Every tortilla dreams of being stuffed with Carnitas. Picture seasoned pork slow-cooked into tender submission, gently shredded and pan-fried to golden, crispy perfection. Carnitas has that elusive combination of juicy and crispy that’s so irresistible. The best part of this Carnitas? 5 minutes prep!
This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!
Carnitas
Is there anything better in this world than pork slowly cooked until it’s crazy juicy and fall apart tender, then crisped to golden perfection?
Yes.
When it’s inside a taco. 😂
Carnitas is one of my specialities. I make this recipe often – for everyday purposes, a freezer standby and for taco-bar gatherings with friends!
The one and only Pork Carnitas
I went through A LOT of Pork Carnitas recipes before settling on this as The One. I’ve been loyal to it for over a decade because it ticks all my boxes:
✅ Extremely quick 5 minute preparation
✅ Made with easy to find natural ingredients
✅ Enough flavour to eat plain (and you will pick it out of the pan!)
✅ Subtle enough flavour so it can be used in any Mexican dish (over salting and over spicing is a common problem);
✅ Perfect caramelized brown bits while retaining the incredible juiciness from slow cooking;
✅ Perfect freezer food – reheats 100% perfectly; and
✅ Excellent food for gatherings – big batch recipe, stays fresh even hours after cooking it
What are Carnitas?
If you’re new to Carnitas, let me be the first to welcome you to your new addiction.
Carnitas are Mexico’s version of pulled pork. It’s the first thing you seek upon landing in Mexico. It’s why we trawled the back streets of Mexico City in torrential rains, hunting down a hole-in-the-wall carnitas joint that was popular with locals.
Made by slow cooking pork fully submerged in lard, this confit method of cooking yields pork that’s unbelievably rich and tender with loads of crispy golden bits.
Unfortunately for most home cooks, a huge cauldron of lard isn’t viable or practical.
But fortunately, it is possible to make carnitas that tastes very similar to authentic Pork Carnitas without gallons of lard. And it’s unbelievably simple.
How to make Pork Carnitas
Best Pork Cut for Pork Carnitas – for ultimate juicy pulled pork full of flavour, you can’t beat pork shoulder, aka pork butt. Bone in or out, it needs to be skinless so it can be rubbed with the Carnitas seasoning
Carnitas seasoning – rub pork with a simple spice mix of oregano, cumin, salt and pepper.
Flavour for cooking – top pork in slow cooker with onion, garlic and jalapeño, then pour over orange juice (the secret ingredient!). It sounds so simple, but with hours of slow cooking, mingling with the pork juices, it transforms into the most incredible braising broth that more than makes up for the absence of gallons of lard.
Slow cook until the pork is pull-apart tender and infused with incredible flavour
Pan fry until golden, doused with the juices from the slow cooker. Pan frying is so much better than broiling/grill or oven!
Can Carnitas be made in an Instant Pot or pressure cooker?
Yes! The outcome is exactly the same – no one can the difference once browned in the skillet. I make this in a pressure cooker when time is of the essence!
The BEST Pork Carnitas are browned in a skillet!
Don’t skip the step to brown the Pork Carnitas! This is the key that makes this the best Pork Carnitas you will have outside of Mexico.
Hand on heart, it is as good as the carnitas I had at a really authentic Mexican joint called Old Town Mexican Cafe in San Diego which is famous for its Pork Carnitas.
So if you think you’ve had great carnitas before, but you haven’t tried browning in a skillet, this is going to be a game changer!
What to serve with Pork Carnitas
While I have a great fondness and tendency to favour Tacos de Carnitas (Pork Carnitas Tacos), pork this juicy and full of flavour is highly versatile – plus it freezes 10000% perfectly.
I use Pork Carnitas to make Enchiladas, Burritos, Quesadillas, Sliders, Mexican pizzas. I toss them into my Mexican Fried Rice (don’t laugh, this is a firm favourite with many readers!), and I make Carnitas Plates – pile Carnitas over Mexican Red Rice with a side of Pico de Gallo or Guacamole, and steamed corn.
And of course, I eat it straight out of the skillet. 😂
And the best part?
• You’re just 5 minutes away from getting this Pork Carnitas in your slow cooker, pressure cooker or oven.
• It can be frozen without any loss of quality.
• There are easy ways to pan fry to golden perfection and still be juicy and fresh hours later – even after refrigerating.
There’s a reason I am rarely without a stash of Carnitas in my freezer!!! – Nagi xx
Mexican recipe favourites
Mexican Fiesta Menu and recipes
Carnitas
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!
Is that a pressure cooker in the video??
Yes and no! My slow cooker (Breville Fast-Slow Cooker) is like an Instant Pot. It’s multi-functional, a pressure cooker and slow cooker in one. Hence why it looks like a pressure cooker with the twisting top. The slow cooking function is no different to any standard slow cooker.
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Carnitas (Mexican Slow Cooker Pulled Pork)
Ingredients
- 2 kg / 4 lb pork shoulder (pork butt) , skinless, boneless (5lb/2.5kg bone in) (Note 1)
- 2 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 tsp black pepper
- 1 onion , chopped
- 1 jalapeno , deseeded, chopped
- 4 cloves garlic, minced
- 3/4 cup juice from orange (2 oranges)
Rub
- 1 tbsp dried oregano
- 2 tsp ground cumin
- 1 tbsp olive oil
Instructions
- Rinse and dry the pork shoulder, rub all over with salt and pepper.
- Combine the Rub ingredients then rub all over the pork.
- Place the pork in a slow cooker (fat cap up), top with the onion, jalapeño, minced garlic (don’t worry about spreading it) and squeeze over the juice of the oranges.
- Slow Cook on low for 10 hours or on high for 7 hours. (Note 2 for other cook methods)
- Pork should be tender enough to shred. Remove from slow cooker and let cool slightly. Then shred using two forks.
- Optional: Skim off the fat from the juices remaining in the slow cooker and discard.
- If you have a lot more than 2 cups of juice, then reduce it down to about 2 cups. The liquid will be salty, it is the seasoning for the pork. Set liquid aside – don’t bother straining onion etc, it’s super soft.
To Crisp:
- Heat 1 tbsp of oil in a large non stick pan or well seasoned skillet over high heat. Spread pork in the pan, drizzle over some juices. Wait until the juices evaporate and the bottom side is golden brown and crusty. Turn and just briefly sear the other side – you don’t want to make it brown all over because then it’s too crispy, need tender juicy bits.
- Remove pork from skillet. Repeat in batches (takes me 4 batches) – don’t crowd the pan.
- Just before serving, drizzle over more juices and serve hot, stuffed in tacos (see notes for sides, other serving suggestion and storage/make ahead).
Recipe Notes:
1.5 – 3 kg / 3 – 6 lb: Cook time per recipe.
3 – 4 kg / 6 – 8 lb: Use large oval slow cooker, 12 hours on low. 2. Other cooking methods: Electric pressure cooker or Instant Pot: 1 h 30 minutes on high. Let pressure release naturally. Proceed with Step 5 of recipe. Stove pressure cooker: use a rack or balls of scrunched up foil to elevate it from the base OR add 3/4 cup of water. Cook 1 h 30 minutes. Proceed with Step 5 of recipe. Oven: Follow recipe but put pork in roasting pan. Add 2 cups water around pork. Cover tightly with foil, roast in 325F/160C oven for 2 hours, then roast for a further 1 to 1.5 hours uncovered. Add more water if the liquid dries out too much. You should end up with 1 1/2 to 2 cups of liquid when it finishes cooking, and you can skip the pan frying step because you will get a nice brown crust on your pork. Shred pork then drizzled with juices. 3. Taco Fixings: Diced avocado or make a real proper Guacamole, Pico de Gallo or Restaurant Style Salsa or even just sliced tomato, grated cheese, sour cream. Sliced lettuce or pickled cabbage / red onions would also be great, but unlike other tacos, you don’t need it for the texture because the carnitas have the crispy bits! Also see this Carnitas Tacos dinner spread. 4. Other Ways to use Carnitas: Burritos (switch for the beef), Quesadillas (baked version here), Enchiladas, Sliders, with Mexican Red Rice, in Taco Soup or Enchilada Soup. 5. Storing / Make Ahead: Crispiness is retained very well, main thing is loss of moisture as meat cools (happens with all meat, shredded meat cools faster). a) Best way to store: Shred pork but don’t pan fry. Keep pork and juice separate, refrigerate up to 3 days or freeze up to 3 months (for freezer, I put pork in containers/ bags and put juice in ziplock bags in the same container). Gently reheat juice to make it pourable (congeals when cold). Pan fry per recipe, drizzling with juice. b) Storing leftovers after pan frying: Keeps extremely well, but tends to lose juiciness when it cools down. Just drizzle with juice, cover with cling wrap and reheat – the crispy bits hold up very well. It’s not quite as crispy as when cooked fresh, but still seriously tasty. c) Brown pork a few hours ahead / keep warm: Works extremely well. Brown pork per recipe, then transfer to slow cooker on warm setting or food warmer and drizzle generously with juices to keep it moist. Cover loosely. As long as the pork is warm when served, it’s really juicy. The crispiness holds up extremely well. 6. Source: This is a recipe I’ve been making for over a decade now, with minor tweaks over time so I can’t remember the exact source. I want to say Rick Bayless but I can’t find the recipe, however, I did find this one from Food Network which is very similar. However, I’m not sure when it was published. 7. Nutrition per serving, pork only, assuming 12 servings. Calories is higher than it actually is because it does not take into account discarded fat.
Nutrition Information:
Carnitas recipe originally published 2014. Updated with new photos and video in 2018, and some housekeeping in March 2019. No change to recipe, I wouldn’t dare! This has been one of the all time most popular recipes since I first published it!
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use pork tenderloin? Sorry to say it’s not suitable for this recipe. Tenderloin is too lean so the long cook time will dry it out. Also, it does not shred into strands well.
Just to confirm – no liquid other than the juice from the oranges?? Really? YES, really. 🙂 The small amount of liquid from the oranges is all you need to keep it from drying out while it comes to temperature, then while it cooks the pork will drop juices. When this finishes cooking you will have more liquid than you started with.
Will it taste of oranges???? Nope, not at all! It magically turns into the most incredible broth that is then poured over the shredded pork.
Can I cook a frozen pork? Please don’t! This will mess with the cook time a lot because it will take sooooo long for the middle of the pork to cook, by which time the outside will be overcooked and when you shred it, it will almost look like mush! The pork must be defrosted!
After I skim off the fat, do I include the onions garlic and jalapeños when topping the meat, or do I discard these and only use the juices? It is up to you! Because it’s been slow cooked, the onion etc is really soft and it just melds into the pulled pork. I don’t bother straining it, but you can if you want to.
Will this work with pork stew chunks? It will definitely work and still be tasty but won’t be quite the same because smaller pieces of pork will cook faster so you won’t get quite the same amount of flavour. 🙂
Just to confirm – no pan frying to brown the pork before putting it in the slow cooker? That’s right! You brown the pork AFTER it is cooked and shredded.
What size slow cooker do you use? Mine is 6 quarts / 6 litres. I use this Breville Fast / Slow Cooker (I’m in Australia) which I love because it’s a pressure cooker and slow cooker in one, plus it has a saute setting! It’s basically an Instant Pot – but without one touch cook functions (like rice etc).
Life of Dozer
I first published this recipe back in 2014, when I was new to blogging. I took sooooo long with the photos – prolonged torture for Dozer!
Al says
Hi Nagi! Thanks for this recipe!! My mouth is watering just thinking about it. I am going to make this tomorrow for the SuperBowl (so not sure I’ll get a response in time) but, do you get equally good results by cooking it on high vs. low? Which do you prefer?
Thanks! Can’t wait to try it!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Al!! Hope I got to you in time! 🙂 Yes I get the same results, I just use Low by default because it’s the setting I typically have it on 🙂
Al says
Nagi, thanks for the reply! I ended up doing it on high for 6.5 hours (I was doing 7 lbs). I increased all the ingredients by 150%. I ended up adding a couple slices of orange peel into the slow cooker (I also used mexican oregano, not sure if this makes a huge difference). The pork shredded very nicely. I removed all the veg from the broth, reduced it and put it back in the slow cooker and then added the pork back and kept the slow cooker on low for the whole party. It was delicious. I did add a little more salt before serving. It was good enough and so juicy out of the slow cooker that we didn’t feel the need to crisp it up. Everyone took leftovers home! Thank you so much and this will be a go to recipe.
KYLE says
Hello,
I’m looking forward to making this tomorrow. I was just wondering if the oranges are the only liquid in the recipe? I usually use a broth or something in a slow cooker. Can you please confirm or deny my suspicion?
Cheers
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Kyle! Yes the oranges are the only liquid, that’s all you need 🙂 It won’t burn, it won’t dry out. The meat is so juicy itself, it ends up cooking in it’s own juices!
Lisa says
I would love to try this recipe but cumin makes my husband very ill, can you recommend a substitution?
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Lisa! Coriander powder is a good sub 🙂
Barbra says
So do I pan fry the whole thing with the rub before putting it in slow.cooker? I’m not sure I understand when the pan frying cones in.
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Barbra! Please check the recipe, there is no pan frying until after the pork is cooked AND shredded. 🙂
Nancy Webber says
I made this last night. It came out great! It was so juicy! I served it with Mexican rice. My husband loved it.
Nagi | RecipeTin says
WOO HOO!!!! Thank you so much for letting me know Nancy! 🙂
Erin says
What sized slower cooker did you use? How many quarts?
Thanks!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Erin! Mine is 6 litres / 6 quarts 🙂
Ramsey says
If I shove 2 butts in should I increase cook time.
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Yup! Increase the time by 50% 🙂
Naj says
Hi, looking forward to making your recipe for the Super Bowl. I realized that the butcher cut off all the fat cap! Will it still be juicy?
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Naj! Yup, it will still be pretty juicy because there’s plenty of fat IN the shoulder too!
Rachel says
This was really good, but how long did y’all cook it on the stove before it crisped up? I left it for about 10 minutes before it smelled so good I just had to give up and eat it. Also, the pork I bought was extra salty. Any suggestions for balancing the salt out when I eat the leftovers? Thanks for the great recipe!
Jeanne says
Can you give an approximation as to how much juice comes out of 2 oranges for you? There’s just such variance on the size of the orange you could get, how juicy or ripe it is, etc.. I’ve yet to make a slow cooker pork shoulder recipe that didn’t come out way too wet for me – gonna give yours a go (excited to!) but I don’t want to overdo the OJ and give it too much moisture right off the bat. Thanks!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Jeanne! Don’t stress about that, this is a pretty forgiving recipe, I’ve made this with very unjuicy oranges and with OJ and it always works out 🙂 The moisture from the OJ won’t make or break this, it’s all about the slow cooking!
Susan says
I discovered your recipe while searching for the best crockpot recipes! I just bought a crockpot and this will be my first attempt using it.
I am thinking about making this to bring to a Superbowl party but I just realized the pork package I got is a bone-in 3 1/3 pound chunk. Now I’m worried about proportioning the other ingredients correctly.
How should I adjust the other ingredients and cook time so I can make sure it still comes out a winner?
Thanks!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Susan! Just proportion the other ratios to the pork you have! 🙂
Emily says
I love this! Can’t stop eating it. I wanted a copycat to Chili’s carnitas- it’s my go to order and I figured I could make it at home… These are better, hands down. I ate them leftover for lunch and dinner. Fantastic, thanks!!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Oh my GOSH, what a compliment! Thank you! I am so glad you enjoyed this Emily!! 🙂
Misty says
I rarely review recipes but I am utterly in love with this. It has taken me years to finally convince my husband to let me try something with a pork shoulder other than pulled pork barbecue (it is delicious but I have to admit that I like the carnitas better). This was so easy and we didn’t change anything. We served on warmed tortillas with pickled red onions and queso cheese. I am ashamed to admit how much we ate. I had to stop myself so we’d have enough for dinner tomorrow night. We literally just finished and are both sitting here with our bellies full. He is fussing because we are about to watch a movie but I told him I had to let you know how scrumptious this was first. I could go on and on but I will end it here. Thank you, dinner was delicious.
Nagi | RecipeTin says
I’m SO GLAD Misty! Really honoured that you enjoyed it so much that you took the time to leave a comment!! <3
Stacie says
Just curious to know if you brown the pork shoulder before or after cooking ? Plan on making this tomorrow.
Nagi | RecipeTin says
nope! Just after 🙂 Please follow the recipe!
Stacie says
Okay. Yesterday I quickly skimmed through the recipe (hence my previous comment. My apologies ) I just finished shredding the pork from the crockpot and good golly it is delicious!!!!! Thank you thank you thank you for sharing! !! AMAZING! !!!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
YAY!!!! 🙂
Tony says
Made this last night for a dinner party – was fantastic. Thanks!! However…… I may have a few glasses of wine and as I was cleaning up I forgot to skim the fat before putting the juices back on the meat! Do you have any thoughts on the best way to reheat the leftovers to be able to get them to a point where I can get some of the fat off but not ruin it all? (I’m thinking just tossing them back in the crock pot for a bit, but thought I’d ask!)
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hmm, gosh, sorry Tony! Maybe just fry it off?
Dayna says
This sounds delicious. I have a pork tenderloin at home – can I use that or should stick with the pork shoulder? In my experience the pork tenderloin shreds up in the same way as a pork shoulder after it is cooked in the crock pot. Thanks!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Dayna! Please stick to shoulder 🙂 Tenderloin is too lean and so it is not as suitable for this recipe!
Jane C. says
Very good recepie, but I always have to put my own twist on things, so, after shredding the meat and reducing the juices on the stove I spread the shredded meat out on a rimmed baking pan lined with foil and sprinkled it with a couple of tablespoons of brown sugar. Then I drizzled about 1/2c. of the reduced juices over the meat and put the pan under the broiler until crisp bits began to form and there were some carmalized places on the meat. This took about 5 – 7 minutes. When I took the meat out from the broiler I drizzled the remaining reduced juices over it and squeezed on the juice of a lime. Amazing!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
I LOVe hearing twists people put on my recipes! YAY!! Glad to hear you enjoyed it Jane, thanks for taking time to come back and let me know!
Donna says
Am I missing something, or does the recipe itself not mention browning the meat before putting it in the crock pot?
Nagi | RecipeTin says
Hi Donna! Doesn’t need it 🙂 Brown it after shredding it!
Jessica Urbina says
Closest thing to carnitas from an authentic Mexican market! My boyfriend couldn’t stop eating it!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
YAY!! Glad to hear you enjoyed it Jessica, thanks for taking time to come back and let me know!
Lee says
Has anyone used a cast iron duty oven or pot with this recipe? Needs some changes?
Lee says
Sorry, that’s supposed to be “cast iron Dutch oven”
AnneA says
Do you strain the juice before freezing? Flavours are great so far!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
I don’t bother but you can if you want!
Emilie Collins says
I made this last week for a family gathering…I was at the end of the line and didn’t even get to try any! Everyone is still raving about it, so I have all the ingredients assembled for round two tomorrow! Thanks so much for the recipe!
Nagi | RecipeTin says
BA HA HA!!! I hope you sampled plenty while making it????