Authentic birria is an iconic meat stew from the Mexican state of Jalisco of lamb, goat or beef cooked low and slow in chili sauce, great for tacos. Serve it in a bowl or as birria tacos.
Authentic Mexican Birria
We're cooking up a flavorful Mexican meat stew in the Chili Pepper Madness kitchen, my friends. It's called Birria, and you're going to want to make this right away. I get this anytime we go to Mexico, and it's a favorite at our local Mexican restaurant.
Mike's Recipe Highlights
- The combination of dried ancho and guajillo chilies gives this recipe an unforgettable flavor, and the chiles de arbol add just the right amount of spicy heat.
- You can make this recipe with beef or lamb, and the slow cooking process results in meat that is fall-apart-tender, which everyone loves.
What is Birria?
Birria is a classic Mexican meat stew or soup made with slowly braised meat - usually lamb, goat, or beef - with chilies and spices. It is one of the most iconic Mexican dishes, originally from Jalisco, Mexico, though has spread throughout Mexican and the United States because of its addictive flavor.
Birria was traditionally made with goat, as local Mexicans were given an overabundance of goats by the Conquistadors during the Conquest of Mexico.
The name, "birria", means "worthless" or "without value", a pejorative term given by the Spanish who found eating goat beneath them.
Today, however, beef is more commonly used, as it is easier to obtain and is less lean, though it is delicious with any of these cuts of meat or what you can commonly find in grocery stores.
Authentic birria is usually served a couple different ways - as a soup or stew, or as birria tacos. The soup/stew version is more classic and often served at family events or large gatherings.
This way, the meat is shredded and served into bowls with the braising liquid, or birria consome.
As tacos, the meat is shredded and served over warmed corn tortillas dipped in the braising liquid, with the consome in a small bowl on the side.
There are different ways to make it, with different cuts of meat and variations to the chilies and seasonings. This is my preferred version adapted from a couple of my favorite Mexican cookbooks and some experimentation.
It's a beef birria recipe (birria de res).
As a spicy food lover, I think you will love this recipe. It will smell amazing in the house with the meat cooking, enough to drive you wild with hunger.
Let's talk about how to make birria, shall we?
Featured Reader Comment
From Christina: "I wanted to make this for Christmas so I tested it and had my Latina friend from Mexico try it and quote '"'The most authentic Birria I've had in a long time'. So I doubled the meat and there is barely anything left. Absolutely DELICIOUS!"
Birria Ingredients - Birria Consome and Birria de Res
NOTE: The full ingredients list with measurements and recipe steps are listed in the recipe card at the bottom of the post.
- Dried Peppers. Use ancho peppers and guajillo peppers. I also use a few chiles de arbol for a bit of extra spice and heat.
- Olive Oil. For cooking.
- Vegetables. Fresh tomatoes, roasted tomatoes, onion, garlic cloves. You can also toss in some fresh peppers, if desired.
- Seasonings. Mexican oregano, sea salt, cinnamon stick, cumin, ginger, black pepper. You can use others, like bay leaves.
- Vinegar. I prefer apple cider vinegar for this recipe.
- Beef Stock. Or beef broth.
- Meat. Use lamb, goat or beef. Lamb shoulder or lamb belly are hugely popular options. For beef, use brisket, beef chuck roast or beef shank.
How to Make Birria - the Recipe Method
Heat a cast iron pan to medium-high heat dry toast the dried chilies 1-2 minutes per side, until the skins darken. This helps loosen the oils and develops flavor.
Add the toasted peppers in a large bowl and cover with hot water. Steep for 20 minutes to soften.
Heat the oil in the same pan to medium heat and cook the onion and tomatoes 5 minutes to soften, then the garlic for 1 minute, stirring.
Add the cooked onion, tomatoes and garlic to a food processor along with the softened chilies and add to the food processor, but reserve the soaking liquid.
Add the seasonings with the vinegar and 1 cup beef stock then process until smooth. It should be fairly thick. You can strain if you’d like for a smoother sauce.
See the RECIPE NOTES below.

Cut the meat into large chunks and add to a large bowl. Pour the birria sauce over them and rub it into the meat.
Cover and marinate the meat in the refrigerator for 2 hours minimum. Overnight is better.
Add the meat with all of the marinade, the chopped roasted tomatoes and remaining 3 cups beef stock or broth to a large pot or Dutch oven.
This broth will not only braise the meat, but becomes your birria consomé, and it's the most important part of the dish. I have a full post on Birria Sauce (Consomé) if you want to go deeper on how to make and use it.
TIP: Want extra flavor? Tap the meat dry, sear it in the hot pan with some oil, then add the marinade, roasted tomatoes and stock.

Cover and cook at medium heat for 3 hours, or until the meat is fork tender and easy to shred.
Add more beef stock or some of the reserved soaking liquid if needed for a soupier birria.
I removed the meat to make it easier to shred.
Then added the shredded meat back to the pot to simmer a bit more before serving.

Serve the braised birria stew meat into bowls as a soup, or shred the meat and serve it up onto warm corn tortillas as birria tacos, with the reserved liquid birria consome from the pot as a side soup/broth.
Adjust for salt and pepper. Garnish with onion, fresh cilantro, chili flakes, squeeze of lime.
Boom! Done! Your Mexican birria is ready to serve. This meat is so incredibly tender and flavorful.
Serving Birria
How are you going to enjoy yours? As a soup or stew in a bowl? Or as birria tacos (tacos de birria)? Quesabirria tacos? Try this birria ramen recipe! Or my birria quesadillas recipe! Or birria nachos! Birria pizza!
Go make some delicious red tacos!

Recipe Tips & Notes
Meat Options. You can make birria with many different cuts of meat. Use lamb meat, goat meat or beef. Lamb shoulder or lamb belly are hugely popular options.
For the cut of beef, use brisket, chuck roast or beef shank. Short ribs are great, too. You can realistically make this with any cut of meat, but the best are the tougher cuts that require low and slow cooking.
You'll get more flavor with bone-in meats.
Strain the Pepper Puree. For a much smoother sauce, strain it through a fine sieve to remove any lingering bits if needed. Also, some people find the skins of anchos and guajillos to be slightly bitter, and straining can reduce this.
This recipe can easily be adapted for your slow cooker or Instant pot. See my Slow Cooker Birria Recipe for full instructions.
You can also make the birria sauce ahead of time as a time saver. See my Birria Sauce (Consomé) recipe for the full breakdown of the sauce, its flavor profile, and how to use it across the whole birria cluster.
Storage and Leftovers
Store any leftover birria in the fridge in a sealed container for up to 5 days. You can easily reheat it gently on the stovetop to enjoy again.
Birria is great for freezing. You can freeze it for up to 6 months in vacuum sealed containers.
That's it, my friends. I hope you enjoy this Mexican birria recipe with consome. Let me know if you make it. I'd love to hear how it turned out for you and how you served yours. Keep it spicy!

This Recipe Is In our Cookbook - FLAVOR MADNESS
Did you know that you can find this recipe in our new cookbook FLAVOR MADNESS? It's waiting for you on PAGE 147.
Try Some of My Other Popular Mexican Recipes
Try Some of My Other Popular Soup and Stew Recipes

Got any questions? Ask away! I’m happy to help. If you enjoy this recipe, I hope you’ll leave a comment with some STARS. Also, please share it on social media. Don’t forget to tag us at #ChiliPepperMadness. I’ll be sure to share! Thanks! — Mike H.

Mexican Birria Recipe
Ingredients
- 5 ancho peppers stems and seeds removed
- 5 guajillo peppers stems and seeds removed
- 2-3 chiles de arbol optional, for spicier
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 large white onion chopped
- 3 large tomatoes chopped
- 5 cloves garlic chopped
- 1 tablespoon dried Mexican oregano
- 1 tablespoon sea salt or to taste
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon cumin
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1 teaspoon black pepper
- ½ cup apple cider vinegar
- 2 large roasted tomatoes chopped
- 4 cups beef stock separated
- 3.5 pound lamb shoulder or you can use beef shank or chuck roast
Instructions
- Heat a large pan to medium heat and add the dried peppers. Dry toast them in the hot pan 1-2 minutes per side, until the skins darken.
- Remove from heat and add the toasted peppers to a large bowl. Cover with hot water and steep 20 minutes, or until softened.
- While the peppers are rehydrating, heat the olive oil in the same pan to medium heat.
- Add the onion and tomatoes and cook for 5 minutes to soften.
- Add the garlic and cook another 1 minute, stirring.
- Add the cooked onion, tomatoes and garlic to a food processor.
- Remove the softened chilies and add to the food processor, but reserve the soaking liquid.
- Add the seasonings to the food processor along with the vinegar and 1 cup beef stock. Process until smooth. It should be fairly thick. You can strain if you’d like for a smoother sauce. See the RECIPE NOTES below.
- Cut the lamb (or beef) into large chunks and add to a large bowl.
- Pour the birria sauce over them and rub it into the meat. Cover and marinate the meat in the refrigerator for 2 hours minimum. Overnight is better.
- Optional: Sear the Meat. For extra depth of flavor, remove the meat from the marinade and pat it dry (reserve the marinade for later). Heat a drizzle of oil in your Dutch oven or large pot over medium-high heat. Working in batches, sear the meat on all sides until browned, 2-3 minutes per side.
- When you’re ready to cook, add the meat with all of the marinade, the chopped roasted tomatoes and remaining 3 cups beef broth to the large pot. Cover and cook at medium heat for 3 hours, or until the meat is fork tender and easy to shred. Add more beef stock or some of the reserved soaking liquid if needed for a soupier birria.
- Serve the braised birria into bowls as a soup, or shred the meat and serve it up onto tortillas as birria tacos, with the reserved liquid consome from the pot as a side soup/broth.
Video
Notes
Nutrition Information

Birria FAQ
What is birria made of?
Birria is a slow-braised meat stew featuring two main things: a tough cut of meat and a dried chili sauce. The sauce is the soul of the dish, with toasted ancho and guajillo peppers blended with tomatoes, garlic, onion, and warm spices like cumin, cinnamon, and Mexican oregano. The meat braises in that sauce low and slow for several hours until it's falling-apart tender, and the braising liquid becomes the consomé, the rich, deeply spiced broth served alongside.
Traditionally the meat is lamb or goat. Beef is more common today, particularly chuck roast, brisket, or beef shank. All work well; the key is a tough cut that benefits from long, slow cooking.
What is the difference between birria and barbacoa?
Both are slow-cooked Mexican meat dishes but they're distinct. Barbacoa is traditionally cooked underground or steamed, usually with beef cheeks or head. Birria is braised in a chili-based sauce, which gives it that deep red color and the consomé broth, something barbacoa doesn't produce. Birria has more complexity in the sauce and the broth is a feature of the dish. See my barbacoa recipe for a deeper dive.
What chiles are used in birria?
The classic combination is ancho and guajillo peppers, with chiles de arbol optional for heat. Anchos are mild and earthy with a faint smokiness, running around 1,000-2,000 Scoville units. Guajillos are fruity and mild with a bright red color that gives birria its signature deep hue. Chiles de arbol are the heat source , around 15,000-30,000 Scoville units, and they're optional in this recipe. Leave them out for a mild birria, add 2-3 for medium, more if you want real heat. Some recipes add chipotle for additional smokiness, or a chile negro for depth.
Can you make birria ahead of time?
Yes, and it's actually better the next day. The flavors deepen considerably after a night in the fridge. Make the full batch, let it cool, then refrigerate the meat and consomé separately in airtight containers for up to 5 days. Reheat gently on the stovetop before serving. Birria also freezes exceptionally well, up to 6 months in vacuum-sealed containers. This makes it perfect for batch cooking: make a large pot and use it across multiple meals - birria tacos one night, birria ramen the next, quesabirria after that.
What's the best cut of beef for birria?
Chuck roast is my go-to, affordable, easy to find, and turns incredibly tender after 3 hours of low and slow braising. Beef shank adds more gelatin to the consomé, which gives it a richer, silky body. Brisket works well and has great fat content. Short ribs are excellent if you want extra richness in the broth. Bone-in cuts generally produce a more flavorful consomé than boneless, so mix in a bone-in piece if you can. Whatever you choose, avoid lean cuts. They don't break down the same way and tend to dry out.
How do you serve birria?
The two classic ways are as a soup or stew in a bowl with consomé, or as birria tacos with the consomé on the side for dipping. Beyond those, birria works in quesabirria tacos (with melted cheese), birria ramen, birria quesadillas, birria nachos, birria pizza, and more. Get creative.
NOTE: This post was updated on 4/28/26 to include new information, including FAQs and clarification on recipe instructions. The recipe was not changed.



Amy says
Are the measurements for Mexican oregano for dried, or does it need to be reduced to a teaspoon of dried if you had used fresh? Its my first time cooking with it, so I wanted to be sure.
Mike Hultquist says
Amy, it is for dried Mexican oregano. If using fresh, you can use 2-3 tablespoons. Enjoy!
Alexis says
I made this with pork chops yesterday and just finished eating and wow, it’s delish! I added some lime juice during the last half hour of cooking and it hit the spot. I’ll be making it again!
Mike H. says
I am happy to hear that, Alexis. Enjoy!
Paul says
Hi Mike,
That sounds like just the thing that would go with the kid goat meat I’ve just got out of the freezer. I’ll halve the recipe due to the amount of meat I have but chillis will be rounded up to the nearest whole.
I’ll let you know the result when I’ve cooked it.
I have every faith in this recipe as others from this site that I’ve cooked have always been fabulous.
Mike Hultquist says
Enjoy, Paul! Perfect with goat!
Christa says
Can I substitute some of the tomatoes for a can of whole peeled tomatoes? I am a little low on fresh tomatoes and I have a can of that. Thanks!
Mike Hultquist says
You sure can, Christa! No problem at all. Enjoy.
Vannessa Inabinette says
hi. so is the vinegar added to the marinade?
Mike Hultquist says
Vannessa, yes, the vinegar is added to the marinade as mentioned in the recipe, which all gets added to the pot later on. Enjoy.
Kayla says
Hi! Can I make this in a crockpot? If so, are there instructions on how?
Mike H. says
Kayla, you surely can. Follow the recipe through step 10. Then, for a crockpot, add the remaining ingredients (no changes needed) to it and cook on high for 4-5 hours, or low for 7-8, or until the meat is nice and tender. Let me know how it turns out for you!
Kristen says
Hi, I can’t find Mexican oregano near me (I’m on an island :/). Any suitable substitutes?
Mike Hultquist says
Kristen, marjoram is the best substitute, though you can use Italian oregano, though use a bit less.
Kristen says
Thank you!
Marie says
Hello!
I just butchered 4 goats and I am planning on making this recipe for this coming sunday. I have legs and shoulders both marinating in spices and wine until tomorrow when I start the birria. Should I keep the meat on the bone since it is so fresh to keep it moist? Or cut in to chunks as the recipe shows? I have fresh chili peppers in my garden, can these be used in lieu of the other chili’s? Or in addition?
Mike Hultquist says
Marie, it's usually cut into chunks, but you can leave it on the bone, then slice/shred the meat when it's done. It will take longer to cook, but I'm sure it will be worth it! You can use fresh peppers, but dried peppers (particularly the ones in this recipe) have a unique flavor that really make the dish. I would definitely use the dried pods, but you can add in some of your own fresh peppers. Let me know how it turns out! I'd love to see some pics on social media! Tag me @chilipeppermadness if you do!
Raksha says
Absolutely delicious. The whole family enjoyed it. Excellent recipe. Thank you
Mike Hultquist says
Great! Thanks for sharing this, Raksha! Glad you all enjoyed it.
Heather says
I made this a few weeks ago. It was so delicious. My family loved it. I strained the sauce and froze the remaining sauce. Just used it again and it’s even better. This sauce has so much flavor! This is my favorite recipe!!
Mike Hultquist says
Excellent! I love that you froze the sauce and used it again! Super smart! Thanks, Heather. Glad you enjoyed it.
Brian says
great recipe. I do add a mixture of beef broth/stout beer half and half. and I leave out the cinnamon usually. but I love your recipe exact as well tried a few variations as it's hard to source peppers in this city right now. but I made it work with what I had left just wanted to tripple it lol
Mike Hultquist says
Glad you enjoyed it, Brian.
Clark in Texas says
It's on! I threw a mild hatch chili in because they are in season here. It all smelled good enough to eat raw. My son has become enamored with his own Birria recipe - so now we have a friendly competition.
I added 3 t-bone bones that I had saved for the broth. Used beef ribs and a neckbone to boot. This is going to be EPIC!
Mike Hultquist says
Boom! Sounds awesome to me, Clark!
BillC in SD says
Hi Mike. I just found your site, signed up and am totally stoked you've included so many of my favorites! My first stab is going to be the birria. Quick question: Do you see anything to be gained by searing/browning (in my case) the beef chuck chunks before marinating? Thanks!
Mike Hultquist says
Thanks, Bill. I hope you find many recipes you enjoy! For birria, yes, searing the meat would be a nice flavor addition, and yes, I would do so before marinating. Let me know how it turns out for you. Enjoy!
Leland says
Hi, I’m making your Birria recipe, and next time I want to use the peppers in powder form how much would I use? can’t wait to try this recipe!
Mike Hultquist says
Leland, use 2-3 tablespoons each of ancho and guajillo powder, and 1 teaspoon chile de arbol. But make a note and adjust the next time to your taste.