Mississippi Pot Roast is rich, buttery, and deeply savoury. The right side dish either soaks up that incredible cooking jus or provides a fresh contrast to cut through the richness. Get the pairing wrong and the meal feels heavy. Get it right and every bite makes sense.
These are the 15 best sides to serve with Mississippi Pot Roast, ranked by how well they work with the dish. Every option on this list has been tested alongside the actual recipe, not just guessed at.
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Starchy Sides (The Best Pairings)
Mississippi Pot Roast produces a rich, savoury cooking jus that needs something to soak into. Starchy sides do this better than anything else, which is why they are consistently the top choice for this dish.
1. Creamy Mashed Potatoes
This is the classic pairing and it earns that status. Creamy mashed potatoes absorb the cooking jus like a sponge, and you can spoon the liquid directly over the top as a ready-made gravy. No extra sauce needed. Use butter and cream generously in the mash so the richness of the potatoes matches the richness of the beef.

Best for: the slow cooker and Instant Pot versions where you have plenty of cooking jus.
2. Egg Noodles
Buttered egg noodles tossed with the shredded beef and a ladle of cooking jus is one of the fastest, most satisfying ways to serve this dish. It comes together in 10 minutes and works especially well for weeknight serving when you want the whole meal on the table quickly. Use wide egg noodles for the best texture contrast with the shredded beef.

Best for: weeknight meals, feeding kids, using up leftovers.
3. White Rice
Plain steamed white rice is an underrated pairing with Mississippi Pot Roast. It absorbs the cooking jus without competing with the flavour, and it makes the dish feel lighter than mashed potatoes. Jasmine rice has the best texture here. Brown rice also works if you prefer it, though the nuttier flavour is a slightly less natural match.
Best for: lighter serving option, large groups, meal prep.
4. Creamy Polenta
Soft, buttery polenta works on the same principle as mashed potatoes but with a slightly different flavour. The mild corn base pairs well with the tangy, savoury beef, and the texture contrast is excellent. Make it loose and creamy rather than set firm. Add parmesan and butter generously.
Best for: dinner parties, a slightly more elevated presentation.
5. Mashed Cauliflower
For a lower-carb option that still absorbs the cooking jus well, mashed cauliflower is the best substitute for mashed potatoes. It needs plenty of butter, cream cheese, and seasoning to stand up to the richness of the beef, but done well it is a genuinely good pairing. This is also the natural choice for the keto version of the dish.
Best for: low-carb and keto serving, pairing with the keto Mississippi Pot Roast.
6. Potatoes and Carrots Cooked in the Pot
The most convenient option of all: cook the vegetables directly in the slow cooker with the roast. They absorb the seasoned cooking liquid as they cook and become intensely flavoured on their own. The only requirement is adding them at the right time so they do not turn to mush. Full guide with timing and quantities: Mississippi Pot Roast with Potatoes and Carrots.
Best for: one-pot cooking, minimal cleanup, weeknight simplicity.
Bread and Rolls
7. Crusty French Bread or Sourdough
A thick slice of crusty bread alongside a bowl of Mississippi Pot Roast is one of the great simple pleasures. The bread is for mopping. Tear it into pieces and drag it through the cooking jus at the bottom of the bowl. Sourdough has enough structure and flavour to stand up to the richness of the beef without getting soggy immediately.
Best for: casual serving, adding alongside any of the starchy sides above.
8. Dinner Rolls
Soft dinner rolls work slightly differently from crusty bread. Rather than mopping, they are best served warm alongside the plate so guests can make small open-faced sandwiches with the shredded beef. Brush them with garlic butter before serving for an easy upgrade.
Best for: family dinners, serving groups, kids at the table.
9. Hoagie Rolls for Sandwiches
If you plan to serve the Mississippi Pot Roast as a sandwich rather than over a starch, a sturdy hoagie or sub roll is the right choice. It needs to be firm enough to hold the beef and juices without falling apart immediately. Toast the roll first to create a barrier against sogginess. More on the sandwich version below in the sandwich section.

Best for: sandwich serving, using leftovers, casual lunches.
Vegetable Sides
10. Roasted Green Beans
Simple roasted green beans with olive oil, salt, and garlic are one of the best vegetable sides for Mississippi Pot Roast. They are quick to make (20 minutes at 425°F), they provide a fresh green contrast to the heavy, brown richness of the beef, and the slight char from roasting holds up well against the strong flavours of the dish. Do not steam them. Roasting is the right method here.

Best for: adding a vegetable without competing with the main dish.
11. Roasted Broccoli
Roasted broccoli follows the same logic as green beans. High heat, olive oil, salt, and 20 minutes in the oven. The crispy edges and slight bitterness of the broccoli contrast well with the buttery, tangy beef. Add lemon zest after roasting for brightness.
Best for: easy weeknight side, nutritional balance.
12. Creamed Corn
This one surprises people but it works. The sweetness of creamed corn plays off the tangy, savoury jus in an unexpected way that works especially well with the pepperoncini flavour. Keep it simple, either from a can or a quick stovetop version with butter, cream, and frozen corn.
Best for: Southern-style serving, comfort food spreads.
Salads and Fresh Sides
13. Simple Green Salad
A lightly dressed green salad (mixed greens, cucumber, a simple vinaigrette) is the best palate cleanser alongside Mississippi Pot Roast. The acidity in the dressing mirrors the tanginess of the pepperoncini in the roast and keeps the overall meal from feeling too heavy. Keep the dressing light and acidic rather than creamy.
Best for: cutting through richness, balanced meals, dinner parties.
14. Coleslaw
Creamy coleslaw alongside Mississippi Pot Roast works especially well when you are serving it as a sandwich or sliders. The cool, crunchy slaw contrasts with the hot, tender beef and the creaminess echoes the ranch flavour already in the dish. Use a vinegar-forward coleslaw if you want something lighter.
Best for: sandwich and slider serving, summer meals, BBQ-style spread.
15. Pickled Red Onions
A small dish of quick-pickled red onions on the table takes less than 5 minutes to prepare (thinly sliced red onion, apple cider vinegar, salt, a pinch of sugar, 30 minutes to sit) and lifts the whole dish. The acidity cuts through the fat in the sauce and the sharpness contrasts with the mellow, long-cooked beef. This is the finishing touch that elevates a simple dinner into something that feels considered.
Best for: adding brightness, sandwich topping, any serving occasion.
Serving Mississippi Pot Roast as a Sandwich
The shredded beef makes an outstanding sandwich, and this is also the best way to use up leftovers. Here is how to build it properly:
- The bread: a sturdy hoagie, ciabatta, or brioche bun. Toast it. An untoasted roll will be soggy within 2 minutes of adding the beef.
- The beef: pile it high. Mississippi Pot Roast sandwiches are not modest. At least 4 to 5 oz of shredded beef per sandwich.
- The cheese: provolone melts beautifully. Swiss and pepper jack also work. Add it to the open-faced roll under the broiler for 2 minutes before piling on the beef.
- The dipping sauce: serve the cooking jus on the side in a small bowl for dipping French dip style. This is one of the best uses for the cooking liquid.
- The toppings: pickled red onions, a smear of horseradish cream, or coleslaw all work well. Keep it simple so the beef is still the star.
For the full leftover ideas guide including sliders and tacos: Mississippi Pot Roast Sandwiches, Sliders and Tacos.
What to Avoid Serving with Mississippi Pot Roast
A few sides that sound logical but do not actually work well:
- Pasta with a heavy sauce: the cooking jus is already a sauce. Adding a cream or tomato-based pasta sauce alongside creates a clash of flavours and the meal becomes overwhelming.
- Strongly flavoured grains like farro or wild rice: their nutty, earthy flavours compete with the ranch and au jus rather than complementing them. Plain white rice or egg noodles let the beef be the star.
- Steamed broccoli or steamed green beans: steaming leaves them limp and bland next to such a strongly flavoured main. Always roast your vegetables for this pairing.
- Caesar salad: the anchovy and parmesan in Caesar dressing clash with the ranch already in the beef. A simple vinaigrette salad is a much better fit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Creamy mashed potatoes are the most popular choice and for good reason. They absorb the cooking jus perfectly and the butter in both the mash and the roast makes the pairing feel cohesive. Egg noodles are the best alternative if you want something quicker.
Yes, white rice works very well. It is a lighter option than mashed potatoes and absorbs the cooking jus beautifully. Jasmine rice is the best variety for this pairing.
Roasted green beans and roasted broccoli are the top choices. The high-heat roasting gives them enough flavour and texture to hold their own alongside the rich, strongly seasoned beef. Steamed vegetables tend to feel bland and limp next to this dish.
Yes, potatoes and carrots can be cooked right in the pot with the roast. The key is adding them at the right time, not at the beginning. Full guide: Mississippi Pot Roast with Potatoes and Carrots.
Crusty sourdough or French bread is best for mopping up the cooking jus. For sandwiches, use a toasted hoagie or ciabatta roll that is sturdy enough to hold the beef without getting soggy.
Set up a build-your-own station with the shredded beef in the slow cooker on WARM, a pot of mashed potatoes, and a few toppings like coleslaw and pickled red onions. Guests serve themselves and build their own plate or sandwich. This works well for 10 to 20 people with minimal effort. Use the slow cooker method so the beef stays warm throughout the meal.
Spoon it straight over mashed potatoes or rice as a gravy. If you want it thicker, pour it into a small saucepan and reduce over medium heat for 5 to 8 minutes, stirring occasionally. It will thicken into a glossy, concentrated sauce. For French dip sandwiches, serve it thin and warm in a small bowl on the side for dipping.



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