Mexican-Style Burritos With Machaca Guisada (Braised Dried-Beef) Recipe

With just a few ingredients at play, the key to these burritos is high-quality tortillas and beef.

By
Christian Reynoso
Christian Reynoso: Contributing Writer at Serious Eats
Christian Reynoso is a freelance recipe developer with a focus on seasonal food and helping home cooks achieve restaurant-level success in the kitchen. He's the former sous chef at Zuni Café.
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Updated July 23, 2023
Overhead of a place of halved machaca guisada beef burritos with slices of cucumber.

Serious Eats / Jillian Atkinson

Why It Works

  • Homemade flour tortillas are far more delicious than most of the store-bought options.
  • Keeping the tortillas well wrapped ensures they stay warm and pliable.

Made from just a few components yet full of complex flavor, the burritos commonly found in Northern Mexico stand in stark contrast to the overstuffed versions north of the border. They're significantly smaller, for starters, with two or three required to make a meal for one person. They also usually feature a much more pared down assortment of fillings, such as freshly mashed beans with cheese or the machaca guisada (braised dried beef with onions and tomato) featured here. Some fresh, crunchy cucumbers and a squeeze of lime round the meal out.

Because so few ingredients are required, they need to be of the highest quality. Most critically, the eight-inch flour tortillas really should be freshly made, either by a local tortilleria or at home with a recipe like this one, which is rich with lard and milk.

This recipe makes six small burritos, which can work as a snack for a larger group or a meal for just two or three people, but it can easily be scaled up by doubling the braised machaca recipe and using the full batch of flour tortillas in the linked recipe.

These burritos can also easily be turned into pan-fried burritos, called chivichangas in Sonora, Mexico. Just add two tablespoons of vegetable oil to a small skillet over medium-high heat, add the prepared burritos to the hot oil, and fry, turning once, until just-crispy and golden on both sides.

November 2020

Recipe Details

Mexican-Style Burritos With Machaca Guisada (Braised Dried-Beef) Recipe

Active 15 mins
Total 15 mins
Serves 2 to 3 servings

Ingredients

Directions

  1. In a saucepan, combine machaca guisada with 1 tablespoon water. Set over medium-low heat and cook, stirring occasionally, until warmed through. Remove from heat.

    Overhead image of a dried beef stew called machaca guisada.

    Serious Eats / Jillian Atkinson

  2. To Re-Warm Tortillas (Only if Needed): Heat a 10-inch cast-iron or carbon steel skillet over medium heat until warmed through, then, working with 1 at a time, add a tortilla and cook, flipping once, until just warmed through, about 20 seconds. Return warmed tortilla to a cloth towel or tortilla warmer to ensure it remains warm and pliable. Repeat with remaining tortillas.

    Rewarming a flour tortilla in a cast iron pan to make burritos.

    Serious Eats / Jillian Atkinson

  3. To Form Burritos: Working with 1 tortilla at a time, set tortilla on a work surface and spoon 3 heaping tablespoons of machaca guisada in center, piling it so that it forms a 2 1/2- by 1-inch horizontal mound.

  4. Using your hands, fold the left and right sides up and over the filling, then roll the tortilla from the bottom up to form a small burrito-like package. Repeat with remaining tortillas and filling.

  5. Serve burritos while still warm with the lime wedges and cucumber slices on the side.

Make-Ahead and Storage

The burritos are best made right before serving.

Read More

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
645Calories
15gFat
64gCarbs
64gProtein
×
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 2 to 3
Amount per serving
Calories645
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 15g19%
Saturated Fat 5g26%
Cholesterol 144mg48%
Sodium 4712mg205%
Total Carbohydrate 64g23%
Dietary Fiber 4g13%
Total Sugars 6g
Protein 64g
Vitamin C 8mg40%
Calcium 68mg5%
Iron 8mg43%
Potassium 685mg15%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

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