Beef Birria Tacos

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Servings 4–6 people

Deep red birria tacos hit the pan with a sizzle that promises exactly what you want: crackly tortillas, melted cheese, and shredded beef that stays juicy instead of drying out. The best part is the dunk in consommé at the end, where the tortilla softens just enough to keep the bite rich while the edges stay crisp. It’s the kind of dinner that looks like it took all day because it did — but most of that time is hands-off, and the payoff is worth every minute.

What makes this version work is the slow cooker base and the way the chile sauce gets blended before it ever touches the beef. Toasting the dried chiles first wakes up their flavor and keeps the broth from tasting flat, while a little chipotle, cinnamon, and vinegar give the birria that deep, savory warmth without making it taste sweet. The fat that rises to the top of the consommé matters too. That’s what gives the tortillas their signature color and helps them fry up with those blistered, crisp edges.

Below, I’ve broken down the part that matters most: how to keep the tortillas from tearing, how to get the cheese melt right, and how to serve the tacos so the consommé stays hot and dark for dipping.

The tacos crisped up beautifully in the consommé fat, and the cheese pulled just like the photo. I also loved that the beef stayed juicy after 8 hours in the slow cooker instead of getting stringy.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Save these crispy beef birria tacos for the nights when you want melty cheese, juicy shredded beef, and a consommé dip worth the wait.

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The Secret to Birria That Stays Rich Instead of Greasy

Birria can go wrong in two different ways: the beef gets dry, or the consommé turns heavy and oily instead of bold and silky. The trick here is not chasing a thick sauce in the slow cooker. You want a braising liquid that loosens the beef and pulls flavor from the chiles, then you separate the consommé after cooking so the tacos get the flavor-packed top layer of fat only when it’s time to fry.

That red oil on top is not a problem. It’s the reason the tortillas turn deep brick-colored and crisp instead of just warming through in a dry skillet. If you stir the whole pot before dipping, you lose that effect and end up with less color and less crunch. Keep the consommé still, skim from the top, and let the pan do the finishing work.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Beef Birria Tacos crispy cheesy consommé
  • Beef chuck roast — This is the right cut for long, slow cooking because the marbling and connective tissue break down into tender shreds. You can use beef shoulder or a mix of chuck and short rib, but lean cuts won’t give you the same juicy bite.
  • Dried guajillo and ancho chiles — These build the deep red color and the mellow, smoky heat birria needs. Guajillo gives bright chile flavor; ancho brings a rounder, raisiny note. If you skip the toasting step, the sauce tastes flatter.
  • Chipotle in adobo — One pepper is enough to add smoke and a little heat without turning the birria into a barbecue sauce. If you want it milder, use half a chipotle and keep the adobo to a spoonful or two.
  • Oaxacan or mozzarella cheese — Oaxacan gives the best stretch and a cleaner melt, but mozzarella works well and is easier to find. Pre-shredded cheese works in a pinch, though freshly shredded cheese melts more smoothly.
  • Corn tortillas — These hold up to the consommé better than flour tortillas and give you the right crisp edge. Warm, flexible tortillas are less likely to tear when you dip them in the fat.

How to Build the Crunch Without Losing the Fillings

Toast and blend the chile base

Toast the dried chiles just until they smell fragrant and a shade darker, then soak or blend them right away so they don’t scorch. When they’re blended with the tomatoes, onion, garlic, chipotle, broth, and spices, the sauce should look smooth and loose, not paste-thick. If the blender struggles, add a splash more broth rather than forcing it, because a smoother sauce coats the beef more evenly.

Braise the beef until it pulls apart cleanly

Pour the sauce over the beef in the slow cooker and cook on low for about 8 hours. The meat is ready when it yields easily to a fork and breaks into long strands instead of clinging in tight chunks. If it still feels chewy, it needs more time; birria gets tender by patience, not by turning up the heat. Save the consommé after shredding the beef, because that liquid is part of the final tacos.

Fry the tortillas in the red fat

Skim the top layer of fat from the consommé and dip each tortilla through it before it hits the skillet. That coating is what gives the tacos their color and helps them crisp without drying out. Work over medium-high heat and keep the layer thin in the pan. If you overload the skillet with too much fat, the tortillas fry before the cheese can melt and you lose that clean fold.

Fold, press, and finish the melt

Add the cheese and shredded beef to one half of the tortilla, fold it over, and cook until both sides are crisp and the cheese has melted through. A good birria taco feels sturdy in your hand and leaves a light sheen of oil on the surface without turning soggy. Let it sit for a minute before serving if it looks too hot to handle, because that brief rest helps the cheese settle and keeps the filling from sliding out.

Three Ways to Make These Birria Tacos Fit What You Have

Make Them Dairy-Free

Skip the cheese and fry the tortillas in a little of the consommé fat for crisp edges and plenty of chile flavor. You lose the stretchy quesabirria effect, but the tacos still eat beautifully with onion, cilantro, and a generous dip in the broth.

Use an Instant Pot Instead of the Slow Cooker

Cook the beef and sauce on high pressure until the meat shreds easily, then reduce the liquid if needed before assembling the tacos. The flavor comes together faster, but the consommé may be a little less layered than the slow-cooked version unless you let it sit so the fat rises to the top.

Stretch the Filling for a Bigger Crowd

Add another half pound to a full pound of beef broth-braised chuck and serve the tacos with extra chopped onion and cilantro so each tortilla needs less meat. The consommé stays the same, which keeps the flavor concentrated even when you’re feeding more people.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the beef and consommé separately for up to 4 days. The tortillas should be cooked fresh for the best texture.
  • Freezer: The shredded beef and consommé freeze well for up to 3 months. Cool completely, portion into airtight containers, and thaw overnight in the fridge.
  • Reheating: Reheat the beef gently in some consommé over low heat until hot. Don’t microwave the assembled tacos if you want them crisp; re-crisp the filled tacos in a skillet instead.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make birria tacos without dried chiles?+

You can, but the flavor won’t taste like classic birria. The dried guajillo and ancho chiles are what give the sauce its red color and deep, earthy backbone. If you swap them out, the consommé will still be tasty, just lighter and less complex.

How do I keep my tacos from getting soggy?+

Use only the top layer of fat from the consommé to dip the tortillas, then cook them in a hot skillet until the surface firms up. If the pan is too cool or the tortillas sit in the liquid too long, they absorb more broth than they can handle and turn soft. Crisp them first, then serve right away.

Can I make the beef birria ahead of time?+

Yes, and the flavor often gets better after a night in the fridge. The fat will solidify on top, which makes it easier to separate for dipping the tortillas later. Reheat the beef in some of the consommé so it stays moist.

How do I know when the beef is done cooking?+

The beef is done when it shreds easily with a fork and doesn’t fight back in the middle. If it’s still slicing instead of pulling apart, it needs more time in the slow cooker. Birria should be soft enough to fall into strands, not just tender around the edges.

Can I use flour tortillas instead of corn tortillas?+

You can, but they won’t give you the same crisp edge or classic birria texture. Corn tortillas hold the consommé fat better and get that signature fried shell. Flour tortillas will stay softer and a little heavier.

Beef Birria Tacos

Beef birria tacos with slow-braised chuck roast in a deeply red chile consommé, then crisp-fried in dipped corn tortillas. Expect melted cheese, visible braised beef at the fold, and a steaming cup of consommé for dipping.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 8 hours 15 minutes
Total Time 8 hours 35 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Mexican
Calories: 540

Ingredients
  

Birria and consommé
  • 3 lb beef chuck roast Cut into chunks.
  • 3 dried guajillo chiles Stems and seeds removed.
  • 2 dried ancho chiles Stems and seeds removed.
  • 1 chipotle in adobo
  • 1 can (14.5 oz) diced tomatoes
  • 1 onion Roughly chopped.
  • 6 garlic cloves
  • 2 cup beef broth
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp oregano
  • 0.5 tsp cinnamon
  • salt and black pepper Season to taste.
Tacos and serving
  • 16 corn tortillas
  • 2 cup Oaxacan or mozzarella cheese, shredded
  • 1 diced white onion For serving.
  • 1 cilantro For serving.

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven
  • 1 cast iron skillet
  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Make the birria (slow-cooker)
  1. Toast the dried guajillo and ancho chiles in a dry pan, stirring constantly, until fragrant, about 30–60 seconds, with a slight darkening on the edges. This should not burn.
  2. Blend the toasted chiles with diced tomatoes, chopped onion, garlic cloves, chipotle in adobo, beef broth, apple cider vinegar, cumin, oregano, cinnamon, and salt and black pepper until smooth, about 1–2 minutes. Blend until the sauce looks fully red and uniform.
  3. Place the beef chuck roast chunks in your crockpot and pour the chile sauce over the top. Make sure the beef is mostly covered.
  4. Cook on low for 8 hours. The beef should be fork-tender and the sauce should look deeply red.
  5. Shred the beef using two forks and reserve the consommé separately. Keep the top layer of red consommé fat for dipping.
Assemble and fry the tacos
  1. Heat a cast iron skillet over medium-high heat until hot, about 2–3 minutes, indicated by quick sizzling when a tortilla touches the surface. Keep it ready for fast frying.
  2. Dip corn tortillas in the reserved red consommé fat (from the top layer), coating quickly and evenly. The tortillas should look glossy and lightly stained red.
  3. Cook the dipped tortillas in the hot skillet for 1 minute until beginning to crisp. You should see small golden spots.
  4. Add shredded Oaxacan or mozzarella cheese and birria beef to one half of the tortilla. The cheese should sit directly on the tortilla where it will melt.
  5. Fold the tortilla in half and press gently, cooking 2–3 minutes per side until crispy and the cheese is melted. The tacos should be browned at the edges and cohesive at the fold.
  6. Serve immediately with a cup of consommé for dipping, diced white onion, and fresh cilantro. The consommé should steam when poured.

Notes

Pro tip: reserve the top red consommé fat and dip tortillas quickly so they crisp instead of turning soggy. Store leftover birria (beef + consommé) in the refrigerator up to 4 days; reheat on the stovetop or in the microwave. Freeze birria for up to 3 months, but fry tacos fresh for best crispness. Dietary swap: use dairy-free shredded cheese if needed (the taco will still crisp, but melt/texture may be slightly less stretchy).

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