Tender, garlicky Chipotle Barbacoa is the copycat recipe everyone loves! This smoky, fall-apart-tender beef cooks up to perfection in the slow cooker and is easily adjustable to suit anyone’s spiciness preference.
What is barbacoa?
In a nutshell, barbacoa is garlicky, tender, shredded beef braised low and slow in a spicy, smoky, flavourful barbecue sauce. It doesn’t hurt matters that it cooks all day (or all night!) while you run errands or do yard work or try desperately not to eat the contents of the pantry while you smell this simmering in the fragrant barbecue sauce. Or is that just me?
This Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe is the jumping off point for a whole host of meals, which is why I call for such a large cut of chuck roast. I’m aware that 6 to 8 pounds is a great deal of meat, but it fits easily into most slow-cookers.
Since you have it going all that time, and the end results of the recipe freeze so incredibly nicely, you might as well get the most bang you can for your energy and food buck.
Even for a family my size, this yields several meals worth of entree portions. Another great option for big batches in the slow cooker is this crockpot chicken breast.
What are some of the magical ways you can serve our Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe?
In warmed homemade corn tortillas with a handful of chopped onions, some fresh cilantro and a squeeze of lime for a Mexican style taco. Not a corn tortilla fan?
Serve Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe in crispy taco shells or flour tortillas with your favourite taco toppings. You’ll be in heaven!
Ready for burrito night? Serve rolled up in a flour tortilla with refried beans, some cilantro lime rice, a sprinkling of cheese, some sour cream, a little salsa, some pickled onions, and some avocado cubes or any variation on the burrito theme.
Serve on top of hot rice with your favourite taco or burrito fillings for a Taco or Burrito Bowl. This is great for a nutritious, filling, crowd-pleasing meal on busy family nights.
Serve Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe over a baked Russet or sweet potato. A dollop of sour cream or crema (or again, those taco toppings…) would make this a filling and delicious option.
Nacho time, of course. Serve over hot tortilla chips baked with cheese on them (and perhaps Candied Jalapenos?) for some memorable nachos.
Mix into your favourite queso dip recipe for some serious sustenance and flavour. A fork. Just use a fork, man.
And if you’re on the hunt for more beef recipes, try out our Pho {Vietnamese Beef Noodle Soup}, Ground Beef Fried Rice, Instant Pot Garlic Beef Stroganoff, and Best Slow Cooker Beef Stew with Bacon.
If you’re looking for more ways to use those delectable chipotles in adobo sauce, look no further than our 5 Minute Restaurant Style Chipotle Salsa, Bold Chipotle Coca-Cola Barbecue Sauce, and Smoked Paprika and Chipotle Sauce | Lemons in Salt.
And you’d best plan on an icy cold beverage no matter how you serve your Chipotle Barbacoa. How about some Watermelon Margarita a.k.a. Sandia En Fuego or some Berry Kombucha Margaritas?
Maybe your tastes run more toward Boozy Strawberry Basil Lemonade or a fabulous Lady Greyhound Cocktail – Tea Infused Cocktail. And if you’re more into the mocktail scene, try these Mixed Berry and Basil Sangria By The Glass (and mocktail variation) or Ginger Switchel Drink {non-alcoholic refresher}!
Chipotle Barbacoa
Chuck roasts are a great cut for this Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe because it’s a selection of beef that has a lot of tissues to break down in the braising process. Additionally, those connective tissues add a velvety texture to the final sauce that you just can’t get from a leaner piece of beef.
This could also be made with the easier to trim (and far more expensive) flank steak. That seems a bit silly, though, when you can get great results from a less expensive cut.
Trim as much of the visible fat as is possible from the outside of the roast (and any large fat veins on the inside) before cutting into 2-inch-ish cubes. While you want some fat to help baste it, you don’t want it swimming in it.
I’ve included an optional step in the recipe, but I do recommend it unless you’re unequivocally morally opposed to cooking anything before it goes into the slow-cooker. I DO heartily recommend taking the 5 or 10 minutes it takes to brown the chuck before soaking it in the barbacoa sauce.
Why? It’s not to seal in moisture. That’s an old wive’s tale. It’s add another level of WOWZA to the flavour profile.
It adds depth to the beef. Can you make this without browning it?
Absolutely. Will it still be delicious? Yep. But do I recommend browning it? Yes, I do. Try it both ways and see which way you prefer it.
I mention that you can use beef or chicken broth or a lager beer in the recipe. It will be equally delicious if different with each of those three options.
Don’t be tempted to go for a hoppy micro-brew in this situation as the hops may compete with the chipotles in adobo. A lighter lager style is where it’s at.
I do suggest you let the beef cubes soak in the sauce overnight to marinate thoroughly. I HAVE, however, been in a hurry and cooked it within roughly 25 seconds of pouring the sauce over the beef.
It was delicious. The one that marinated overnight was even better, though. Consider yourself informed.
After the beef has cooked to the point where it shreds quite easily with a fork, you have a couple of options. If you have a ton of liquid in the slow-cooker, you can dip it out into a pan using a ladle and put the pan over medium heat until the liquid reduces by half or more and thickens.
Pour back into the slow-cooker with the beef and use two forks to shred the beef. This is the easiest method, by far.
Freeze any thoroughly cooled leftovers in air-tight containers or zipper top freezer bags in single meal portions. Date and label those bags so you don’t forget what’s in them. That will make it easier to use on the fly.
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Use this to make Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe:
- Slow cooker
- chef’s knife
- cutting board
- liquid measuring cup
Barbacoa Recipe
Optional flavour building step:
Drizzle the vegetable oil in a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium high heat. Brown the beef cubes on all sides in batches (you do not want to overcrowd the pan).
Cool the beef cubes completely before proceeding.~~~~
To Make the Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa:
Add the beef (whether you’ve browned it or not) to the crock of a slow-cooker. Add the chipotles in adobo, onion, garlic, broth or beer, apple cider vinegar, lime juice, cumin, oregano, ground cloves, salt, and black pepper to a blender and blend on high until smooth.
Toss the bay leaves on top of the beef, pour the contents of the blender over the contents, stir, and cover Let the beef stand overnight to marinate.
In the morning, add the crock to the slow-cooker, turn the temperature to LOW. Cook 8 hours on LOW or 4 hours on HIGH, or until the beef shreds very easily with a fork. Remove and discard the bay leaves. Use two forks to shred the meat in the sauces.
To Serve:
Serve the shredded Barbacoa with sauces over rice, in corn tortillas with onion and cilantro, in burritos, soups, on nachos, or just with a fork!
Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe {slow-cooker}
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 6 to 8 pounds boneless chuck roast trimmed of excess fat and cut into 2 inch cubes
- 1 tablespoon vegetable oil or canola oil
- 6 chipotles in adobo with sauce
- 1 large white onion peeled and roughly chopped
- 10 cloves garlic peeled and roughly chopped
- 1 cup beef or chicken broth or lager beer
- 2/3 cup apple cider vinegar preferably raw
- 1/4 cup lime juice preferably freshly squeezed
- 2 tablespoons cumin
- 2 tablespoons oregano preferably Mexican oregano, but all oregano will do!
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 3 bay leaves
Instructions
Optional flavour building step:
- Drizzle the vegetable oil in a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium high heat. Brown the beef cubes on all sides in batches (you do not want to overcrowd the pan).
- Cool the beef cubes completely before proceeding.~~~~
To Make the Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa:
- Add the beef (whether you’ve browned it or not) to the crock of a slow-cooker. Add the chipotles in adobo, onion, garlic, broth or beer, apple cider vinegar, lime juice, cumin, oregano, ground cloves, salt, and black pepper to a blender and blend on high until smooth. Toss the bay leaves on top of the beef, pour the contents of the blender over the contents, stir., and cover Let the beef stand overnight to marinate. In the morning, add the crock to the slow-cooker, turn the temperature to LOW. Cook 8 hours on LOW or 4 hours on HIGH, or until the beef shreds very easily with a fork. Remove and discard the bay leaves. Use two forks to shred the meat in the sauces.
To Serve:
- Serve the shredded Barbacoa with sauces over rice, in corn tortillas with onion and cilantro, in burritos, soups, on nachos, or just with a fork!
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
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Accompany Slow-Cooker Copycat Chipotle Barbacoa Recipe with these delicious recipes:
Spicy Corn and Black Bean Salad
Grilled Mexican Street Corn Salad
This post was originally published May 17, 2018 and republished September 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Shyam says
This looks amazing…! Barbacoa is my favorite. Thanks for sharing. I definitely try this at my home.
Kate says
Oh my GOSH this looks amazing!
Jim says
I made this according to the recipe and I was blown away. It IS Chipotle barbacoa! For even more intense flavor, reserve a little bit of the marinade to mix with the finished beef. I cooked it in an InstaPot for 90 minuets and it was perfect.
Rebecca says
That is fantastic, Jim! I’m so glad you like it so much; thank you for the excellent review!
Ben David says
I made this recipe for our NYE Bash last night! It was a big hit! I made it with Brisket and served street taco style (make your own). I received a ton of compliments and requests to make it again. Next time I am going to make it a day earlier and let it sit in the braising liquid over night after its cooked and shredded (in addition to letting it properly marinate the night before). It was even more flavorful when we had leftovers today so I will try to recreate that on a bigger scale. Thanks for posting this!
Rebecca says
Fantastic, Ben! Thank you so much for letting me know you loved it!
Angela Gomez says
I’m going to try to make this for a baby shower but in the oven. Do you know what the cook time and on what temp it would be? I’m utilizing my crockpot for shredded chicken so oven is my next cooking space:) also with 6 chipotles in adobe is this really spicy? Can’t wait to cook this!
Rebecca says
Hi Angela-
Most crockpots have a goal temperature of between 250°F and 275°F. If you put your oven somewhere in that range it should work well. Of course, it is a different cooking environment so you’ll need to monitor it a little more closely, checking on it every hour or so… (And you’ll need to keep the pan tightly covered to retain the cooking juices.)
As for the 6 chipotles, I don’t find it very spicy, but that’s all personal perspective! I hope you and your guests enjoy it!
Kristen says
Do you think it would be ok if I marinate it overnight, brown in the morning, and then put it in the crockpot? I’m only wondering if it’s a great idea to get it hot and then put in the fridge for a day without cooking it?
Or will it not get hot enough when browning? Maybe I’m weird about food safety. Just wondering.
Rebecca says
Hi Kristen-
You can certainly marinate it overnight then sear it! Just gently dry it off before searing it. I prefer to brown my cubes, cool them, and then plunk them into the marinade. I’m not sure why that step was represented by 2.~~ on the recipe card 😀
Jill says
I made this recently and it is incredible! I froze the leftovers for a dinner party. My question is what is the best way to reheat the meat? I am defrosting it in the fridge first. I don’t want to lose the integrity of the shredded beef. Thank you in advance!
Rebecca says
I would put the beef and sauce in a baking dish, cover lightly with foil, making sure one side is vented, and bake at 350°F until heated through!
Sheena Haywood says
I’m not familiar with one of the ingredients. the 6 chipotles with adobe sauce. Do i have to get this in a speciality market or in the international section of the grocery store. Is it a canned product ? Please advise. Thanks
Rebecca says
Hi Sheena- This is a canned product. I know many super Walmarts carry them as do many Target stores. They’re most often near the Mexican foods (or TexMex foods like taco shells, salsas, etc…) in decently stocked grocery stores. If you can’t find them locally, you can always order them via Amazon.com!
Jill says
I made this recipe about a year or so ago. It was amazing!!! My husband and I absolutely loved it.
I want to make it again for some families who aren’t all that excited about spicyness.
It’s been so long I can’t recall how spicy this is to begin with (considering the chipotles, my favorite part). Can you help remind me?
Heather says
Ever done this without marinating first? I didn’t notice that step and just put it in the crock pot!
Rebecca says
I have but I preferred it marinated. What did you think of the unmarinated results? 😀
Gloria says
Hello I just made this today followed every step even the browning of the meat first I put it on high for 4 hrs I had to go to work and left my bf to shred the meat but he said the meat isn’t shred able yet. He pUT it back on low for a while longer to see if that helpsm do you mind giving me a tip on how I can fix this? Thanks
Rebecca says
Every cut of meat is a little different, so sometimes you have to allow for extra cooking time. If it doesn’t shred, just leave it in the sauces simmering on low longer!
Nancy Garbarini says
Barbacoa is my absolute favorite, I cannot wait to try this! However, there is no Step 2, am I missing something??
Rebecca says
Hi Nancy- That is a weird formatting glitch. I didn’t intend to have the steps numbered and there isn’t a separate step that should come between what is numbered as 1 and numbered as 3. I am trying to solve the formatting issue, but the recipe is complete as it reads here! 😀
Ailie says
I have about 4 lb of chuck roast & chuck steak meat in my freezer — small packages for a small family 😉 — so am I right in thinking I should halve all the ingredients? That seems like not much seasoning, but I know some flavors get stronger in the slow cooker.
Rebecca says
Hi Ailie- Were I you, I’d plunk two of those 4 pound roasts in and get the biggest bang for my electricity buck (since you have the slow-cooker going already) by cooking them at the same time, maintaining the seasoning level. If you’d really like to do the half sized one, I would reduce the spices by 1/3 rather than by half… I do think it might lose some of the seasoning “oomph” if you reduce the flavour components by half.
Ailie says
Thanks for replying so quickly! I talked my friend into digging a chuck roast out of her freezer, and we’ll split the leftovers after we have dinner together. (Given what I’m doing with the meat, this was not hard to negotiate.) It’s gonna be a long 8 hours until dinnertime…!
Ailie says
(Oh just FYI, my original comment was unclear: I only had 4-5 lb *total* in my freezer, otherwise I would have just done what the recipe said. Anyway… we’re all set now.)
Rebecca says
HA! Well, that explains it all! 😀
Jim Purl says
8 Lbs of roast!!! Why would I want to make a $100 dinner at home??
Rebecca says
I haven’t seen chuck roast run that expensively! When I get it on sale I get it for under $5/lb and when I buy full price I don’t pay over $8/lb. Aside from that, there is a compelling reason to spend a good amount of money to make this yourself. You’re going to get a meal that is just as good or better than getting it at the restaurant. While you’re laying out a fair amount of money up front, you get significantly MORE food for your dollar. We’re talking about several meals worth of food, here!
Pam says
Wow! This is delicious!! I made it just as you said with all the extra steps and it was AMAZING! (and yes, I’m yelling, because it was so good!) I took it on a group camping trip in an aluminum pan covered in foil, reheated it on a camp stove and people couldn’t stop talking about it! Trouble is, now they think I can cook. 🙂 Thanks for the recipe!
Rebecca says
HA! That’s awesome, Pam! I’m camping soon and this is a great reminder that barbacoa would make a fantastic addition to our camping meals!
Marie D. says
This was FANTASTIC!!! I made it this weekend for a small crowd of men, teenage boys and a couple of women (including myself) who can eat like men. There was definitely enough meat for a few meals. Everyone loved it! Thank you for sharing the recipe. I couldn’t help but wonder how it would be made with pork shoulder– have you ever tried to make it like carnitas?
Rebecca says
Thanks for taking the time to tell me you loved it! I do pork shoulder quite similarly. Here’s a link for it!
Amy Rundstrom says
Oh my! Made this yesterday and couldn’t quite wait till the ‘holiday’ to eat it – it was SO GOOD! In fact, it was so good that it put the fancy food truck tacos to shame that I”d been looking forward to for so long. I only had half of a lime (oops … gin and tonic season…) but it was just perfect. I also separated the meat from the broth (I think I had extra sauce – I was too cheap to buy quite that much meat and I THOUGHT I cut the rest in half as well, but it’s entirely possible that I got caught up in the moment and didn’t actually DO it). But I added part of the sauce back to the shredded meat and froze a good cup and a half or more to use over quesadillas or burritos later when I”m in a hurry.
I love the non-stick stove top safe insert for my slow cooker – it makes the browning of the meat no extra work at all.
Just a fun tip, I buy the biggest cans I can find of chipotles in adobo sauce and then puree the whole can in my little food processor, use what I need for that go-round and then put the rest in a pint sized siplock freezer bag and freeze it FLAT – then I can just break off chunks when I need them, prechopped, no muss, no fuss!
This recipe is totally a keeper and one I will make over and over.
Amanda says
This looks absolutely amazing!
sue|theviewfromgreatisland says
It’s NOT just you!! This stuff call to me, I have wanted to recreate my favorite burrito bowl for ages, now I can 🙂
Erin says
Are you an angel? Barbacoa is my FAVORITE Chipotle meat! I’m talking I get it every. single. time. I might have a problem. Does this truly taste like my favorite Mexican treat?
(Also, I’m a college student near the end of the semester…could I make this with a smaller roast to last me the next week? I don’t know what I’d do with the left overs!)
Rebecca says
You can make it smaller, but I just haven’t tested it smaller, so I couldn’t give you a specific alteration for time, but I CAN tell you you’ll probably want to reduce the time by some. 😀 The other option would be a TACO FESTIVAL in the dorm. 😀
Kate says
I would make the sauce as a large batch and then freeze half. Then use the other half on 3 lbs of meat.
OR make the whole recipe and freeze half after marinating. Just extend the cook time in the crock pot.
Erin @ The Spiffy Cookie says
I most often make my Mexican pulled meat for tacos with chicken but I do love beef so this is definitely going to have to be made.
Rebecca says
You won’t regret it!