These 4 Mexican Braises Will Jump-Start Your Fall

By
Daniel Gritzer
Daniel Gritzer
Editorial Director
Daniel joined the Serious Eats culinary team in 2014 and writes recipes, equipment reviews, articles on cooking techniques. Prior to that he was a food editor at Food & Wine magazine, and the staff writer for Time Out New York's restaurant and bars section.
Learn about Serious Eats' Editorial Process
Updated July 01, 2019
20120423-barbacoa-tacos-primary.jpg
Welcome fall with a flavorful Mexican braised meat. . J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

Let's take a quick test. I'll fill in my answers here, and you can answer for yourself as you read:

Q: Do you crave Mexican food?

A: Is there something wrong with me if I say ALWAYS?

Q: Do you crave braised dishes?

A: Have you noticed how cold it's getting outside? I'm not exactly craving sno-cones right now. (I wouldn't turn one down though...)

If you answered as I did, then you passed the test. Your reward? These four Mexican and New Mexican braised meat dishes from Kenji that I pulled from the Serious Eats archives. Here's a quick rundown on each one.

The Beefiest Barbacoa

20120423-barbacoa-tacos-primary.jpg
Welcome fall with a flavorful Mexican braised meat. J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

To make this extra-beefy barbacoa, Kenji reaches for both beef chuck and also oxtails, and then layers in even more flavor with multiple chilies and a splash of fish sauce.

Killer Carnitas

Carnitas

Traditional carnitas are made by slowly cooking pork in a pool of lard. That's not practical for most home cooks, so Kenji devised a method of cooking pork shoulder in a small casserole dish—as the fat renders from the meat, it surrounds the pork in such a small vessel. After a quick trip under the broiler, it's ready for tacos!

Chile Verde Virtuosity

Chile Verde

Purists may cry foul, but this New Mexican-style chile verde isn't made with Hatch chilies. Instead, Kenji opted for more widely available peppers like poblanos and jalapeños. As for the pork, it's tender and delicious.

Carne Adovada Awesomeness

Carne Adovada (New Mexico-style Pork with Red Chilies)

Once again looking to New Mexico, this carne adovada recipe is made with pork shoulder (noticing a correlation here between delicious braises and pork shoulder?), and a handful of surprise characters, like raisins, orange juice from concentrate, and fish sauce.

Get The Recipes:

More Serious Eats Recipes