Let Your Slow Cooker Make Dinner! A Savory Classic Sandwich Made Easy.
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Argo cornstarch, baking powder, baking soda, barilla pasta, Bertolli extra-virgin olive oil, black pepper, Bob's Red Mill, brown sugar, Clabber Girl, College Inn, Cool Whip, domino sugar, eat, Eggland's Best eggs, food, Gold Medal flour, granulated sugar, Green Giant, Hershey, Jell-O, Jif peanut butter, Johnsonville, kosher salt, Kraft, land o lakes butter, McCormick spices, Morton salt, Pam Cooking Spray, Pepperidge Farm, Philadelphia cream cheese, Powdered sugar, recipe, Sargento, Thorn Apple Valley, Toll House, TruMoo milk, tyson, vanilla, vanilla extract, Vlasic, Wesson vegetable oil, whipped topping
I have ordered French dip sandwiches pretty much anywhere I’ve ever eaten that serves them, but I had never really considered trying to make them at home before. They always seemed to me like something that would have be made in huge batches in order to have all the delicious au jus you would want to dip them in, and it just seemed easier to keep letting professionals make them for me. I probably would have continued to hold that view point indefinitely until a friend sent me this awesome little recipe and I saw that this was absolutely something I could and would make at home.
And wow – I am SO glad I tried it! You’re going to make this and as soon as it’s done and you’re eating a moist, tender, super savory amazing French dip sandwich on a buttered french roll at your own kitchen table, you’re going to laugh at how easy it actually was to get there. Now, I will point out, just so you can plan appropriately, that this is very much a necessarily slow cooked recipe. You want all that slow, slow cooking and even though the incredible smell of this in crock pot is going to drive you and the rest of your family crazy with impatient hunger, I promise, it will be worth the wait.
Recipe is courtesy of lonwolf32 on AllRecipes.com
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Quick Tip: This recipe calls for a bottle of beer and it’s worth it to spring for something good and a little heavy, like a dark stout or ale. It just makes better au jus. My favorite has been Guinness.