Make rich and flavorful birria right at home! This authentic Mexican dish can be enjoyed as a stew topped with onions, cilantro, and a squeeze of fresh lime juice or as the famous birria tacos! The possibilities are endless, and all taste incredible.

Introducing the famous birria recipe that is so flavorful and has become so popular! Birria has gained so much popularity, and for good reason: it’s freaking delicious!
The richness of the spicy and savory red chile broth mixed into the melt-in-your-mouth juicy beef is so satisfying and packed with layers of flavors.
What is Birria?
Birria is a traditional Mexican dish from the state of Jalisco made from slow-cooked fall-apart juicy and tender beef in a rich and flavorful red chile broth, or consomé.
It’s traditionally cooked for special occasions, holidays, weddings, parties, and even baptisms, but it has become so incredibly popular on social media that it can be found everywhere nowadays!
It’s usually enjoyed as a savory stew served with toppings like cilantro, onions, and freshly squeezed lime juice or served as tacos with lots of melted cheese, aka quesabirria tacos!

Birria Ingredients
- Dried Chiles: You need guajillo chiles, ancho chiles, and arbol chiles. You can find them in the international foods aisle of your local grocery store or in a specialty Mexican grocer. If you can’t find them in your area, buying them online is always a great option! If you’ve never worked with dried chiles before, don’t worry. It’s easy, and I walk you through step by step how to use them in the recipe.
- Spices and bay leaves: I used a combination of garlic, cumin, ground clove, Mexican oregano, Mexican cinnamon stick, black peppercorns, and 3 bay leaves. If you don’t have Mexican oregano, you can use regular oregano. If you can’t find Mexican cinnamon sticks (or Ceylon cinnamon sticks), you can use 2 teaspoons of ground cinnamon.
- Beef: I recommend using chuck roast for the fat amount and how well it tenderizes, but you can also use rump roast.
- Broth: Using beef broth enhances the beef flavor in the consomé, but you can opt for vegetable broth.
- Vinegar: Adds a really delicious tangy element to the consomé that pairs really well with the red chiles!
- Tomato, garlic, and onion: Staple ingredients that add more depth of flavor.
Did you know?
The most common type of meat used to make birria is beef, but traditionally it was made with goat’s meat. Beef is the most popular meat to use now since everyone has access to it. They both work, but I use beef to keep it simple.
How to Make Birria
Season and sear: Season your meat on both sides with salt and pepper. Then set a Dutch oven over medium-high heat with olive oil. Add the meat and sear on all sides until browned. You might need to work in two batches. Once all meat is seared, set aside.


Soak the chiles: In a medium pot, add all of the dried chiles, tomatoes, onion, cinnamon stick, bay leaves, and peppercorns, covering everything completely with water. Bring this to a boil, then lower the heat, cover, and cook for 10 minutes.
Blend: Once the chiles are softened, transfer everything to a blender and add 1 cup of chile-soaked water. Add in the broth, vinegar, and the remaining spices. Blend until smooth, about 5 minutes.



Cook: Strain the blended sauce into the pot with the seared meat (if necessary, depending on the power of your blender), gently stir, and bring to a boil. Bring heat to low, cover, and cook for 3-3 ½ hours, until meat is fall-apart tender.

Shred: Take the meat out to shred, and add shredded meat back to consumé.


Serving Birria
Birria can be enjoyed in a lot of ways which is the best part of making it! Whichever way you choose to enjoy your birria, make sure to dip it into the consumé or enjoy it as a stew with plenty of that broth.
- Birria: Serve as a stew in bowls with diced onion, chopped cilantro, and freshly squeezed lime juice.
- Birria tacos: Dip a corn tortilla in the consomé, then lightly fry it in a hot skillet. The consomé has plenty of fat in it from the rendered shredded beef, so it will fry beautifully without having to add additional oil. Add in some shredded beef, and top your taco with cilantro, diced onions, and lime juice.
- Quesabirria: Same as above, except add plenty of shredded Oaxaca cheese (or your favorite melting cheese)! Fold the tortilla to create a taco and cook it in a skillet until the cheese has melted. Serve with cilantro and diced onions.

Adjusting the Spice Level
Birria is traditionally somewhere between a medium to hot spice level, which is how I would classify this recipe.
For a true medium spice, I recommend using only 3 arbol chiles. For a mild spice, don’t use any arbol chiles. For a hot spice level, use anywhere from 7 to 10 arbol chiles.
Recommended Tools to Make This Recipe
- Dutch oven: This is one of my most-used kitchen tools and is oven safe!
- Slotted spoon: Use this one often when transferring rehydrated chiles to a blender for all my Mexican sauces.
- Blender: A powerful blender is a must when blending up chiles to make Mexican sauces.
- Strainer: If you don’t have a super powerful blender, a strainer comes in handy to ensure your chile sauce and consomé are smooth.
Storing and Reheating
Birria can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months.
To reheat, let the birria thaw in the refrigerator overnight if frozen, then heat in the microwave or in a pot over medium-high heat 5 minutes until heated.
More Mexican Recipes

Ingredients
- 4 to 5 pounds chuck roast, cut into large 4-inch chunks
- ½ tablespoon kosher salt
- ½ tablespoon black pepper
- 1 ½ tablespoon olive oil
- 12 guajillo chiles, rinsed, stemmed, and seeded (about 2.5 oz)
- 5 ancho chiles, rinsed, stemmed, and seeded (about 2 oz)
- 5 árbol chiles, rinsed and stemmed (about 0.1 oz)
- 2 large Roma tomatoes
- ½ medium yellow onion
- 1 4-inch Mexican cinnamon stick*
- 3 bay leaves
- ½ teaspoon whole black peppercorns
- water, as needed
- 2 cups beef broth
- ¼ cup distilled white vinegar
- 5 cloves garlic
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 teaspoon dried Mexican oregano*
- ½ teaspoon ground cloves
Instructions
- Generously season the meat with salt and pepper on all sides, and heat the olive oil in a large pot or Dutch oven over medium-high heat.
- Working in 2 batches, add the meat and sear on all sides until browned. Remove the pot from the heat, add the seared meat back into the pot, and set aside.
- While the meat is searing, add the guajillo chiles, ancho chiles, arbol chiles, tomatoes, onion, cinnamon stick, bay leaves, and peppercorns to a medium pot. Cover completely with water and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce the heat to low, cover, and cook for 10 minutes.
- Using a slotted spoon, transfer the softened chiles and all the other ingredients to a large blender.
- Add 1 cup of the chile-soaked cooking water, the beef broth, white vinegar, garlic, cumin, oregano, and cloves. Blend on high for a few minutes until completely smooth. (You may have to do this in 2 batches if your blender isn’t big enough.)
- Strain the blended sauce through a fine mesh strainer into the pot with the seared meat. Discard any solids left behind.
- Stir the meat and chile sauce together to combine and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce the heat to low, cover, and simmer for 3 to 3 ½ hours until the meat is fall-apart tender.
- Transfer the meat to a large bowl and shred it with 2 forks. Add the meat back into the consomé and serve as a stew in bowls with diced onion and chopped cilantro or as tacos in corn tortillas with shredded Oaxaca cheese, cilantro, and diced onions.
Video
Isabel’s Tips:
- Mexican cinnamon: If you don’t have a Mexican cinnamon stick (also known as Ceylon cinnamon), you can use 2 teaspoons of ground Ceylon cinnamon instead. If you can’t find Ceylon cinnamon, I recommend using 2 teaspoons of ground Cassia cinnamon. If your cinnamon doesn’t indicate which kind it is on the label, it’s likely Cassia cinnamon.
- Mexican oregano: If you don’t have Mexican oregano, you can use regular oregano instead.
- Spice level: The spice level of this recipe is somewhere between medium and hot. For a true medium spice, use only 3 chiles de arbol. For mild spice, don’t use any chiles de arbol.
Loved this recipe!!! It was just amazing! Thank you for making us better cooks
I made this AUTHENTIC BIRRIA. It is really good.
This was amazing!! Easy recipe to follow, went very well with the homemade corn tortillas to get all of the broth. Thanks for a great recipe!
Delicious!!
Simply amazing! I love Birria tacos, and order them whenever I can at restaurants, but now I don’t have to! This Birria is better than any I’ve had in a restaurant.
I am a vegetarian, so I made a jackfruit version. I had to make a few modifications, such as not simmering as long, and adding a few umami boosters like liquid aminos to make up for the difference in flavor. It worked really well though, and the sauce from dried chiles is truly spectacular!
I finally made the Birria! It is sooo good and we’ll have multiple meals from it over the next couple of months. It freezes and reheats really well. My husband loves it and has all kinds of plans on how we’ll be eating it.
My family can be quite picky about taco recipes, but they loved this one. I originally found a Birria recipe on a different website, but it required cooking it in an oven. I prefer not to use the oven in the summer, so I thought to myself that I should see if Isabel Eats had a birria recipe. ¡Claro que sí!
I searched long and hard, watched many videos and read tons of reviews before attempting to make quesabirria. I finally decided on your recipe and all I can say is PERFECTION! My family and I loved it. I made absolutely no changes and it was restaurant quality if not better. Although I know it’s your recipe, I feel quite accomplished. Thank you!
Amazing! I pretty much fail at most recipes I attempt. I was determined and followed your recipe exactly and it is so good. My family was surprised. I told them the Mexican came out of me. And no, I am not Mexican. Thank you!
BTW, I make all of my dishes with your recipe only! I am not a good cook. I have to follow recipes. It’s awful but on the other hand I get to make delicious dishes from you and others! Everything I’ve tried has been absolutely delicious!!
I plan to make this tomorrow. I wonder if I can use a slow cooker and/or make it ahead (tonight) and warm it back up? Thoughts? I just don’t have time to cook it and eat dinner at a reasonable hour is why.
Hi Kimmie! Yes either one of those will work!
Iam making this right now my granddaughter found birria on the internet last year and I’ve been making it ever since. May I ask what does the vinegar do to the flavor? I’m afraid to put vinegar in it because my family is picky I’ve only put it in there one time but very very little.
Hi Naomi! The vinegar taste is not strong at all. It’s mainly to help cut the savoriness and richness of all the chiles and spices, but I wouldn’t worry about you being able to taste it or it overpowering the dish.
Thank you so much, Isabel, for another winner! This is delicious! Now I am wondering your opinion about making this also with a pork butt? The beef is delicious… just wondering what you think. Again, thank you for so many wonderful recipes!
Hi Adele! I think it would be great! If you try it let us know how it turns out.
I know this is going to be the bomb! It sounds a lot like your chile colorado with some additional ingredients. I can’t wait to make this!
Made this recipe this weekend. It was a huge hit!
Isabel, I have been waiting for you to add this to your incredible collection of recipes! You hit this out of the ballpark! This is THE BEST recipe for Birria!! Gracias, gracias, gracias!! Perfecto!!!
Thanks for this recipe, Isabel. My girlfriend absolutely LOVES it. It honestly tastes better than the restaurants, especially when you make it in the pressure cooker. We cook this all the time now; at least once or twice a month. So delicious!
Can you share how you make it in the pressure cooker? Sounds like a great way to go! TIA!
This looks really similar to how my family makes it. I can’t wait to try it!
I’ve been so excited for this, I can’t wait to make it!