Slow Cooker Mexican Beef {Instant Pot Directions Included}
This slow cooker shredded Mexican beef is incredible! Flavorful and tender, the beef is perfect for enchiladas, burritos, salads, and more.
This easy Mexican shredded beef recipe is straight up one of the most delicious recipes on the planet.
Not only is it simple to make (slow cooker or Instant Pot!), but it freezes well, and can be used a million different ways. Our favorite: ENCHILADAS.
Instant Pot Directions
The pressure cooker directions for this beef are super simple:
- Combine beef and sauce mixture in an Instant Pot or other electric pressure cooker.
- Cook on high pressure for 60 minutes. Let the pressure naturally release.
- Shred the beef into bite-size pieces.
- Simmer the remaining liquid from the Instant Pot and whisk in a cornstarch or flour slurry to thicken.
- Pour some of the thickened sauce over the beef.
Slow Cooker Directions
This shredded Mexican beef is just as easy to make in the slow cooker.
Same story as above: beef and sauce in the slow cooker. Cook on low or high until tender.
And then simmer the remaining liquid on the stovetop and thicken with the cornstarch or flour slurry.
The shredded beef is insanely delicious. I mean, the flavor, is just absolutely through the roof.
The beef is perfect in enchiladas, burritos, quesadillas, chimichangas, salads and more.
Or it can serve as a simple meal served over rice with toppings and some black beans on the side. So, so good.
Enchilada How-To
Most often, I use the slow cooker Mexican beef in enchiladas. It’s my family’s favorite application of the beef (and it makes a really fantastic take-in meal).
To assemble enchiladas:
- Spread some of the leftover sauce on the bottom of a baking pan.
- Roll some of the saucy beef and a sprinkle of cheese in corn or flour tortillas (I usually do some of both since my family is divided when it comes to Team Flour or Team Corn tortillas).
- Place the enchiladas seam-side down in the baking pan.
- Smother with sauce and cheese and bake until hot and bubbly.
These saucy, cheesy, flavorful enchiladas are next-level delicious.
A Very Popular Recipe
This shredded Mexican beef recipe, thanks to it’s simplicity and deliciousness, has garnered thousands of fans over the years.
Christie says: Made these last night. Loved them for dinner, and they were amazing for lunch today! They really are better than the restaurant ones. Thanks Mel for another great recipe!!
Ann B. writes: Rave reviews from the family. Absolutely wonderful! Love the seasoning and the sauce is crazy good. Thank you for another winning recipe!
Lauren says: 100x better than a Mexican restaurant. Best Recipe EVER!
Alanna writes: Amazing! made exactly as stated, but I did strain the sauce before pouring into the skillet, because my salsa was on the chunky side. Made for a family gathering and they disappeared fast!!!
If you have yet to make this recipe, what are you waiting for?? I hope you love it!
What to Serve With This
- The Best Cornbread
- Fresh Fruit
- Roasted Broccoli or Skillet Green Beans
- Black Beans and Rice
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Slow Cooker Mexican Beef
Ingredients
Shredded Beef:
- 2-3 pound boneless chuck or sirloin beef roast
- 2 cups low-sodium beef broth
- 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
- 1 cup salsa (green or red salsa)
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 teaspoon chili powder
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon pepper
- 2 tablespoons cornstarch or flour
Enchiladas:
- 10 6 or 7-inch flour or corn tortillas
- 1 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese
- 1 ½ cups shredded Monterey Jack cheese
- Fresh cilantro, optional
Instructions
- For the slow cooker: in a 4- or 5-quart slow cooker, add the beef roast. Whisk together the broth, vinegar, salsa, cumin, chili powder, onion powder, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Pour over the roast, cover the slow cooker, and cook on low for 8-10 hours until the beef is tender and shreds easily.
- For the Instant Pot/Electric Pressure Cooker: in a 6-quart electric pressure cooker, add the beef roast. Whisk together the broth, vinegar, salsa, cumin, chili powder, onion powder, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Pour over the roast, secure the lid on the pressure cooker and close the valve. Cook on high pressure for 60 minutes. Let the pressure naturally release for 15 minutes (or all the way). Release the remaining pressure.
- Remove the roast and place in a large bowl or shallow pan (like a 9X13-inch pan). Shred into bite-size pieces with two forks.
- Turn the Instant Pot to sauté and bring the liquid to a simmer (for a slow cooker, pour the liquid into a saucepan and bring to a simmer).
- In a small bowl, whisk together the cornstarch (or flour) with about 2-3 tablespoons water (use a bit more water if using flour). Add the slurry to the simmering liquid, whisking constantly, and cook, stirring constantly, until the mixture is thickened slightly, 4-5 minutes. Add additional salt and pepper to taste, if needed.
- Pour about 1/2 cup sauce in with the beef and toss. Use as desired (instructions for enchiladas below).
- To make enchiladas: Spread about 1/2 cup sauce on the bottom of a 9X13-inch pan.
- Toss the cheddar and Monterey Jack cheeses together.
- Spread shredded beef in the center of each tortilla. Sprinkle with cheese. Roll up and place in the pan, seam-side down.
- Spread 1-2 cups of sauce over the top of the enchiladas. Sprinkle with cheese.
- Bake at 350 degrees for 20-30 minutes until bubbly and hot. Let the enchiladas rest for 5-10 minutes before serving.
- Sprinkle with fresh cilantro, if desired, and serve.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: adapted slightly from Jamie G (a super sweet blog reader who sent it to me; it’s her favorite meal!)
Recipe originally posted January 2015; updated September 2022 with new photos, recipe notes, etc.
This is a perfect, kid friendly recipe! We loved it!
I served mine with homemade mango salsa
I can’t thank you enough for this recipe, Mel! It took our (much-loved) beef enchiladas to an entirely new level! Restaurant-worthy? No – much better than any we’ve had at a restaurant! The sauce/drippings are out of this world. I’ve never been able to find an enchilada sauce that compared well with our favorite Mexican restaurant (smooth and creamy), so I pureed the sauce (made with Newman’s Own Salsa – yum!) with my immersion blender, and thickened as directed. I had more sauce than needed, but no worries – it went in the freezer for future use. I’ve been an avid gardener for years, but I’ve never made my own salsa, despite an abundance of the necessary ingredients – we don’t eat it often enough for it to be worth it. Thanks to your recipe, we will now have a dedicated ‘salsa garden’ section, just so I can make my own for more enchiladas!
Thank you so much, Nikki! So, so happy you loved this recipe!
Amazing! made exactly as stated, but I did strain the sauce before pouring into the skillet, because my salsa was on the chunky side. Made for a family gathering and they disappeared fast!!!
Unbelievable!!!!! This meat is incredibly special! And just as important is the fact that I can depend on it to come out exactly perfect as the times before. I make a huge amount, 6-7 pounds, at a time for that evenings meal and to put up for the deep freeze. Heaven help me if word gets out amongst my grown children. They will drive over an hour to pick some up for their own families! If that is not a testament to how good this is then I am at a loss as to what is. Thank you so very much for the fabulous recipe and the memories it has in turn inspired.
So I wanted to make this today but didn’t get the roast in my crock pot in time to be ready for dinner tonight. I have pressure cooker and see from the other comments it has been done before in the instant pot. But have you done it both ways? Which way does the meat turn out better? Cause if it’s better in the crock pot, I will probably just pot to wait until tomorrow.
I haven’t made this recipe in the IP, but I love making other roast-type recipes in the Instant Pot. I think it would work great!
how would you modify this for a pressure cooker?
I’d cook it for about 60-65 minutes on high pressure.
I figured I should probably leave a comment. We use this recipe (for the meat) all the time! We use it to make enchiladas, tacos, burrito bowls, etc. Everyone loves it!!
Have you ever made this in the Instantpot? If so what time and pressure did you use?
It should work pretty well cooking at high pressure for 55-65 minutes (I usually cut meat roasts into large chunks for the IP).
Have you made this in the Instant Pot yet? Just wondering how it came out if you did!!
I haven’t, but I think several others have. I think I’m going to try cooking it at 60 minutes high pressure and see how it goes.
I made this in the Instant Pot – a 3 lb chuck roast for 70 mins on high pressure. Natural release. Then I took the meat out and shredded it. Turned the Instant Pot back to Saute and thickened the sauce with corn starch like the recipe calls for. I did everything else the same! Made it super easy and easy clean-up! Thanks Mel!
Awesome! Thanks, Trena!
Hi Mel, this recipe sounds fabulous! Would it be possible to use a Dutch oven to slow cook the beef instead of a slow cooker (I don’t have one)? If so, how many hours do you suggest to simmer the beef?
I haven’t tried it, but you could experiment. Maybe 3 hours at 225 degrees or so?
You can do this in a Dutch oven .. brown each side in Dutch oven first then put it in Follow directions but cook on 325° for a few hours covered and when it’s easy to shred.. about 3-4 hours for 4 lbs…take it out
Sweet mother of pearl, these are so good. Thanks, Mel!
We love enchiladas, but whenever I make them, they come out gummy and soggy. My husband has suggested that I not add sauce to the bottom of the pan. Do you ever have soggy enchiladas?
I’m assuming you use corn tortillas?
I actually use flour tortillas quite a bit, and I agree, they can get kind of soft. You can just lightly grease the bottom of the pan instead of putting sauce down and that might help, like your husband suggested! Are you using flour tortillas?
Do you ever use the slow cooker setting on your instant pot? I wanted to try it out but wanted to make sure it’s just as good as using my regular slow cooker (or hopefully better:)
I have used it a few times on both the 6- and 8-quart models, and honestly? I hate it. I’ve had the worst luck. I’ve tried altering the settings (between the low, normal, high) and still can’t figure out the sweet spot, so I always just use my old slow cooker.
Delish and Easy!! Everyone loved it. I make it with corn tortillas so it’s gluten free!
These were delicious and so easy! I made them for a family lunch and we all loved them.
I made the recipe for slow cooker Mexican shredded beef exactly as she wrote it and it
was delicious! This was much better than any
restaurant enchilada. It will definitely be made frequently in the future.
Thank you so much for this recipe! I made this and was a little skeptical but WOW by far the best beef enchilada ever!!
Amazing. You must make this as your next dinner meal. I literally have been thinking about it since I made it last. DELICIOUS! Thank you so much Mel!
All l can say it was fantastic
For sure will makes these again. I added a bit more broth and strained the sauce other then that followed the recipe.
The enchiladas were so so good. Everyone loved them, the only problem I had was my flour and corn tortillas got very soggy. What would you suggest to avoid this. Thank you
If using corn tortillas you should dip each tortilla in hot oil for about 3 seconds. This softens the tortillas and keeps them from absorbing the sauce and getting soggy. Just do all your tortillas and stack them on a plate with paper towels. Let them cool a bit then make them into enchiladas. Warm and serve right away. Enchiladas really can’t be made ahead if you don’t want them soggy.
Dearest Mel,
Our family thanks you yet again for an amazing recipe. We are from Texas and know good enchiladas when we taste them. My husband said that these are the best beef enchiladas he has ever eaten In. His. Life. Yup. High praise indeed. I don’t really like shredded beef and I completely loved the tenderness and flavor. Thank you thank you thank you!!!
Yay!
The enchiladas were a huge hit! The recipe is excellent with clear instructions and readily available ingredients. Not having to use canned enchilada sauce was a big plus. I cut the roast in half and put it in the slower cooker for about five hours and it came out really tender and flavorful. Thank you!
This was the best beef I have had in a long time. So tender and flavorful. I’m making it again tonight. Thanks!
You were delicious, like a smothered beef tamale…and I don’t even really like shredded beef. Thanks Mel!
Mel, can this be cooked on high for 4 to 5 hours instead of low for 8 to 10 hours? Will it make the meat tougher? Thanks for sharing your great recipes!
Could certainly try! I usually cook on low because the meat is super tender, but it may work just as well on high.
You really out did yourself with this one. I can’t begin to explain how perfect these are. WOW. I have a new favorite. We used homemade salsa. Next time I will try it with carnitas.
Mel thank you so much for these astounding beef enchiladas. I made them once before and I don’t even really like Mexican food but seriously if it all tasted this awesome I would eat it daily. Thank you for yet again another winner in my books!
I don’t see ‘chunks’ in your sauce, from the salsa. Are you straining them out or blending them??
My homemade salsa is a bit chunky, so I’m not sure what I should do…and I’m making them tomorrow! Ahhhhhh…the stress, lol.
Thanks 🙂
The salsa I use isn’t super chunky – but you can either blend the salsa before adding it to the recipe…otherwise, the texture from chunky salsa would be totally fine.
Would you recommend freezing totally assembled before cooking or put in freezer after cooking? have you noticed a difference in taste and quality? thank you! making these for Christmas Eve this year!
I usually freeze before baking. 🙂
These sound amazzzzzing! I’m going to make them for friends this week. I am wondering though if I make them on Wednesday will they be ok in the refrigerator until Thursday night if I don’t freeze them? I’m using corn tortillas and don’t want them to get too soggy.
The tortillas will probably soften a bit, but I think they should be fine.
I made this recipe once before and it was better than any Mexican restaurant I have ever been. I am making it again tonight because it was gobbled up by my family, kids and all. Love! Thanks!
You know those dinners that are so good that you’re literally counting down the hours until lunchtime the next day so you can consume the leftovers? This is one of those meals. I’ve only made them twice so far, but they are out of this world delicious. Even the naysayers who claim they don’the like shredded beef lick their plates clean. Thanks for this spectacular, amazing, makes-me-look-like-a-rockstar dinner!!
Do you think (once frozen) you could thaw this in the fridge to cut down on cooking time? Or would that just make the tortillas mushy?
Yes, you could definitely thaw in the refrigerator. The tortillas might be a bit softer than normal but I’ve done it like that and it works great.
I was thinking of making this in the IP today. Any suggestions on using slow cooker mode vs. pressure cooking? Thanks!!
Slow cooker in the IP, I’d use the same instructions in the recipe but for pressure cooking, if your roast is pretty average sized (a few inches thick), I’d probably do 60-75 minutes at high pressure.
My husband said these are really good. Almost too good! I served these with your Mexican chopped salad. I left out the cheese. It was a great light side dish to the flavorful enchiladas. I have never made enchiladas before that I liked as much as these. BTW my daughter thinks we need Mel appreciation day. We love your recipes that much!
I noticed you didn’t use enchilada sauce. Don’t recall any recipe that didn’t use it. Was there a reason? I’m making them today. Thanks.
The recipe doesn’t need enchilada sauce but you could use it if you like.
THE BEST ENCHILADAS EVER!!!! I changed it up a little bit to cut some calories(Dr. orders) I used white tortilla’s, for the cheese I used 2% sharp cheddar and a Mexican blend( Cheddar, Monterey Jack, Asadero, and Queso Quesadilla.
I had a baby not too long ago. How do people work and then have to cook when they get home with babies?! Oh I know…the crock pot! I made this yesterday for my husband and mother in law. Seriously so easy and so good. We devoured it. Thank you so much for giving me a simple and tasty week night meal.
I ate at this amazing food truck a few weeks ago that had beef quesadillas. I decided to recreate using this beef recipe. I added some sautéed veggies to the quesadillas–mushrooms, sweet potatoes, onions, zucchini and jalapeño–and made a sour cream dipping sauce. It was SO good. I put it on the menu again this week.
Any idea how this would do in an instant pot?
Hi! I live in Malaysia and I tried out this recipe last night for dinner. I cannot tell you how INCREDIBLE and AWESOME it was… my family loved in and the slow cooker beef came out just nice. Thanks a million for such a fabulous recipe. I’m sure I will make it again… 🙂
I’ve been following this basic recipe for about 20 years now, with minor variations. I originally saw it in a local newspaper. When I was on the board of a local youth group, I took it as potluck for an annual Xmas party, and it became the main entree for the next few years.
Most importantly, this dish is the main reason my wife agreed to marry me. If I make it a few times a year, she agrees to stay married.
I wonder, could you use a roast that is frozen?
I would probably thaw first so it is optimally tender after cooking.
These are absolutely wonderful and melt in your mouth. They also freeze and reheat extremely well, which I love. In fact I’m just about to take some out of the freezer…:) SO good.
I made this with 2.5 lbs of skirt steak and it work wonderfully. The only thing I’ll add about making it with skirt steak is after cooking it, we shredded it when I wish we had cut it into chunks. The reason being the shreds were long and trying to cut your enchilada, with a fork, into a bite size piece was difficult as the meat was just long shreds and pulled all out of the tortilla. Nothing bad about it, just an annoyance to eat with just a fork.
Also, I used Herdez brand of Salsa Taquera as my salsa and it tasted great as an enchilada sauce. Good recipe!!
The only meat my husband will eat is chicken. I wonder if this recipe would work out the same? We shall see! It’s what’s for dinner
I’ve made this 3 times already, it is a family favorite!
Hi Mel. I want to make these on our family vacation. instead of trying to transport the fully made in pans, do you think I could make the beef ahead of time, freeze it with the sauce and then assemble them at a later date?
Absolutely!
The meat is amazing! So tender…scrumptious and mouth-watering. Thank you! I have a quick question about freezing. I froze the enchiladas two days ago, and when I baked them tonight the bottom of the enchiladas stuck to the pan. Any suggestions on how to prevent this from happening? I really want to make these again as they were so incredibly tasty…but I’d really like the bottom too! : )
Hi Ruth – was your pan well-greased? You might try covering the bottom of the pan with a little more of the sauce from the meat – that could help the enchiladas not stick. Also, if you baked them from frozen, try decreasing the heat slightly so they bake longer but more moderately.
Thank you so much for your response, Mel! I appreciate it. I think both of your suggestions are great ones. I didn’t grease the pan before I put the sauce down as the base. For the future, do you think I should coat the pan in PAM before I put the sauce in? Thanks for everything. My sister-in-law told me about your blog/website and now I am addicted. 🙂
Thanks, Ruth. 🙂 Yes, a light coating of nonstick cooking spray will definitely help!