Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with this quick and easy Instant Pot Irish Stew! It’s hearty and filling for the perfect comfort food dinner.
Made with Guinness beer, plenty of carrots and potatoes and either beef or lamb stew meat, it’s a wonderful meal to make on a cold day.
I’ll be honest: I actually I don’t like beer. UNLESS it’s Guinness in a hearty Irish Stew, that is. This is a pretty straight-forward recipe for your instant pot, not much different from my Instant Pot Beef Stew, to be honest.
The biggest difference between Irish Stew and regular beef stew is that I use Guinness instead of red wine for the gravy. Also, I’ll often make my Irish Stew as a lamb stew, but you can absolutely use beef (I also use beef in my Slow Cooker Irish Beef Stew and in my Dutch Oven braised Guinness Beef Stew!).
I’m sure my way of making this Instant Pot Irish Stew is not 100% purist and traditional, but it’s perfectly easy and delicious.
Ingredients you’ll need
Here is a visual overview of the ingredients in the recipe. Scroll down to the printable recipe card at the bottom of this post for quantities!
Ingredient notes
- Meat: The instant pot is great at tenderizing meat, so you can absolutely go for cheap stew meat here. If you’d rather dice up some beef chuck yourself, that’s perfectly delicious, too. Beef or lamb stew meat work great here, although the lamb does tend to fall apart a little easier.
- Celery: Feel free to use finely sliced leeks in place of the celery, if you prefer! My parents always make this with leeks and love it, so it’s a great option if you’d like to switch things up.
- Potatoes: I prefer using waxy potatoes in this stew to help them keep their shape (I used Yukon gold). If you use starchy potatoes such as Russet, they will most likely turn into mush.
- Guinness beer: Feel free to use a different dark beer you enjoy cooking with.
How to make Irish Stew in the Instant Pot
Making stew in the instant pot makes the meat fork-tender! It’s also much quicker than making it in the crock or on the stove, and SO easy, too.
1 – Brown the meat:
Set the Instant Pot to sauté. Heat the oil, then brown the meat (season as it cooks).
2 – Start the gravy:
Stir the onions and garlic into the meat and cook for 1 minute. Then add the tomato paste and cook for 1 more minute.
Pour the Guinness over the meat, scratching the browned bits off the bottom of the pot (make sure you catch them all or you’ll get the burn warning). Simmer for 5-10 minutes to cook off the alcohol.
3 – Cook the stew:
Switch off the instant pot. Add the beef stock to the stew. Stir in the vegetables. Close the instant pot and set the valve to “sealing”. Press the “stew” button.
4 – Finish:
Once the pot is indicating it’s done with cooking, do a natural pressure release for 15-20 minutes (just unplug your pot and leave it alone).
Then manually release any remaining pressure according to manufacturer’s instructions and open the lid.
5 – Thicken
Set the instant pot to sauté and stir in the cornstarch slurry. Simmer until thickened. Alternatively, you can blend 1 cup of the stew and stir it back in.
Recipe tips
How do you make stew meat tender?
Pressure cooking the stew helps a lot with tenderizing the meat without having to cook it for seventy hours.
The one thing you have to take care off when using a pressure cooker is to allow the stew a natural pressure release for 10 minutes after cooking. I know it’s annoying and we all want to rush this step – but it’s crucial to allow the meat fibers to relax.
That way, your meat will be tender and delicious.
What cut is best for stew?
For a beef stew, I love diced chuck roast. It gets tender and flavorful when cooked right. But cheap packets of diced stew meat are perfectly fine here, too.
For a lamb stew, I will usually go for diced shoulder.
How can I thicken my stew after cooking?
While the stew won’t thicken in the pressure cooker (the liquid cannot cook away because the lid is always closed), you can thicken the stew to your taste after cooking using one of the following methods:
- blend 1 cup of the stew and stir it back in
- make a slurry of 1-2 teaspoons cornstarch and 1 tablespoon cold water, set the instant pot to sauté and stir the slurry into the stew. Simmer until thickened.
The second method is my preferred one (because I don’t want to mess around with the blender etc while my family is hungry), but you can use either.
What to serve with Guinness Irish Stew
We love this over mashed potatoes (or Colcannon, for extra decadence!). Or with a simple, traditional soda bread on the side.
And if you don’t like soda bread, a No Knead Bread is tasty, too!
Watch the recipe video
PS If you try this recipe, please leave a review in the comment section and add a star rating in the recipe card – I appreciate your feedback! Follow along on Pinterest, Facebook or Instagram.
Printable recipe
Instant Pot Irish Stew
Recipe details
Ingredients
For the meat
- 2 tablespoons oil
- 1 ½ pounds diced beef stewing meat OR lamb stewing meat
- salt & black pepper to taste
For the gravy
- 1 medium yellow onion diced (about 1 cup)
- 3 medium sticks celery sliced
- 2 cloves garlic minced
- 1 tablespoon tomato paste
- 1 (11 or 12-oz) bottle Guinness beer
- 1 cup beef stock
For the vegetables
- 1 pound waxy potatoes peeled and cut into chunks
- 3 medium carrots peeled and cut into chunks
To thicken
- 1-2 tablespoons cornstarch mixed with 1 tablespoon cold water
Instructions
- Brown meat:Set Instant Pot to sauté. Heat oil, then brown meat in 2-3 batches (season as it cooks). Once browned, remove from pot and set aside on a plate.
- Start gravy:Add onions, celery and garlic to pot and cook until softened, 4-5 minutes. Add tomato paste and cook for 1 more minute. Pour Guinness over meat, scratching any browned bits off the bottom of the pot.
- Cook stew:Simmer (on sauté setting) until beer has reduced by half, about 5 minutes. Then switch off instant pot and stir in beef broth, potatoes, carrots and browned meat. Close lid and set valve to "sealing". Press "stew" button.
- Pressure release:Once pot is indicating it's done with cooking, do a natural pressure release for 15-20 minutes (just unplug your pot and leave it alone). Then manually release any remaining pressure and open the lid.
- Thicken stew:Set instant pot to sauté and stir in cornstarch slurry. Simmer until thickened. Alternatively, blend 1 cup of stew and stir it back in.
Notes
Ingredient notes
- Meat: The instant pot is great at tenderizing meat, so you can absolutely go for cheap stew meat here. If you’d rather dice up some beef chuck yourself, that’s perfectly delicious, too. Beef or lamb stew meat work great here, although the lamb does tend to fall apart a little easier.
- Celery: Feel free to use finely sliced leeks in place of the celery, if you prefer! My parents always make this with leeks and love it, so it’s a great option if you’d like to switch things up.
- Potatoes: I prefer using waxy potatoes in this stew to help them keep their shape (I used Yukon gold). If you use starchy potatoes such as Russet, they will most likely turn into mush.
- Guinness beer: Feel free to use a different dark beer you enjoy cooking with.
Recipe tips
- Do not skip the natural pressure release, as it helps to tenderize the meat.
-
While the stew won’t thicken in the pressure cooker (the liquid cannot cook away because the lid is always closed), you can thicken the stew to your taste after cooking using one of the following methods:
- blend 1 cup of the stew and stir it back in
- make a slurry of 1-2 teaspoons cornstarch and 1 tablespoon cold water, set the instant pot to sauté and stir the slurry into the stew. Simmer until thickened.
- Meat cuts: For a beef stew, I love diced chuck roast. It gets tender and flavorful when cooked right. But cheap packets of diced stew meat are perfectly fine here, too. For a lamb stew, I will usually go for diced shoulder.
Nutrition
More recipe information
Recipe first published on 02/28/2019. Updated and republished on 03/16/2021 with new photos, video, better text and minor improvements to the recipe.
More St. Patrick’s Day recipes
More Instant Pot recipes
P.S: For more stew recipes, check out our collection of homemade beef stew recipes!
Josie says
Thanks for the quick fix to a late start on dinner. Made a wonderful boneless leg of lamb stew!
Connie Murphy says
My husband and I enjoyed this recipe. The only thing I noticed was that the potatoes and carrots were overcooked. I’ve not used the Stew function before (it defaulted to a 35-minute cook time), but I might try using the Pressure function and setting the time to 25 or 30 minutes to see if the potatoes come out firmer.
Nora says
Vegetables tend to come out cooked quite well in a stew, the meat just needs a lot more time. If your preference are firmer vegetables, I would consider pressure cooking just the meat for 20 minutes, then release the pressure, add the vegetables, then pressure cook for another 15 minutes or until the meat and the vegetables are to your preferred doneness. Hope this helps, Connie!
Barbara Jae says
What size Instant Pot did you use for these recipes? I have the 3-quart mini and I know you can’t just cut the recipes in half.
Nora says
I use a 6 quart instant pot, Barbara. Unfortunately, I don’t own a mini and have never looked into recipe conversion. Sorry I’m not of more help!
Sharisa says
Do I just have to double the ingredients if I have 3lbs of meat?
Nora says
Sharisa, doubling the ingredients would max out the instant pot capacity, so that would unfortunately not work.
Shelby says
This was SO GOOD. The Guinness gives it such a deep flavor! The recipe doesn’t specify how much time to put on the instant pot but it does say cook time 45 mins. I subtracted the 10 mins to cook the veggies and reduce the beer for a total of 35 mins in the IP. Turned out great. It’s freezing here in Colorado (we just had a blizzard!) so this was perfect. I’ll definitely be making this again and again!
Debba says
The STEW function doesn’t require a time to be set? I’m guessing it should be 45 minutes, from the summary above the recipe card, but the card doesn’t instruct to set the timer for cooking. Or, at least, I can’t see it. FYI
Nora says
Debba, the stew function defaults to 35 minutes. That’s how long you need to cook it for. If you don’t have a stew function, just cook on high pressure for 35 minutes.