Birria-Style Beef Tacos
Traditional birria-style beef tacos are a project. Chuck roast braised for three to four hours in a chile-heavy consommé, shredded, stuffed into corn tortillas that have been dipped in the cooking fat and fried until the outside is crispy and the cheese inside is fully molten. The result is one of the best things you can eat. It is also not a Tuesday dinner.
This is the Tuesday version. Ground beef cooked in a chipotle and beef broth consommé that delivers the same deep, smoky flavor profile in thirty minutes. Corn tortillas still dipped in the consommé and still fried until crispy. Still filled with cheese. Still served with the dipping broth alongside. About eighty percent of the traditional birria experience at twenty percent of the time investment. On a weeknight, that math works.
Why Ground Beef Gets You There
The three-to-four-hour braise in traditional birria is necessary because the cuts involved — chuck roast, short ribs, beef shank — are tough, collagen-rich muscles that need extended time in liquid to break down into something tender and shreddable. Ground beef has none of those constraints. It’s already fine-textured, it browns in five minutes, and it absorbs a deeply flavored braising liquid in the time it takes to simmer down rather than the time it takes to break down connective tissue.
The result tastes different from a four-hour birria. It tastes better than anything else in the thirty-minute ground beef dinner category. The chipotle in adobo does the work of the traditional dried chiles — smoke, heat, and depth — without requiring you to toast and rehydrate anything. Two peppers plus a tablespoon of the adobo sauce. That’s the shortcut.
The Consommé Dip Is the Whole Point
If you’ve had birria tacos at a restaurant or a food truck, you know the dipping broth — a rich, brick-red consommé served in a small bowl alongside the tacos that you dip each bite into before eating. It’s the thing that makes birria tacos taste like birria tacos rather than just tacos.
In this recipe, the consommé is the cooking liquid — the beef broth, chipotle, tomato paste, and spices that the ground beef simmers in. After the beef is done, you pull the meat out with a slotted spoon and pour the remaining liquid into a bowl. That’s your consommé. It tastes like everything you just cooked, concentrated.
Dipping the tortilla in the consommé before it hits the hot pan is what gives it the signature reddish color and the slight savoriness on the outside that makes the crispy fried tortilla taste like more than just a fried tortilla. Don’t skip it. The whole experience of a birria taco is the combination of crispy consommé-fried shell, melted cheese, seasoned beef, and the dipping broth alongside. Remove any one of those elements and it becomes a different dish.
The Cheese Situation
Oaxacan cheese is the traditional choice and if you can find it, use it. It’s a semi-soft Mexican cheese that melts and pulls like mozzarella but has a slightly milkier, more delicate flavor that complements the smoky beef without competing. Pull it apart into pieces rather than shredding — it separates more naturally that way and distributes better in the taco.
Mozzarella is the substitute and it works identically in terms of melt. Monterey Jack melts well too. Avoid pre-shredded bags — the anti-caking agents slow the melt and you end up with cheese that’s warm but not fully molten by the time the tortilla is crispy.
Working Fast at the Griddle
Once you’re frying the dipped tortillas, the process moves quickly. The consommé on the tortilla starts sizzling the moment it hits the pan. You have about fifteen seconds to add the cheese and beef before the tortilla sets and gets too stiff to fold. Have everything staged before the first tortilla hits the pan: consommé in a wide shallow bowl for dipping, beef in a bowl with a spoon, cheese ready to grab. Work one or two tacos at a time. Don’t try to do all twelve at once.
Substitutions
Ground beef: Ground chuck (80/20) produces the best result here — the fat content contributes to the richness of the consommé and keeps the beef moist. Ground turkey works as a lighter substitute with slightly less depth.
Cheese: Any good-melting cheese works — Monterey Jack, muenster, or mild cheddar are all solid options. Avoid anything aged and sharp; the funk competes with the chipotle.
Heat level: Two chipotle peppers produces a moderately spicy result. One pepper for mild. Three for genuinely hot. The consommé carries the heat through both the beef and the tortilla dip, so the spice level is consistent throughout the whole taco.
What to Serve With It
Birria tacos are the meal. Pickled red onions alongside (from a jar or quickly made with red onion, lime juice, and salt) add brightness that cuts through the richness. A simple green salad with lime vinaigrette. Chips and guacamole as a starter. Nothing elaborate — the tacos have enough going on.
Storage
Store the beef and consommé together refrigerated for up to four days — they improve as the flavors continue to meld. The tortilla frying step should be done fresh each time; pre-fried tortillas go soft in the fridge and don’t revive well. Reheat the beef and consommé on the stovetop, dip fresh tortillas, fry, and assemble. The active cooking part of this process takes about five minutes when the beef is already made.

Birria-Style Beef Tacos
Ingredients
Meat & Protein
- 1 lb ground beef 80/20 preferred
Produce
- 0.5 yellow onion diced
- 4 garlic cloves minced
- 3 lime cut into wedges
- 0.25 cup fresh cilantro roughly chopped, for serving
Dairy
- 1.5 cup shredded mozzarella cheese or Oaxacan cheese, pulled apart
Pantry & Canned Goods
- 12 corn tortillas small, 6-inch
- 2 cup beef broth low sodium
- 2 tbsp chipotle peppers in adobo sauce finely minced — about 2 peppers plus 1 tablespoon of the sauce
- 1 tbsp tomato paste
- 1 tbsp olive oil
Seasonings & Spices
- 1.5 tsp ground cumin
- 1 tsp smoked paprika
- 1 tsp dried oregano
- 0.5 tsp garlic powder
- 0.75 tsp kosher salt divided
- 0.5 tsp black pepper
- 1 bay leaf
Instructions
- Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the diced onion and cook for 3 minutes until softened. Add the minced garlic and cook another 60 seconds until fragrant. Add the ground beef, breaking it apart with a spatula, and cook for 5 to 6 minutes until fully browned with no pink remaining. Drain excess grease, leaving just a thin coating in the pan.
- Add the chipotle peppers and adobo sauce, tomato paste, cumin, smoked paprika, dried oregano, garlic powder, salt, and black pepper. Stir to coat the beef evenly and cook for 1 minute until the spices are fragrant and the tomato paste darkens slightly.
- Pour in the beef broth and add the bay leaf. Bring to a simmer, then reduce heat to medium-low and cook uncovered for 8 to 10 minutes until the liquid reduces by about half and the beef is sitting in a rich, flavorful consommé. Remove the bay leaf. Taste and adjust salt. The consommé should be deeply savory and slightly smoky — this is both the cooking liquid for the beef and the dipping sauce for the tacos.
- Transfer the beef to a bowl using a slotted spoon. Pour the remaining consommé into a wide shallow bowl for dipping. Keep both warm.
- Heat a separate large skillet or griddle over medium-high heat with a thin film of oil. Working one or two at a time, dip each corn tortilla into the consommé, coating both sides, then lay immediately in the hot pan. The consommé-coated tortilla will sizzle and start to crisp. Working quickly, add a small handful of shredded mozzarella to one half of the tortilla and a spoonful of the beef to the same half. Fold the tortilla over the filling and press down gently with a spatula.
- Cook for 1 to 2 minutes until the bottom is crispy and the cheese is melted. Flip and cook another minute on the second side. Transfer to a plate. Repeat with remaining tortillas. Serve immediately with the warm consommé for dipping, lime wedges, and fresh cilantro on top.
