in a way that makes the broth taste like it has been simmering all week.
Garlic (4 cloves, minced) weaves through the entire stew as it cooks and contributes a warm, savory base note that ties everything together. Fresh minced garlic is what I use in this fall crockpot recipe. Garlic powder works in a pinch but is a distant second.
Dried thyme and rosemary are the herb backbone of the stew. I use 1 teaspoon of each, and when I have fresh rosemary on hand, I swap it in for a more aromatic, resinous quality that dried cannot quite match.
Chopped vegetables (4 cups total of carrots, potatoes, and celery) give the stew its heartiness and texture. Cut everything into similar-sized pieces so they cook evenly. Celery adds a subtle savory note that often goes unnoticed but makes the broth taste fuller.
Yellow onion, roughly chopped, softens and sweetens over the long cook and becomes part of the broth’s body rather than a standalone ingredient by the time the stew is done.
How to Make This Fall Crockpot Beef Stew
Step 1. If you have time, sear the beef stew meat in a hot skillet with a little oil before adding it to the crockpot. I have made this stew both ways and the version with seared beef has noticeably more depth and a richer broth. It takes about 10 minutes and is worth it when you have the time.
Step 2. Place the beef stew meat into the bottom of the 6-quart crockpot. Make sure the pieces are cut into roughly 1-inch cubes so they cook evenly and turn tender at the same rate.
Step 3. Add the chopped carrots, potatoes, celery, and onion on top of the beef. Give everything a gentle stir to combine so the vegetables and meat are evenly distributed throughout the pot.
Step 4. Pour in the 4 cups of beef broth and 1 cup of dry red wine. The liquid should come close to covering the ingredients but does not need to completely submerge them.
Step 5. Add the tomato paste, dried thyme, rosemary, and salt and pepper to taste. Stir everything together until the tomato paste dissolves and is evenly distributed through the liquid.
Step 6. Cover the crockpot and set it to LOW for 8 hours. If you are home, give the stew a gentle stir around the halfway mark to help the flavors meld, though this is optional.
Step 7. After 8 hours, check the beef by pressing a piece gently with a fork. It should fall apart with minimal pressure. If the beef or vegetables need more time, cover and cook for another 30 to 60 minutes.
Step 8. For a thicker stew, whisk 2 tablespoons cornstarch with 2 tablespoons cold water in a small bowl until smooth. Stir the slurry into the stew during the last 30 minutes of cooking and leave the lid slightly ajar to allow some steam to escape.
Step 9. Taste and adjust salt and pepper before serving. A final crack of black pepper over each bowl just before bringing it to the table is a small touch Betty never skips.
How to Store and Enjoy Later
I typically store this fall crockpot beef stew in a large airtight container in the refrigerator, and the honest truth is it tastes better on day two. The broth deepens overnight and the beef absorbs more of the surrounding flavors. Stored properly, it keeps well for up to 4 days in the refrigerator, making it one of the better meal-prep options in the fall and winter rotation.
For freezing, let the stew cool completely before portioning it into individual containers with a generous ladle of broth over each serving. The broth protects the beef and vegetables from freezer burn and keeps everything moist when reheated. Leave about an inch of space at the top of each container for expansion and freeze for up to 3 months. Betty’s method is to label each container with the date and recipe name so nothing gets lost in the back of the freezer.
For reheating, the stovetop over medium-low heat is the best approach. Add a splash of beef broth to loosen the stew and stir gently as it warms. The microwave works in a pinch: use medium power in 90-second intervals and stir between each one to heat evenly without drying out the beef.

What Goes Well with This Fall Crockpot Stew
- Crusty sourdough or a fresh baguette is ideal for soaking up the broth, and in Betty’s house a bowl of stew without bread on the side is genuinely considered incomplete
- Egg noodles or creamy mashed potatoes make the meal even more filling and turn a bowl of stew into a full plate dinner that satisfies everyone at the table
- A simple green salad dressed with lemon vinaigrette or Italian dressing balances the richness of the stew with something fresh and light
- Roasted green beans or sauteed mushrooms add an earthy note that complements the wine-braised beef without competing with it
- Buttered dinner rolls are a Midwest staple alongside any slow-cooked meal and are especially welcome on cold fall evenings
- Fresh flat-leaf parsley, chopped and scattered over each bowl just before serving, brightens the whole dish visually and adds a clean herbal note
FAQs
You can cook on HIGH for 4 hours if needed, but LOW for 8 hours produces noticeably more tender beef. The connective tissue in stew meat needs time to break down fully, and HIGH heat does not always allow for that.
A dry, medium-bodied red like cabernet sauvignon, merlot, or Syrah works well. Avoid sweet wines or bottles labeled as cooking wine, as they tend to make the broth taste off-balance.
Yes. Replace the 1 cup of red wine with an additional cup of beef broth and add 1 tablespoon of Worcestershire sauce and 1 tablespoon of balsamic vinegar to replicate some of that depth and acidity.

Hearty Fall Crockpot Beef Stew
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Optional but recommended: Sear the beef stew meat in a hot skillet with a little oil for 2 to 3 minutes per side until browned. This adds significant depth of flavor to the broth.
- Place the beef stew meat into the bottom of the 6-quart crockpot. Make sure pieces are cut into roughly 1-inch cubes for even cooking.
- Add the chopped carrots, potatoes, celery, and onion on top of the beef. Stir gently to combine.
- Pour in the 4 cups of beef broth and 1 cup of dry red wine.
- Add the tomato paste, dried thyme, rosemary, and salt and pepper to taste. Stir everything together until the tomato paste is fully dissolved and evenly distributed.
- Cover the crockpot and cook on LOW for 8 hours or on HIGH for 4 hours. If you are home, give the stew a gentle stir halfway through cooking.
- After cooking, check that the beef is tender and falls apart with gentle fork pressure. If not fully tender, cover and cook for an additional 30 to 60 minutes.
- For a thicker stew, whisk 2 tbsp cornstarch with 2 tbsp cold water until smooth. Stir into the stew during the last 30 minutes of cooking and leave the lid slightly ajar.
- Taste and adjust salt and pepper before serving. Serve hot with crusty bread, over egg noodles or mashed potatoes, and topped with fresh parsley if desired.