One-Pot Recipes
583 recipes

Beef and Barley Soup with Root Vegetables

Green Chili Mac and Cheese with Pepper Jack

Slow Cooker Minestrone Soup with Beans

One-Pot Chicken and Rice with Smoked Paprika Seasoning

Creamy Tomato White Bean Stew with Sun-Dried Tomatoes

One-Pot White Bean Mushroom Stew

Vegan Mushroom Wild Rice Soup with Coconut Milk

Low Carb Daikon Hash Browns with Bell Peppers

Green Bean Casserole with Buttered Cracker Topping

Dutch Oven Whole Roasted Chicken with Root Vegetables

Hearty Red Meat Winter Stew with Root Vegetables and Herbs

Bombay Beef and Cauliflower Stir-Fry

Lebanese Mujaddara: Spiced Lentils and Rice with Kale

Double Mushroom and Kale Farro with Pecorino Romano

Hearty Vegetarian Black Bean and Butternut Squash Chili

Creamy Chicken and Mushroom Skillet with Herbs

Asian Chicken Noodle Soup with Bok Choy and Mushrooms

French Onion Chicken with Caramelized Onions and Cheese

Sheet Pan Indian Spiced Chicken and Broccoli with Cauliflower

Quick Chicken and Broccoli Sauté with Bacon and Dijon

Veggie-Packed Shakshuka with Eggplant and Poblano Peppers

Baked Sweet and Sour Tofu with Broccoli and Pineapple

Slow Cooker Curried Chickpeas with Couscous

Turmeric Detox Soup with Spinach and Chickpeas
One-pot cooking means everything goes into a single vessel. Your pasta cooks right in the sauce. Your rice absorbs the chicken stock while the meat browns on top. The vegetables steam themselves tender in the liquid below. This method works best when you want dinner in 45 to 90 minutes without juggling multiple pans. Most one-pot recipes follow a pattern: brown your protein first at 350°F to 400°F, then add aromatics like onion and garlic for 2 to 3 minutes, pour in liquids, add starches last. The trick is timing. Add ingredients based on their cook times. Chicken thighs need 35 minutes. Carrots take 20 minutes. Fresh spinach wilts in 2 minutes. Layer them accordingly. One-pot differs from braising because you use less liquid, typically a 2:1 ratio of liquid to grain rather than submerging everything. It differs from slow cooking because you work at medium to medium-high heat on the stovetop or 375°F in the oven. The pasta releases starch directly into the sauce, making it thicker. The rice soaks up every drop of flavor from the meat drippings. Your dishwasher thanks you later. Pick a heavy-bottomed pot that holds at least 5 quarts. Cast iron Dutch ovens distribute heat evenly and go from stovetop to oven. Stainless steel works if it has a thick base. Avoid thin aluminum pots that create hot spots. The lid matters too. A tight seal traps steam and speeds cooking by 15 to 20 percent.
Equipment
FAQ
How much liquid do I need for one-pot pasta?
Use 4 cups of liquid for every pound of pasta, which gives you a 1:4 ratio by weight. This amount accounts for absorption and evaporation during the 12 to 15 minute cooking time. Add an extra 0.5 cup if you want saucier results. Stock adds more flavor than water, but the pasta starch will thicken whatever liquid you use into a light sauce.
Can I convert regular recipes to one-pot?
Yes, but reduce liquids by 30% since there's less evaporation with the lid on. If a soup calls for 6 cups of broth, start with 4 cups. Add ingredients based on cooking times, starting with items that need 30+ minutes and ending with 5-minute vegetables. Brown meat first at 375°F before adding liquids.
Why does my rice burn on the bottom?
Three fixes: First, use medium-low heat once you add rice, around 225°F to 250°F on an electric burner. Second, resist stirring after the first 5 minutes since agitation releases starch that sticks. Third, place a heat diffuser or cast iron griddle under thin-bottomed pots to spread the heat more evenly.
What's the difference between one-pot and dump-and-go slow cooker recipes?
One-pot recipes use active heat at 300°F to 400°F and finish in 30 to 90 minutes. You brown ingredients first and add them in stages. Slow cooker dump recipes cook at 190°F to 210°F for 4 to 8 hours with everything added at once. One-pot gives you caramelized edges and reduced sauces. Slow cookers produce softer textures and more liquid.