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Home Iconic Dishes

Birria Tacos

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published5 Sep '25 Updated6 Sep '25
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Birria Tacos – or Quesabirria – are the legendary crispy red tacos stuffed with cheesy shredded beef, served with a rich consommé for dunking. This was a beast of a recipe to crack, so I’m thrilled we got there. I’m obsessed – big flavour delivered with every single bite!

Birria Tacos

A message to Birria connoisseurs!

We’ve eaten and made a lot of Birria Tacos, and this is our idea of the perfect Birria Tacos! Here’s what makes them stand out (in our humble opinion):

  • We toss the shredded beef in sauce before stuffing for extra flavour – I can’t believe every recipe doesn’t do this.

  • We give you chilli measures in weight and cups so your sauce has enough flavour – how much is “4 anchos” really?! They vary wildly in size!

  • Our birrias are crispier because of the way we cook them (you’ll understand when you see)

  • Our consommé is not thin and watery. A deliberate choice, because it clings better to the Birria Tacos. Which means more flavour in every bite!

If you give ours a go, we’d love to know what you think!

~ Nagi & Goh (tech bro and RecipeTin’s world food expert!)

Birria Tacos

What’s that you say? You haven’t had Birria Tacos before? Then let me introduce you to them. This is what they look like on the outside:

Birria Tacos recipe

This is what they look like on the inside:

Birria Tacos recipe

And this is how you eat them:

Birria Tacos recipe

Have I got your attention? 😂

About Birria Tacos – in words!

Though not as fun as showing you pictures, here’s a bit of background. Birria Tacos are originally a Mexican taco made with slow-cooked meat (goat or beef) soaked a rich chilli broth and stuffed into tortillas.

Quesabirria or “cheese birria” is a modern twist with cheese added to the taco, which is then crisped in the chilli-stained oil, and served with flavour-packed braising liquid (the consommé) alongside for dipping.

Often just called “birria tacos” too, they became a hot craze a few years ago. We’ve long since had a goal of creating a version with real punch, because so many we’ve tried are disappointedly bland. It took a few years, but we finally got there – and here it is!!

Birria Tacos recipe

Ingredients in Birria Tacos

If you don’t use dried Mexican chillies, it’s not Birria. I’m not saying it won’t be nice, it’s just not Birria! The dried chillies are the main flavouring, and also provide the signature red colour staining the tacos.

So if you can’t get the ones we use, rather than substituting with other chillies (land of the unknown!), I’d recommend you make my Mexican Shredded Beef instead which uses everyday grocery store ingredients. Assemble/crisp the tacos like Birria. See FAQ for steps!

1. The chillies

We use a mix of three types of Mexican chillies, for their different qualities and the complexity they bring when combined: Anchos for their sweet, raisin-y flavour; guajillo for their fruity tartness and earthiness; chile de arbol for their heat.

Where to buy – Fellow Sydneysiders can find dried Mexican chillies at Mexican/Latin or well-stocked international grocers like Top Ryde Growers (my local). You can also buy them online at Fireworks food (Australia), else readers can find chillies on Amazon: guajillo (AU|UK|US); ancho (AU|UK|US); chiles de arbol (AU|UK|US).

🌶️ Spiciness: Birria is a little on the spicier side! Definitely not blow-your-head-off but a good hum. If you prefer less spicy, reduce or omit the chile de arbol which is responsible for most of the heat.

⚠️USE THE RIGHT AMOUNT OF CHILLIES⚠️

The most common flaw with Birria recipes is that they call for chillies by number like “2 dried Anchos”, yet their size and density can vary wildly. Two large ones can weigh double two small ones, which means bland-Birria if you use too little or overpowering-Birria if you overdo it (or possibly inedibly-spicy-Birria with too many Chile de Árbol). Always measure by weight for accuracy, or chop and measure in cups if you don’t have scales. I’ve given both options.

2. BIRRIA ADOBO PASTE

The base of the flavour of this whole dish is an Adobo which refers to sauces and marinades in Mexican cooking usually made with dried chillis. In addition to the dried chillies listed above, here’s what you need to make this Adobo for Birria Tacos:

  • Garlic and onion – Yes, five cloves of garlic seems like a lot! But the long simmering process turns them sweet and mellow. The onion meanwhile gives the sauce more thickness and body, and some wetness to create the paste. Use 1/2 a large onion or 1 small onion.

  • Fresh tomato – This also provides wetness to make the paste, and I think it’s nice to use a fresh tomato rather than canned, in amongst all the big flavour explosions! Tomato also adds a bit of red colour to the sauce.

  • Cumin – We’ve had many birria tacos that are quite heavy on the cumin. We love this style in its own right, but wanted a less cumin-forward flavour for our recipe. 1 tsp is the sweet spot – a little spice hum without being dominating.

  • Oregano – A classic Mexican flavouring for braised meats and rubs.

3. best beef for birria + braising liquid

You need a stewing cut of beef for Birria Tacos that can be slow cooked until tender enough to shred. Chuck is my first choice, followed by short rib. Cheeks and shanks would also work.

  • Beef – Use chuck (my preferred) or short rib. Short rib is richer and fattier, but once shredded and sauced, chuck is just as good, plus cheaper and easier to find.

    Go for large pieces of chuck and cut into tennis-ball size pieces if you can, rather than pre-cut thin steaks, for juicier results.

    Other good cuts: cheek or shank/osso bucco. Gravy beef and brisket are leaner but workable. Avoid lean steak/roast cuts like tenderloin, sirloin, prime rib, rib eye (scotch fillet).

  • Beef stock – Use low sodium beef stock (broth), a good one if you can though this is still excellent with mass produced brands like Campbells. Homemade beef stock is of course the best if you have it (you’ll need to add extra seasoning to the consommé at the end).

    I do not recommend using powdered beef stock for this recipe, which tastes more artificial than liquid stock.

  • Herbs and spices (cloves, cinnamon and bay leaves) – These warm spices are key flavourings for birria along with the chillies. Using a cinnamon stick rather than powdered really makes a difference here. It infuses with subtle flavour without overwhelming. I also use plenty of cloves because they pair so wonderfully with the beef (they sink so you won’t bite into them).

  • Apple cider vinegar – A splash of acidity helps brighten things a touch. Substitute with white or red wine vinegar, or regular white vinegar. Avoid rice vinegar, sherry vinegar or balsamic vinegar as they have distinctive flavours that aren’t suitable here.

4. TO ASSEMBLE BIRRIA TACOS

  • Tortillas – I prefer corn tortillas as they have great flavour and crisp up better. But you can use flour tortillas too, and they do crisp up as well. Corn tortillas are quite stiff when cold. So they need to be warmed to be pliable enough for folding without breaking, which we do in the pan as we pan-fry them that classic “Birria red” colour!

    Size – The ones I use are 14.5cm / 6″ wide. Feel free to use larger or smaller. You could even make quesadilla size ones!

  • Cheese – You want a good melting cheese with stretch and flavour. Our pick is Colby and Monterey Jack, but provolone or tasty cheese work too. Oaxaca is traditional but we can’t get it where we are. Mozzarella is a common choice in recipes but a bit bland – we prefer something saltier and more flavourful. That said, I’d happily use any melting cheese!

  • Diced white onion – A classic taco addition with a fresh bite and crunch. White onions are milder and better raw than yellow/brown. If you prefer, soak in water to mellow the bite, swap for red or green onions, or skip entirely.

  • Chopped coriander/cilantro – A little sprinkle for inside the tacos for a hit of freshness! If you’re one of those coriander haters, you can skip this, or substitute with chives if you still want little green specks inside.

  • Lime wedges – Present on any good plate of tacos to cut through all the fatty richness! Just a little squeeze on the taco before or after dunking.

  • Salsa (ie. Mexican chilli sauce) – Totally optional, as these tacos already pack plenty of flavour! But if you love some fresh and spicy zing, a salsa doesn’t go astray at all.

How to make Birria Tacos

Blitz the paste, sear beef then slow cook 2.5 hours until shreddable. Stuff in tortillas and pan fry until crispy!

1. Prepare the chillies

Dried chillies are tough so we need to soak to soften before blitzing into an Adobo paste.

  1. Deseed the chillies by cutting them in half lengthways and tapping/scraping out the seeds. Also trim off and discard tough stems. We remove the seeds because they are spicy and also because we don’t want gritty bits in our braise. (A few random seeds left is ok, just get rid of 98% of them).

  2. Cut chillies into 1 – 1.5cm / 1/2″ pieces.

  1. Soften the chillies by simmering in boiling water for 10 minutes. The flesh will become pasty and the skin should be pliable, not tough and wrinkly as they were when dried.

  2. Drain the chillies through a sieve, being sure to reserve 1/2 cup of the simmering water.

  1. Press out excess water from chillies (no need to squeeze out by hand, just do this in the sieve).

  2. Reserved water – We are going to use 1/2 cup for the Adobo paste (next steps).

2. birria adobo paste

Just add everything and blitz!

  1. Blitz – Put the chillies, reserved 1/2 cup of water and all the remaining adobo paste ingredients in a jug large enough to fit the head of a stick blender. Blitz until smooth – it takes about 20 to 30 seconds, moving the head around. It won’t become completely liquified but make it as smooth as you can. It should be like a chilli paste.

    Other blitzing methods – Mini food processor, NutriBullet or blender. To help it blitz, use some of the beef stock listed in the ingredients if needed, but only the minimum amount needed to make it puree. Then add the rest of the beef stock into the braising liquid as per the recipe.

3. slow cook beef

Don’t be tempted to reduce the oil in the recipe. It uses more than typical so that there’s enough of the red-stained oil floating on the surface at the end to fry the tortillas with for the signature Birria style finish!

  1. Sear beef – Heat the oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat then sear half the beef aggressively to brown it well on all sides, about 5 minutes. Remove and brown the remaining beef.

  2. Cook off adobo paste – Add the paste to the same oil and stir for 2 minutes (lower heat if it’s spitting furiously).

  1. Slow cook 2.5 hours – Add the stock, vinegar, bay leaves, spices and salt. Give it a stir then add the beef. Bring it to a simmer, cover with a lid and lower the heat so it’s simmering very gently. Slow cook for 2.5 hours until the beef is easily shreddable. (Note: Beef short ribs will take between 3 – 3.5 hours).

    During this stage the braising liquid develops stacks of flavour. This delicious liquid becomes our Birria Consommé in which the tacos are dipped. Meanwhile, the oil and rendered beef fat float to the surface and gets stained the signature red colour. We separate and use this oil to pan fry the tacos.

  2. Shred and season – Remove the beef from the Birria Consommé into a shallow pan and shred well using forks. Sprinkle with salt and toss.

  1. Sauce it! Pour 1 cup of the Birria Consommé into a clean, large non-stick pan big enough to also use to crisp the tacos later. Heat over medium-high and simmer the Consommé for about 30 seconds. Now add all the beef in and toss until it sucks up all the liquid pooled in the base of the pan. We want the beef moist but not wet (this compromises taco crispiness). Put the beef back in the shredding pan, scraping all the juices out of the non-stick pan.

    💡Note: This is not a step we’ve seen in many other Birria recipes. But honestly, we found the beef is rather bland if you don’t soak it in some braising liquid. We have plenty of that flavourful Consommé – why skip an opportunity for free extra flavour?? We’ve taken cues from Pork Carnitas (the fry-off-in-braising liquid step catapults it into ah-mazing territory!). Also Papi’s Birria Tacos, our local favourite and the only truly great Birria taco joint we know of here in Sydney, do the same.

  1. Scoop off Birria Oil – Skim off the red oil that has risen to the top of the Birria Consommé (we’ll call this the “Birria Oil”) and put it in a small bowl or container. I scoop off as much as I can also so the consommé is not overly oily. You need at least 6 tablespoons of Birria Oil to have enough to crisp the tacos. If you are short, add vegetable oil into the consommé and give it a good stir. The oil will take on red colour by mixing with the liquid. Now leave for 10 minutes to let the oil rise to the surface, and then skim.

    CRISPY / GREASY NOTE: Many recipes will tell you to dunk tortillas straight into the consommé, relying on the red oil that rises to the surface. The problem is that you’re not just coating the tortilla with oil – you’re also dragging in some of the water-based liquid so the taco won’t crisp up as well. Also, I find this makes the tacos excessively greasy. I prefer to scoop the oil off and use a controlled amount per taco.

4. make crispy, cheesy birria tacos!

OK! It’s time to make our crispy Birria tacos!!

  1. Make tortillas red (and soft!) – Put 1 teaspoon of the Birria Oil in a non-stick pan over medium heat (I use the same pan I used to toss the beef). Then place a tortilla in and use it to “wipe” the skillet to mop up all the red oil so the underside of the tortilla is covered with red. The heat will also soften the corn tortillas so it’s pliable and won’t break when folded. When the tortilla is soft (only about 10 seconds), remove onto a cutting board, red-side down.

    There’s no need to flip the tortillas, we only put the red oil on one side – the outside. I do flip in the video only to show you the red side. 🙂

  1. Repeat twice more, adding a little more oil each time, so you have 3 tortillas in total. We’re going to make 3 Birria Tacos at a time.

  1. Stuff – Working on the cutting board, top one side of each tortilla with cheese, then beef, then sprinkle with onion and coriander.

  2. Crisp it! Fold over like a quesadilla then pan-fry on medium-high heat (or medium, if your stove is strong) until crisp and the cheese is melted – about 90 seconds on each side. You won’t need to add any more oil, the oil on the surface of the tortilla should be enough.

  1. Spoon some Birria Consommé into a dipping bowl for each person.

  2. Serve the crispy Birria Tacos alongside the Consommé with some lime wedges and Mexican chilli sauce (salsa) if desired. If you want to add a garnish, sprinkle with a little white onion and/or coriander leaves. Finally, serve!

Birria Tacos recipe

Practical matters: Cooking and serving hot

One of the things I grappled with Birria Tacos was the practicality of making lots in one go, and serving hot. Nobody wants to be the slave in the kitchen pan frying tacos one at a time and sliding them hot and crispy onto the plates!

What I do is to warm 3 tortillas at a time in the red oil, then assemble as many as I need (ie. stuff and fold). Then pan-fry 3 at a time (you can get 2 pans going if you want to do more), and keep cooked tacos warm in the oven.

For big crowd cooking, a BBQ with hot plates is best so you can cook lots in one go! Set up a Birria Station 😄.

And lastly, there’s the plain tortilla-assembling method. Here you assemble using plain no-red-oil tortillas which you can fold, then pan fry after in the red oil. If using corn tortillas, you’ll need to warm the tortillas to make them pliable (just microwave). This is also useful for big batch cooking. This method needs more oil than the “skillet wiping” method we use, so as an insurance policy I’d add some extra oil into the braising liquid so I get more Birria Oil out at the end.

Birria Tacos recipe

Time to get messy!

This is how to eat Birria Tacos: Grab one, and admire that beefy, cheesy goodness and the glorious red-stained crispy shell. Now over to the Consommé … Dunk and bite, dunk and bite … (interspersed with lime and sauce squeezes)…. you get the picture!

Yeah, they are greasy and it gets messy – that’s half the fun!! Drippy, slurpy, napkin-stainingly messy, this is food so good it will invade your dreams for days to come until you go and make it!!

Enjoy! – Nagi x

** A big thanks to my brother Goh who did the heavy lifting for the development of this recipe. It was a big one, a whale we’ve been chasing for years to nail down. It wasn’t until a great Birria taco truck finally opened in Sydney that we were inspired once again to pick this up and get it across the finish line. Taco lovers around the world thank you, Goh! This is one to be proud of. 🙂 (Read about Goh’s food credentials here!)

Birria Tacos FAQ

The components (beef, consommé, red oil) keeps 4 days in the fridge, freezer 3 months. Best to cook on demand for crispy fresh tacos! Excellent for prepare ahead.

I don’t recommend substituting with other chillies because Birria is so reliant on chilli for flavour and uses quite a lot. If you use different chillies I cannot say how it will affect the flavour or spiciness. It could end up bland or inedibly spicy!

Instead, I recommend making Birria Tacos with my Mexican Shredded Beef instead which is made from grocery-store available ingredients, see below.

To make Birria Tacos with Mexican Shredded Beef, make the following changes to the recipe:

  • increase oil to 1/3 cup (to make red Birria Oil)

  • halve the canned tomatoes

  • add an extra 1 cup of beef stock

Make recipe as written, but once you shred the beef, do NOT put it back in the sauce. Instead, recent to this Birria Tacos recipe – skim off fat, toss the beef with some sauce, and assemble the tacos per this recipe. Note: the oil will not be as red (as the red colour comes from the chillies in Birria) but it will still be crispy, cheesy, beefy and delicious!

Yes, for the slow cooking step – 8 hours on low. I don’t recommend pressure cooking or instant pot as getting flavour in the consommé is so vital for this recipe and you can’t cheat time!

One of the things that’s important to specific is the quantity of dried chillies to use, because they vary so much in size! You can accidentally use twice as much or half as much if you just reach for “4 ancho chillies”.

So our recipe specifically provides weights, as well as cup measures if you don’t have scales, for each chilli. This is so important to ensure you get the right flavour balance in the sauce, and also that you don’t accidentally make it blow-your-head-off-spicy! (Actually it’s unlikely since these chillies are not as spicy as say, Asian chillies, but you know that I mean 🙂 )

Here’s some more detail and visuals on the quantity of each chilli we use.

ANCHO CHILLIES

45g = 1.6oz = ~2 x 11cm / 4.5″ long ancho = 1 cup chopped

GUAJILLO CHILLIES

25g = 0.9 oz = ~4 x 15cm / 6″ long chillies = heaped 3/4 cup once chopped.

CHILE DE ARBOL

6g = 0.2 oz = ~6 x average 8cm / 3″ long = 2 tbsp once chopped

  • Birria Tacos – Tender, Juicy Beef You Didn’t Know You Needed

  • I Thought Birria Tacos Were All Hype. Then I made THESE.

  • How To Make Birria Tacos

  • Papi’s Birria Tacos, Sydney (amazing!) – Haberfield and Carlton.

  • La Vaca Birria, San Francisco (very good)

  • … as well as a number of other taco places in Sydney that were sadly not quite up there, but we learned from.


Watch how to make it

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Birria Tacos

Birria tacos

Author: Nagi
Prep: 30 minutes mins
Cook: 3 hours hrs
Mains
Mexican
4.34 from 3 votes
Servings22 – 25 tacos
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. Birria Tacos – or Quesabirria – the legendary crispy red tacos stuffed with cheesy shredded beef dunked in rich consommé. This was a beast of a recipe to crack, so I’m thrilled we finally got there. These deliver big flavour with every single bite, the consommé is rich and full bodied with beefy chilli flavour, and wow the tacos are crisp!
Important: Birria is very reliant on chillies for flavour. So if you don't have scales for the chillies, deseed, chop, then measure using cups. Don't rely on "4 anchos", they can vary so much in size.

Ingredients

Birria adobo (paste):

  • 25 g (0.9 oz) guajillo chillies, dried (~4 pieces, heaped 3/4 cup once chopped) (Note 1)
  • 45 g (1.6 oz) ancho chillies, dried (~2-3 pieces, 1 cup once chopped) (Note 1)
  • 6 g (0.2 oz) chillies de arbol, dried (~6 pieces, 2 tbsp once chopped) (Note 1)
  • 5 garlic cloves , peeled
  • 1 small onion , roughly sliced (~tennis ball size)
  • 1 medium tomato (180g), roughly sliced
  • 2 tsp dried oregano
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1/8 tsp black pepper

Birria braising:

  • 5 tbsp vegetable oil (or canola oil) (Note 2)
  • 1.3 kg/2.6 lb chuck beef , cut into 6 large pieces (or boneless beef short ribs – 1.8kg/3.6 lb bone-in) (Note 3)
  • 2 cups beef stock / broth , low sodium
  • 10 cloves (or 1/4 tsp ground cloves)
  • 1 cinnamon stick (substitute 1/4 tsp powder, but it’s not quite the same)
  • 3 bay leaves , preferably fresh else dried
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar (or regular white vinegar, red or white wine vinegar)
  • 2 1/2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt (halve for table salt, +30% for flakes)

Beef seasoning:

  • 1/2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt

Birria Tacos:

  • 20 – 25 corn tortillas (14.5cm/6" wide) (Note 4)
  • 1 white onion , diced (Note 5)
  • 1/2 cup finely chopped coriander / cilantro leaves
  • 3 1/2 cups (350g) shredded Colby, Monterey Jack or Oaxaca cheese (if you can get it) (Note 6)
  • Lime wedges , optional
  • Your favorite salsa or hot sauce , optional
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

ABBREVIATED RECIPE:

  • Deseed and chop chillies, simmer 10 min. Strain, blitz with Adobo ingredients + 1/2 cup chilli water. Sear beef, cook off adobo paste, slow-cook beef 2 1/2 hrs (lid on). Remove meat, shred, skim fat off braising liquid ("Birria Oil"). Toss beef in skillet with 1 cup braising liquid (aka Consomme). Heat 1 tsp Birria oil over low heat, wipe pan with tortilla, remove, repeat x2 with 1/2 tsp oil each. Top tortilla with cheese, beef, onion, coriander, fold over, pan fry until crisp. Serve with Birria Consomme for dunking!

FULL RECIPE:

    Prepare chillis:

    • Use gloves if you're sensitive to working with chilli!
    • Deseed – Trim and discard stems. Cut lengthwise, remove and discard the seeds. Roughly chop into 1 – 1.5cm / 1/4" pieces.
    • Simmer – Put chillis in a large saucepan of boiling water. Simmer rapidly for 10 minutes to soften, until flesh is mushy (skin stays intact but softens).
    • Reserve 1/2 cup of chilli-simmering water. Drain chilli in a sieve, lightly press out residual liquid.

    Shredded beef:

    • Birria Adobo (paste) – Place cooked chillies, reserved 1/2 cup chilli water and remaining Adobo ingredients in a tall jug large enough to fit the head of a stick blender. Blitz for 20 seconds until as smooth as possible (it's not completely smooth, see video). You can also do this in a small food processor, NutriBullet or blender (Note 7).
    • Sear beef – Heat the oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat (I use my 24cm / 9.6" dutch oven). Add half the beef and sear each side aggressively until it's dark golden brown (about 1 – 1 1/2 minutes each side). Remove to a bowl and repeat with remaining beef.
    • Cook off Adobo – Add the paste to same pan and stir for 2 minutes in oil (lower heat if spitting aggressively).
    • Slow cook 2 1/2 hours – Add all Birria braising ingredients, stir, then add the beef. Bring to a boil then lower heat until it's simmering very gently (small gentle bubbles every now and then). Cover with a lid and cook for 2 1/2 hours, or until beef shreds easily (short ribs take 3 – 3.5 hrs). (Note 8 for slow cooker)
    • Shred – Remove the beef to a clean pan and shred well. Add the 1/2 teaspoon of salt and toss meat to distribute.
    • Birria oil – Skim off as much of the red oil floating on braising liquid surface as possible (ideally 6 tbsp+) and place in a separate bowl (this is the "Birria Oil"). Precious stuff!
    • Soak beef – Pour 1 cup of the braising liquid ("Birria Consommé") into a large non-stick pan over medium-high heat. Let it simmer for 15 seconds, then add all the beef and toss in the sauce until it's all absorbed by the beef, there should be almost none pooled in the pan. Move beef back into the shredding pan, scraping the non-stick pan clean.

    MAKE CRISPY CHEESY BIRRIA TACOS!

    • Red tortillas – Heat 1 teaspoon Birria Oil in the same non-stick pan over medium-low heat. Put a tortilla in and "wipe" around to make the underside red. Once the tortilla is soft (no need to flip) – about 10 seconds – remove to a work surface red side down. Repeat twice more, heating 1/2 teaspoon Birria Oil for each tortilla.
    • Stuff – Spread cheese on half of each tortilla, top with beef, then onion and coriander/cilantro.
    • Crisp! Fold over then pan-fry 3 Birria Tacos at a time (in the same pan) over medium-high heat for 2 minutes on each side, until golden-red and crispy.
    • Serve – Remove and serve while hot with the Birria Consommé for dunking!

    Recipe Notes:

    Yield – Makes 22 – 25 tacos (900g shredded beef once sauced), depending on how generously you stuff with beef! It is quite rich some for normal people, 3 tacos might be enough though if you’ve got big eaters around, I could see them inhaling 6 to 8!
    1. Chillis – Weight is before deseeding. This birria is on the spicier side, which is how it’s supposed to be!
    Spiciness – If you prefer less spicy, reduce or omit the chile de arbol which is responsible for most of the heat. See Ingredients section for where I get my chillies.
    Seeds are removed – this is where the main spiciness is, and also to avoid seeds floating in the sauce (visual).
    Can’t get these chillis? Use Mexican Shredded Beef instead and make it Birria-style, see FAQ for directions.
    2. Oil quantity – You need a decent amount, so there’s enough to skim off for frying the tortillas and giving them their signature red colour. Any neutral oil can be used here as long as it’s good for frying.
    3. Best beef cut – Some recipes suggest short ribs, but in my opinion chuck is juicy enough once shredded and mixed with the braising liquid. Short ribs are pricier, fattier, and fiddly to shred (need to pick through fat globs and gristle). Don’t combine chuck and short ribs, they are done at different times (yes you can over slow-cook things to the point of mushy).
    4. Corn tortillas cook up crispier than flour, and have more flavour too. 🙂 Corn is also traditional! Mine are 14.5cm/6″ wide. Flour tortillas do also work (and crisp up).
    5. White onion – substitute with red onion, green onion. For milder flavour, soak in water for 30 minutes to reduce oniony-ness.
    6. Cheese – Any melting cheese works here though mozzarella is a bit bland (I’d toss with a pinch of salt).
    7. Adobo paste blitzing – If needed, use the minimum amount of the beef stock required to properly blitz using NutriBullet or blender. Proceed with recipe as written, adding the remaining beef stock when called for in the recipe.
    8. Slow cooker – Follow recipe up to the point the liquid is simmered, bring it to a simmer on the stove and scrape the base of the pot well (to thoroughly deglaze). Transfer all liquid into a slow cooker, add beef. Slow cook 8 hours on low.
    I don’t recommend pressure cooking or instant pot as getting flavour in the consommé is so vital for this recipe and you can’t cheat time!
    9. Batch cooking – keep cooked ones warm in a 100°C/200°F oven on a rack set over a tray, but you don’t want to hold longer than ~ 10 minutes else they just aren’t as fresh. You can also assemble lots (ie stuff and fold) then pan fry.
    Leftovers – Best to pan fry fresh so they’re crispy. Excellent for prepare ahead – keep the beef (tossed in the sauce), red oil and Consommé separate, prep chopped coriander and onion. Then cook on demand! Keeps 4 days in the fridge, freezer 3 months.
    Nutrition per Birria Taco.
    Keywords: birria, birria recipe, birria tacos, birria tacos recipe, Quesabirria
    Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

    Life of Dozer

    Exciting, important day for Mr Dozer yesterday – his presence was requested at a meeting in the Big Smoke to discuss the launch of the children’s book he’s starting in – Row, Row, Row your boat with monsters! (Announcement here, in case you missed it 🥰).

    If you are picturing a quiet, calm office, everybody at their desks working earnestly – then huff, huff, huff in comes Dozer with his unmistakable excited panting sound, leaving a trail of golden fur on the grey office carpet and on the clothing of everyone who dared to wear black on that day – you’re just scratching the surface of the reality that is Dozer in an office.

    There was attempts at food swiping off the coffee table, splashing slobbery water everywhere as he gulped it down (in the publishing directors’ office, no less 🤣), barking persistently if someone dared to stop patting him (we took it in turns).

    As for the meeting agenda?

    1. Overview of Dozer’s well-being

    2. Dozer merch

    3. Dozer press and media

    4. Dozer availability for events

    5. Dozer measurements for PR

    And when was the last time you were at an office meeting when staff were on the floor instead of sitting around a boardroom table? Never? I thought so.

    Dozer with one of his favourite people, PR Queen Candice (at my publisher Pan Macmillan)

    Yes. City office meetings with Dozer are a little different to the usual. 😂

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    38 Comments

    1. Holly says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:37 pm

      These look delicious! Will definitely be making. Thank you Nagi!

      Reply
    2. Chris Payne says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:37 pm

      Hi Nagi, you mentioned where to purchase chilli’s for this dish. One that you left out is Chilli Mojo, they actually sell a Birria kit that I have used and would recommend, especially if you are a novice.
      https://www.chilemojo.com.au/?srsltid=AfmBOorbEFlTRYirJHnZ6NInSA3UPCpj8344tmQxQyO_CtPO6ESrlrJP

      Reply
    3. Tom says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:31 pm

      These look so unhealthy, I can’t wait to try them!

      Reply
    4. Sarah says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:28 pm

      Looks soooo good but would my spice tolerance need to be good because…it is not 🙃

      Reply
    5. Caitlin says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:19 pm

      I am SO excited to try this recipe!! I love birria tacos and can’t even get them anywhere near me! Have been looking for a good recipe to try and now I have one! 🌶️

      Reply
    6. Sarah says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:19 pm

      5 stars
      Noooo how could you forget gloves! Hope it wasn’t too bad afterwards. These look very involved to make but look delicious

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        September 5, 2025 at 4:29 pm

        😂Actually the chillies aren’t that spicy so it’s fine, but I realise I might have asbestos hands!!

        Reply
    7. Kim says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:16 pm

      Omg, so glad you tackled this one. I’ve made the ones from Mike from Chili Pepper Madness you are so right about the amount of dried chiles used, so much better to have measurements by weight.
      Can’t wait to make this one to see how it compares.

      Reply
    8. Mike says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:13 pm

      Nagi,
      The nutrition information is missing from this recipe.

      Oh and Dozer needs a treat!

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        September 5, 2025 at 4:14 pm

        It’s so complex! 😭 I’m trying to do it right now. – N x

        Reply
    9. Jens Laundrup says

      September 5, 2025 at 4:10 pm

      Birria tacos are not made with beef (never made with beef) unless they are an American interpretation. They are always made with goat meat, and it makes all the difference in the world. The recipe you have provided is an interesting (albeit delicious beef stew), but it is not Birria.

      Reply
      • Leah O'Connor says

        September 5, 2025 at 4:36 pm

        You can make it with any meat. Birria doesn’t mean “made from goat meat”.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birria

        Food always evolves and Birria is commonly made with other meats even in Mexico. Who can get goat anyway? (I wish I could btw, I’m sure it’s delicious)

        Reply
      • Nagi says

        September 5, 2025 at 4:14 pm

        Hi Jens! Yup, we made comment that it’s traditionally made with beef or goat and this is the modernised version where cheese got added and it’s made with beef. It’s in the about 🙂 Thanks for sharing that info! Learning the background of dishes is something we always enjoy doing. – N x

        Reply
        • Mike says

          September 5, 2025 at 4:39 pm

          Additional information about Birria can be found at

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birria

          Reply
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