
I treat this Colorado Cache prime rib as an old-fashioned creamy roast, even though the ingredient list uses a 1-pound beef chuck roast rather than a rib roast. That is the honest way to cook it: a small roast, a thick milk gravy, and enough time in the oven for the beef to turn sliceable.
The sauce is the whole personality of the dish. Butter, flour, and buttermilk or whole milk cook into a pale, peppery blanket that keeps the beef from drying out. I like it with potatoes because the extra sauce needs somewhere to go.
I keep the method practical: prep the pieces, follow the heat and timing, and do not rush the cooling or resting step when the recipe asks for it. That small bit of patience is usually the difference between a tender, sliceable roast with a creamy pan sauce and a batch that feels hurried.
Why I keep coming back to this
- I can make the sauce from pantry staples while the oven heats.
- The creamy gravy protects a leaner chuck roast from drying out.
- It slices cleanly after a short rest, which makes serving easier.
- The recipe is mild enough for potatoes, vegetables, or rice on the side.
- Leftover slices reheat better when I save extra sauce with them.
- It feels like diner comfort food without needing a long ingredient list.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- 1 pound beef chuck roast.I keep the meat fairly plain so the sauce can season it as it bakes.
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour.It gives structure, or in savory recipes, thickens the sauce without making it pasty.
- salt and pepper.I do not skip it because sweet and savory recipes both taste dull without a little salt. The note I keep with it is: to taste.
- 1 cup unsalted butter or margarine.The note I keep with it is: cold and cubed.
- 6 cups buttermilk or whole milk.
How I make it
Step 1 — Heat the oven and season the beef
I preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C), pat the 1-pound chuck roast dry, and season it on all sides with salt and pepper. I set it in a roasting pan with enough room for the sauce to bubble around it.
Step 2 — Make the creamy sauce
In a medium saucepan, I melt the cubed butter or margarine over low heat. I stir in the flour until the mixture looks smooth, then slowly add the buttermilk or whole milk while stirring constantly. Once it thickens, I season again with salt and pepper.
Step 3 — Bake until the roast is sliceable
I pour the sauce over the beef, cover loosely if the top is browning too fast, and bake. The source method gives 1-2 hours, while the listed cook time is 160 minutes; with chuck, I plan for the longer window and check tenderness before I pull it.
Step 4 — Rest and slice thinly
When the beef is done, I let it cool and settle before slicing it thinly. Cutting too soon pushes the sauce and juices everywhere, so I give it a few quiet minutes and spoon the extra sauce back over each serving.
Tips from my kitchen
- Keep the heat low for the sauce.I have rushed the roux before, and it goes lumpy fast.
- Whisk the milk in gradually.A slow pour gives me a smoother gravy.
- Check the roast early.A small chuck roast can move from sliceable to dry if the pan runs hot.
- Save every spoonful of sauce.It is what makes leftovers worth eating.
Variations I have actually tried
- Herb roast:I add thyme or rosemary to the sauce before it goes over the beef.
- Mushroom pan:I scatter sliced mushrooms around the roast so they cook in the gravy.
- Sharper sauce:I use buttermilk for tang instead of whole milk.
- Weeknight plate:I serve the sliced beef over toast, almost like an open-faced sandwich.
- Slow cooker style:I brown the meat first, add the sauce, and cook low until tender.
Storing and reheating
I cool the sliced beef and sauce together, then refrigerate them in a covered container for up to 4 days. To reheat, I warm the sauce gently first, add the beef slices, and stop as soon as everything is hot so the meat does not tighten.
What I serve with it
Mashed potatoes are my first choice because they catch the sauce. I also like buttered noodles, roasted carrots, green beans, or a simple salad with vinegar in the dressing to cut through the richness.
A few small details I do not skip
I read through the whole recipe once before I start, especially when I am making colorado cache prime rib on a busy day. It keeps me from discovering a cooling step, a second pan, or a chilling time after the counter is already covered with bowls.
I also measure the seasonings and small add-ins first. That sounds fussy, but it lets me pay attention to texture while I cook. If a dough looks dry, a sauce thickens too fast, or a frosting needs another spoonful of liquid, I can fix it while the mixer or pan is still in front of me.
The other detail I watch is temperature. Ovens, stovetops, mixers, and refrigerators all have personalities, so I use the listed times as a guide and then check the real signs in front of me. For colorado cache prime rib, that means I look for the texture described in the steps before I move on.
I would rather pause for 5 minutes than push ahead and fight the recipe later. A short rest can firm a bar, settle a roast, cool a cupcake, or thicken a sauce. That kind of quiet step rarely looks exciting, but it makes the finished food easier to serve.
Frequently asked questions
Is this really prime rib?
I cook it according to the provided ingredient list, which calls for a 1-pound beef chuck roast. I think of it as a prime-rib-style creamy roast rather than a standing rib roast.
Can I use whole milk instead of buttermilk?
Yes. I use whole milk when I want a milder sauce and buttermilk when I want a little tang. Both keep the gravy creamy.
Why is my sauce lumpy?
The milk probably went in too quickly or the heat was too high. I whisk in a splash of milk at a time until the flour mixture loosens, then add the rest slowly.
Can I make it in a slow cooker?
I can, but I still make the sauce first. I cook it on low until the chuck is tender, then slice and spoon the sauce over the top.
How do I keep leftovers moist?
I store the beef with the sauce, not separately. The sauce protects the slices when I reheat them gently.
If you make this, tell me whether you used buttermilk or whole milk because the sauce changes quite a bit. I read every note because those little adjustments are how I decide what to test next.

Colorado Cache Prime Rib
Description
A creamy Colorado Cache prime rib-style roast made with beef chuck, butter, flour, and buttermilk or whole milk. I bake it gently until sliceable and serve it with the pan sauce spooned over the top.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C). Pat the beef chuck roast dry, season with salt and pepper, and place it in a roasting pan.
- Melt the butter or margarine over low heat in a medium saucepan. Stir in the flour, then gradually add the buttermilk or whole milk, stirring constantly until thick and creamy. Season with salt and pepper.
- Pour the creamy sauce over the roast. Bake at 350°F (177°C) for 1-2 hours, or up to the listed 160 minutes if needed for tenderness.
- Remove the roasting pan from the oven. Let the roast cool briefly, then slice it thinly and serve with the creamy sauce.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 15
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 15kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Potassium 4mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 3g1%
- Calcium 1 mg
- Iron 0.2 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Sauce texture. If it thickens before the milk is fully added, I lower the heat and whisk harder before adding more liquid.
Roast size. A 1-pound roast cooks faster than a large holiday roast, so I start checking early.
Serving. Thin slices taste better here because every bite gets some sauce.
Frequently Asked Questions
I cook it according to the provided ingredient list, which calls for a 1-pound beef chuck roast. I think of it as a prime-rib-style creamy roast rather than a standing rib roast.
Yes. I use whole milk when I want a milder sauce and buttermilk when I want a little tang. Both keep the gravy creamy.
The milk probably went in too quickly or the heat was too high. I whisk in a splash of milk at a time until the flour mixture loosens, then add the rest slowly.
I can, but I still make the sauce first. I cook it on low until the chuck is tender, then slice and spoon the sauce over the top.
I store the beef with the sauce, not separately. The sauce protects the slices when I reheat them gently.