Why You’ll Love This Low Sodium Beef Stew
Beef stew is winter soul food, but restaurant and canned versions routinely carry 900–1,200mg of sodium per serving. This low sodium beef stew builds its depth on a no-salt-added broth base, layering the natural sweetness of tomato, carrot, and onion with smoky paprika — the beef simmers until it falls apart at the touch of a fork, all at about 170mg of sodium per bowl.
- Fall-apart tender. Chuck simmered low for two hours turns its collagen to gelatin, giving that soft, silky texture — never dry or stringy.
- About one-sixth the sodium of a restaurant bowl. No salt at all; the savory flavor comes from vegetables and spices, not the shaker.
- One pot, hands-off. Everything goes in and a low simmer (or a slow cooker) does the work with almost no babysitting.
- Better as leftovers. Stew deepens overnight — the next-day flavor is richer, making it ideal for meal prep.
Ingredients
- 600g beef chuck (cut into 4cm cubes)
- 4 cups no-salt-added beef broth
- 3 carrots (cut into chunks)
- 3 potatoes (peeled and cubed)
- 1 onion (diced)
- 2 cloves garlic (minced)
- 1 can (400g) no-salt-added diced tomatoes
- 2 tablespoons tomato paste (unsalted)
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 0 salt — the whole point of the recipe
- Optional: 1/4 teaspoon salt substitute (potassium chloride) — skip if you have kidney disease or a potassium-restricted diet.
Why no-salt-added broth? Store-bought beef broth often runs 600–900mg of sodium per cup — one can blows the whole day’s budget. Choose a “no salt added” version (under 50mg per cup) and hand the seasoning to tomato, onion, and paprika — that’s the backbone of a low-sodium stew. If you want a “salty signal,” finish with 1/4 teaspoon of a potassium-chloride salt substitute for almost no added sodium; skip it on a renal diet.
Instructions
Step 1: Sear the Beef
Heat the olive oil in a Dutch oven or heavy pot over medium-high. Sear the beef cubes in batches until browned on all sides (don’t crowd the pot or they’ll steam). That browned crust — the Maillard reaction — is the flavor foundation of the whole stew. Remove and set aside.

Step 2: Build the Aromatic Base
In the same pot, cook the diced onion and garlic until soft and fragrant (about 3 minutes), then add the tomato paste and paprika and stir 1 minute until the color turns deep red and glossy.

Step 3: Return the Beef and Add Broth
Return the beef to the pot and add the no-salt broth, no-salt diced tomatoes, thyme, and black pepper. Bring to a boil, then drop to the lowest simmer, cover, and cook 1.5 hours.

Step 4: Add the Root Vegetables
Add the carrots and potatoes and simmer another 30–40 minutes until the potatoes are tender and the beef falls apart at the touch of a fork. Taste the broth — the sweet, savory depth comes from the vegetables, no salt needed.

Step 5: Reduce and Serve
Uncover and boil hard for 5 minutes to thicken the broth slightly (or stir in a little cornstarch slurry). Ladle into bowls and garnish with fresh parsley.

Pro Tips for the Best Results
Chuck beats tenderloin. Stew wants a cut with some connective tissue and fat (chuck or brisket), which turns to gelatin over a long simmer for that silky texture; lean tenderloin dries out. It’s also budget-friendly and the better choice here.
Don’t skip the sear. Boiled-from-raw beef comes out gray and flat; searing to a brown crust first puts the aroma a full level higher. It’s worth the extra 8 minutes.
“Cook the paste red.” Fry the tomato paste until it darkens to deep red and the oil separates — the raw, sour edge turns to concentrated sweetness. This is the key to killing the raw-tomato taste, so don’t just dump in water right after.
Add potatoes late so they don’t fall apart. Potatoes cooked over an hour disintegrate into mush; add them for the final 30–40 minutes so they’re tender but hold their shape.
Slow cooker version: Everything except the potatoes goes in on low for 6–8 hours or high for 4, adding the potatoes for the last hour. Toss it in before work and dinner’s ready when you get home.
Storage and Reheating
Cool and store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days, or freeze in portions for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge and reheat gently, adding a splash of no-salt broth if it’s thickened too much. Stew’s texture barely changes after freezing, so this low sodium beef stew is excellent make-ahead meal prep.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use chicken instead?
Yes — make it a low-sodium chicken stew: use chunked chicken thighs with the same method and simmer just 45 minutes (chicken cooks faster than beef). Sodium is even lower (thigh natural sodium about 80mg per 100g).
What if I don’t have a slow cooker?
A regular pot on the lowest simmer with the lid on works the same way — just watch the liquid so it doesn’t cook dry, topping up with a little no-salt broth if needed.
Can I freeze it?
Yes. Cool, portion, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge and reheat. Stew’s texture holds up beautifully to freezing, making it perfect meal prep.
Will kids eat it?
Most kids love this soft, sweet-savory stew. If yours objects to onion chunks, blitz the onion in a food processor before cooking so it disappears into the broth.
Does it fit a heart-healthy or DASH diet?
Yes. At about 170mg sodium per serving it sits well within a DASH plan’s 1,500–2,300mg daily target, and the lean protein plus vegetables make it a balanced heart-healthy meal.
Conclusion
This low sodium beef stew shows that comfort and heart health belong in the same pot. With no-salt broth, a good sear, and zero added salt, you get a fork-tender, deeply savory bowl at about 170mg of sodium. Keep the broth unsalted, cook the paste red, and let time do the tenderizing.
More Low Sodium Recipes to Try
Build a low-sodium table with these:
- Low Sodium Vegetable Soup — a lighter bowl for another day
- Low Sodium One Pot Meal — another all-in-one dinner
- Low Sodium Spaghetti Sauce — a versatile tomato base
- Low Sodium Chili — a spicier cousin of this stew
- Low Sodium Complete Collection — every heart-healthy recipe in one place
Nutrition Information (Per Serving, 1 of 6)
| Item | Amount | % Daily Value* |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 320 kcal | 16% |
| Protein | 28 g | 56% |
| Fat | 12 g | 15% |
| Carbohydrates | 24 g | 9% |
| Fiber | 4 g | 14% |
| Sodium | 170 mg | 8% |
*Daily values are based on a 2,000 kcal diet. Sodium is an estimate for no-added-salt preparation (USDA FoodData Central: beef chuck about 70mg/100g, no-salt broth under 50mg/cup, plus the vegetables’ natural sodium) — roughly one-fifth to one-sixth of a restaurant beef stew.