Vinca minor (I know it as creeping myrtle; apparently lesser periwinkle is a more common common name) is a short evergreen groundcover; it's considered invasive in some areas.
Vaccinium vitis-idaea (Lignonberry) is a more useful-to-humans short evergreen plant, due to the berries.
Lowbush blueberries are not evergreen, but have nice foliage colors in the fall and similarly useful-to-humans berries. Vaccinium myrtillus known as bilberry would be more native to your area.
Vaccinium oxycoccos is a cranberry that's native to Europe and evergreen, but it may find the conditions on your slope too dry.
Gaultheria procumbens Checkerberry or American Wintergreen is another low-growing evergreen with berries useful-to-humans, but does seem to be lacking a direct Euopean counterpart, so it might be hard to come by. Does like a sandy slope, in my experience.
Juniper is available in forms from trees to low-spreading shrubs.
You didn't really specify short plants, those are just what springs to mind first for covering a slope. In a taller plant, Azeleas are available evergreen or not, and like well drained soils.