This Mexican Shredded Beef has incredible depth of flavour! The sauce is really rich and thick, and there is PLENTY of it. Fantastic for tacos, burritos, enchiladas and quesadillas, piled high on Mexican Red Rice or stuffed in rolls to make sliders!
This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!
Mexican Shredded Beef
I have a “thing” about shredded meats. I just love how it acts like a mop for sauces, so every mouthful is so juicy.
From Shredded Chicken Tacos to Pulled Chicken Nachos, Shredded Beef Ragu Pasta and Chicken Pot Pie, Chicken and Rice Soup to Crispy Chinese Shredded Chicken, if the eating experience is better when the meat is shredded – I shred it.
And Mexican Shredded Beef makes the cut – tenfold!! In fact, I adore it so much I’ve recently published another version – Beef Barbacoa. This version is slightly tangy and punching through with flavour from chipotle chillies!
The sauce for this Mexican Shredded Beef is loaded with big flavours – and there’s PLENTY of it!
What goes in Slow Cooker Mexican Beef
There’s a ton of spices in this that makes up the flavour of the braising liquid which becomes the sauce!
The secret ingredient is orange juice – it’s actually quite a common ingredient in Mexican cuisine. For example, it’s used in Carnitas (Mexican Slow Cooker Pulled Pork) and the marinade for Chicken Fajitas.
It doesn’t make the broth taste orangey at all – it totally transforms when slow cooked, and adds a touch of sweetness and flavour into the sauce.
How to make Slow Cooker Mexican Beef
The making part is very straightforward and mostly hands off time:
Cut beef into big pieces and sprinkle with spices
Sear aggressively: browning = flavour on both the beef and in the sauce (from the brown stuff on the base of the pot)
Add everything else into the pot
Slow cook on the stove, oven, slow cooker or pressure cooker until fall apart tender
Shred
Toss back into the sauce
Transfer to serving platter
Devour in desired form! (Tacos in this case 🙂 )
What to make with Mexican Shredded Beef
The beauty of this Mexican Beef is that it’s 100% freezer friendly and can be used for dozens of dishes, making it a brilliant standby for quick meals. Here’s just a few ideas:
Obvious uses
Tacos (this recipe)
Nachos – switch out the chicken in this Shredded Chicken Nachos recipe
Burritos – freezer friendly!
Quesadillas – switch out one of the fillings for this beef
Beef Enchiladas – skip the ground beef/mince filling and spices, just use this beef instead. (Still make the Enchilada Sauce, use the refried beans etc)
Mexican Plates – Piled beef over Mexican Red Rice with a big dollop of Guacamole, Pico de Gallo and sour cream, corn on the cob, finish with lime wedges and fresh coriander/cilantro
Some less obvious, mighty tasty ideas
Sliders – stuffed into bread rolls to make sliders!
Mexican Toasties 🥑🧀 – toast bread → smear with avocado → pile on shredded beef → top with cheese → MELT → devour 🙌
Mexican “Empanadas” – make triangles/parcels (like this)using puff pastry, seal with egg, brush with egg, bake until golden. Try adding corn and black beans to fill it out!
Mexican Cottage Pie – mix through sautéed onion, capsicum/bell peppers, zucchini, corn and other chopped veg of choice. Pour into casserole dish, then top with mashed potato and bake per this Cottage Pie recipe. Or try Mexican Beef Chicken Pot Pie!
Mexican Beef Lasagna – layer this beef with tortillas in a baking dish, top with loads of cheese and bake! I’d fill it out with veggies.
Fully Loaded Mexican Breakfast! – make Shakshuka (Middle Eastern Baked Eggs) which, really, is made with thoroughly Mexican flavours, and serve with a generous pile of this beef and warm tortillas. OMG….
Breakfast Enchiladas – skip the bacon, use this beef instead
Shredded Beef Tacos
Here’s what I use to make a simple Shredded Beef Tacos spread- something that’s super quick to assemble:
This Mexican Shredded Beef
Warmed or charred tortillas
Sour cream
Lime wedges
Fresh lime wedges
Fresh coriander/cilantro leaves, whole or finely chopped
You won’t need a separate sauce because this shredded beef is so juicy and saucy.
So really, if you have a batch of this Mexican Beef on hand, then you’re just 15 minutes away from the taco spread pictured above because all you have to make is the Pico de Gallo (and if that’s all too hard, just slice some tomatoes!!) – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!
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Mexican Shredded Beef (and Tacos)
Ingredients
Spice Mix
- 1 1/2 tbsp chipotle powder , adjust spiciness to taste (Note 5)
- 1 tbsp paprika
- 1 tbsp dried oregano
- 1 tsp All Spice powder (ground All Spice)
- 1 tsp coriander powder
- 2 tsp onion powder or garlic powder OR 1 tsp of each
- 1 tsp salt and pepper , each
Beef
- 1 – 2 tbsp olive oil
- 3 lb / 1.5kg beef chuck or brisket (or gravy or any other slow cooking beef) cut into 4 pieces
- 5 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 onion , diced (yellow, brown or white)
- 3/4 cup (185 ml) orange juice
- 2 tbsp lime juice
- 14 oz / 400g can crushed tomatoes
- 2 cups (500 ml) beef or chicken broth/stock
- 1/2 cup (125ml) water
- Salt and pepper
Instructions
- Combine the Spice Mix ingredients in a bowl. Sprinkle 4 teaspoons over the beef and pat so it sticks.
- Heat the olive oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat. Add the beef (in batches if necessary) and brown well on all sides. Remove onto a plate.
- Turn the stove down to medium. If the pot looks dry, add more olive oil.
- Add the garlic and onion and cook for 3 minutes until soft.
- Add the orange juice and lime juice, and scrape the bottom of the pot so the brown bits mix into the liquid.
- Add tomato, beef stock, water and remaining spice mix. Mix, then return beef into pot.
- Put the lid on, bring to a simmer then turn the stove down so it is bubbling gently, not rapidly.
- Cook for 2 hours, then remove lid and simmer for another 30 minutes until beef is tender enough to shred. (Note 2 other cook methods).
- Remove the beef from sauce, shred with 2 forks.
- Leave the sauce to simmer with the lid off for 10 to 15 minutes to reduce and thicken to your taste. Adjust salt to taste. Optional: puree with stick blender to make it smooth (I do this for company)
- Toss beef back into the sauce (can reserve some Sauce for drizzling on tacos if you want, there’s plenty).
- Transfer beef into large dish and serve. See notes for suggestions.
Tacos
- To make tacos, serve the beef with warmed small tortillas, avocado slices, Pico de Gallo, shredded cheese, sour cream, lime wedges and extra cilantro/coriander leaves.
Recipe Notes:
- Mild – reduce to 2 tsp to 1 tbsp, add 1 tsp extra coriander, plus add 1 tsp cumin
- Medium – use 1.5 tbsp per recipe (I do this for groups of friends, good mid point)
- Spicy, but not blow your head off spicy – increase to 2 tbsp (I like this)
Nutrition Information:
Originally published September 2015, updated July 2019 with new photos, new video, new step photos and Life of Dozer section added. No change to recipe!
Life of Dozer
Bushwalking with Dozer – best done in winter when it’s snake free!
Maggie Unzueta says
My mouth is watering. I want to eat that!
Nagi says
Make it! eat it! 🙂
Linda says
Hi Nagi, I was thinking of using this sauce for smoked brisket ? I already smoked it and shredded it, but it needs a sauce.
Any alterations you can think of, or will it work just as good ?
Also, If I do it again, should I sear the brisket before I smoke it ? or that not necessary ?
Nagi says
Hi linda! I’m sorry to say I am not familiar enough with smoking to know how best to use this recipe. However, the sauce would be great with smoked brisket! N x
Michael Stebbins says
I couldn’t find smoked paprika nor, chipotle powder. I figured if a smokey flavor is the key…throw the meat on a grill. I patted in the dry spices on the meat, less the chipotle powder and , tossed it on a fril over a small chunk of mesquite (SMALL mesquite is a sharp over powering flavor wood) Seared the outsides of the meat to a dark crisp, then followed the recipe….add a teaspoon of tumeric and half teaspoon of leaf marjoram powder…oh my..soaked the onion and garlic cloves in the citrus juice then strained them out and cooked them in butter until soft as you would prep cooking veggies before a roux.
Nagi says
So…. good??!! 😂
Betty says
Hi Nagi: I am making this tomorrow for Sunday’s dinner. I’m assuming it might be better the second day. My question though, is that i am using a beef tenderloin roast that I’ve had in my freezer and want to use up. Should I add extra fat such as bacon? butter?
I have made and enjoyed very much your beef ragu.
Thanks for any suggestions.
Nagi says
Hi Betty I’m so sorry I’m too late with this response! I’m not sure how well that will work because I don’t know how well it will shred. But if you do make it, I would add 2 tbsp of butter into the sauce to add some richness 🙂 N x
Piter says
Thank you, this is my favourite recipe ever!
Sara says
Hello
I cant wait to try this
Could you please tell me if
1.I can substitute chipotle for paprika
2. I can substitute all spice for garam masala or something else.
Thank you very much
Nagi says
Love hearing that Piter! Thanks for letting me know 🙂 Have a great weekend! N x
Cher says
Hi! I’m planning to cook this tomorrow. Wondering if it’s too spicy. My husband and my son don’t really like spicy food. I hope to hear from you soon. Thank you!
Sandra Stevens says
Absolutely delicious, and I mean it with a capitol D! I made it for a crew and a couple said it was the best taco they ever had. The depth of flavor was incredible. Just enough spice. I blended the left over sauce for the topping and the rest I am saving for beans. Thank you so much for this recipe, I will be making this for my crews and company for years to come! Thank you thank you!!
Nagi says
Wonderful! So glad you enjoyed this Sandra! N x
Kelli says
Just finished serving this for Cinco de Mayo…delicious! Made it in my crockpot. A big hit with the family. Definitely a keeper. Thank you!
Nagi says
I’m glad to hear you enjoyed this Kelli!!! Thanks for taking the time to let me know 🙂 N x
Lara says
Your pictures are amazing and inspirational! I’m making it in my Dutch oven right now and looking forward to putting taste with the wonderful smell. Happy Cinco de Mayo!
Nagi says
Hope you love it Lara!! N xx
Matt says
Nagi, this is a cool recipe but it appears you’re missing a step. It says to remove the beef and put it on a plate after browning but it doesn’t tell you when to re-add the meat to the pot. Also, I am assuming you need to dice or mince the garlic…
Nagi says
Hi Matt! I don’t return the beef into the pot, I shred it then serve with the sauce over it 🙂 Or toss it in some of the sauce. And yes, minced garlic. Can’t believe you’re the first to pick that up! 🙂 N xx
Elise says
Hi Nagi! I have the same question as Matt did, and I still don’t quite understand. You said to remove the beef in step 2, and in step 4 you say “enough water so the beef is mostly, but not completely submerged”. I assume I should add the meat again in step 4? I know the recipe says to not return it and shred it in step 6, but it is earlier in the recipe where it seems to be missing! Very excited to try this recipe, looks amazing.
Nagi says
Hi Elise! Poor directions writing by me 🙂 Step 4 should have included to add the beef back in!
Sonja Truesdale says
Hi Nagi
No offence … Unless you have made changes to the recipe since Elise commented in April, you did state in Step 4 to return beef to pot.
“4. Add the orange juice and lime juice, and scrape the bottom of the pot so the brown bits mix into the liquid. Then return the beef into the pot, add remaining Spice Mix, canned tomatoes, beef broth, and enough water so the beef is mostly, but not completely submerged. (Note 1)”.
I have a question though
Why do you add orange juice? How does orange juice improve the recipe?
I don’t mean to offend, and if I have offended you, please accept my sincerest apologies.
I try to be as authentic as I can and I’ve been googling beef taco recipes, reading my Mexican recipes etc.
PS: I make all my recipes from scratch. I don’t buy curry pastes, sauces etc. I buy fresh and organics.
Admittedly I do have a Thermomix; she makes my cooking much fun. I’ve named her Thelma 😁
Insherah Asadi says
A delicious recipe!! I prepared the meat with the rest of the ingredients and put it for only 30min in a pressure cooker. Took the meat out and simmered the sauce uncovered.
Nagi says
Love hearing that Insherah! So pleased you enjoyed this 🙂 N x
Kitty says
Greetings from London! I made this for the first time today and it was incredibly easy and flavoursome. The tips of a) separately the beef and sauce and b) adding orange juice are new to me but worked really well. Like others I slightly adapted the recipe by added Worcestershire sauce plus I used stewing steak chunks but it worked really well. Will make again and likely to freeze leftover sauce to add to other dishes.
Nagi says
That’s wonderful to hear Kitty! Thanks for taking the time to let me know you enjoyed this! N xx
mick says
Got this cooking on my stove right now! First time making it and i must say my house smells delicious. Looking forward to dinner tonight!
Nagi says
Yuuuum! I was just looking at this recipe, thinking when I’m going to make it again! N xx
Kari says
Full disclosure – I made several adaptations to your recipe, but it turned out really, really delicious! I would have never thought to add OJ to my shredded beef, even though I use it in several marinades! I used an “extra spicy” seasoning mix along with the salt, pepper, coriander, garlic powder, onion powder, & paprika. After seasoning & searing the roast in my dutch oven I added the beef broth, orange juice, onion & garlic, but then used 1/2 cup of tomato sauce, about 1/4 cup of blended up chipotles, a 1/2 cup of homemade spicy salsa, a few dashes of worcestershire sauce, and a 1/2 tsp of Mexican oregano. Definitely a keeper!
Nagi says
I LOVE hearing that Kari! Thanks so much for letting me know! N xx
tess says
I love the recipe, how come I can’t print the recipe
Nagi says
Hi Tess! Can you see the Print button on the recipe card?? 🙂 N xx
Tess says
Yes I click 6 times did not work
Joe Johnston says
I really want to make this, it sounds delicious! But I’m a little confused about the slow cooker instructions – which steps do I take before putting the beef in the slow cooker?
Nagi says
Hi Joe! So after you add the liquids into the pan in step 4, bring it to a simmer and scrape the bottom of the pan to get the brown bits off the bottom. Then tip that in the slow cooker along with everything else 🙂
Johanna Prevost says
Wonderful recipe! I LOVE your site and recipes – thank you! Here are a few things I did differently and it turned out great. I added a diced jalapeno (no seeds) sauted that with onions and garlic. Added two tablespoons of tomatoe paste along with the canned tomatoes. I stirred the paste into the sauted garlic and onions. And 2 tablespoons of worschtsire sauce. Thank you!
Nagi says
That’s so great to hear Johanna! Thank you for letting me know you enjoyed it! N x
Johanna Prevost says
BTW! My family loved it and loves all your recipes : )
Amanda says
Could I make this in a pressure cooker?
Nagi says
Yes! It’s in Step 5 🙂
Trond Farbrot says
Made this for the second time today and it is absolutely gorgeous, I also added 1 teaspoon of cumin and 1 teaspoon of thyme as that suits my taste buds. 3,5 hours in the oven with my Dutch oven and the beef becomes very moist and succulent.
Thanks!
Nagi says
I’m so pleased to hear you enjoyed this Trond! Thanks so much for letting me know! N x ❤️
Tony says
Made this twice already, great flavors, for those who are finding it hard to get Mexican ingredients, i get my Mexican supplies from Chile Mojo, they have a huge selection including Mexican oregano (yes using the Mexican version really makes a difference). These guys deliver to me within 48 hours and I live in Far North Queensland. Thanks for the recipes really enjoying the diversity.
Nagi says
AWESOME TIP!!! Thanks Tony!
Andrew Stapleton says
I just want to say thank you very much for this recipe. I found it about 2 years ago, tried it, and loved it. The flavour and balance of the spices using the smoked paprika, paprika, the onion and garlic granules is just perfect. I have made this recipe a few more times, but have made the spice mix countless times since finding it, and is now my go to spice mix which I use with beef, pork and chicken. I know the spice mix off by heart and am writing this as the beef simmers for another delicious dinner. Thanks so much again.
Sam says
Hi. I have leftover cooked slowcooked beef which was cooked reletively plainly. Can I make just the sauce to mix with the beef to use up my leftovers?
Nagi says
You sure can Sam!