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.
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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...
Nicole says
Two tablespoons of dried oregano?
Rebecca says
Yes, two tablespoons of dried oregano is what you want to use here.
Phillip says
For an extra dimension, follow this recipe and when it’s done drain all of the moisture off and reduce it according to the Cook’s Notes #6 above.
Don’t shred the beef, but pull it sans-liquid into larger chunks and then brown it on a large griddle grill, like the 28″ Blackstone 1517 or the 36″ Blackstone 1554. toss it around on the griddle until it gets that nice char on the edges.
Once it’s the way you like it, serve it with the reduced sauce on the side.
Rebecca says
Good idea!
Marian says
Hi there,
I got all the ingredients to make this recipe but somehow I wrote on my list to get brisket ( don’t know how that happened), so I now have 5 pounds of brisket and reading your recipe it calls for chuck. Would it work with brisket? Or should I run to supermarket and buy chuck roast? Thanks for any help you can give me.
Rebecca says
Hi Marian- I don’t think it would be a disaster to make this with brisket! It’ll just be different. 🙂
Rie says
Great to know. I have a brisket in the freezer I have to use and I don’t have the 10+ days to turn it into corn been. Will try it first with the brisket, and if we like it, I will use the chuck next time and compare. Wish me luck
Katie says
Love this recipe so much; we tried it with chicken as well and actually prefer it over the beef. It’s a monthly staple at our house now. =D
Rebecca says
I’m so, so glad you love it, Katie! And I love the idea of making it with chicken!
Rachel C says
Made half the recipe for my family.. it was overly spicy I followed the recipe exactly and only did half of everything. Very frustrating! I only ate one taco and I’m up with a stomach ache. I was really hoping it would be like chipotle! Maybe If you are sensitive to spice or have acid reflux I would scale way back on the chipotle peppers. Never used them in my food and I probably won’t after this experience
Rebecca says
Hi Rachel- If you’re sensitive to spice or have reflux, I recommend tasting a little bit of the ingredients before committing the whole recipe to them to be sure you’ll be able to handle the level of spice. The good news is you can still get the smokiness of chipotle peppers with just a very small amount. If you try again, and I hope you do because this is delicious, just add half of one chipotle pepper.
Jesse says
Hi there, thank you for this recipe as I love barbacoa! One quick question though, wether I use a slow cooker or insta pot, do I need to add any liquid to this before heating? My normal recipes for other items have me always put water in or some sort of liquid. Will I need to do the same here since all of the items blended to make more of a paste than liquid? It’s sort of a watery paste so I’m afraid the slow cooker or instapot won’t have any steam to use to cook. Please let me know, thank you.
Rebecca says
Hi Jesse- I’ve not had any difficulty at all in needing to add more liquid. If you’re concerned, you can add 1/2 a cup, then just reduce the resulting sauce a little more later. No harm, no foul 🙂
Chrissy says
So do we make the sauce with all ingredients to marinate in and then remove the meat, Brown it and then put the sauce we marinated the meat in into the crockpot?
Rebecca says
Yes, indeedy!
Beverly says
I only have 5.21 pound of roast. Would that change the ingredient measurements? Or would I be safe to do what you have listed?
Rebecca says
Hey Beverly- You’ll probably have a little extra sauce, but that should be fine!
Beverly says
Thank you so much for your quick reply, making this tomorrow for a Mexican style Christmas party. So excited to try this!!
Mary Moore says
I’m a 70-year young Caucasian woman who loves to cook with her 72-year old husband and 42-year-old daughter who also love to cook. We love it all, but most especially the way you describe everything you do as a culinary expert. The way you describe the way you put together your creation is like poetry! Thank you for the fun we had making the Barbacoa last night and then making it again tonight…to munch on as we choose.
Mary says
Thank you very much for this recipe! I made it for my family to kick off Thanksgiving holiday with my family and everyone loved it.I served it on a large platter with Mexican style rice as a family style dinner so it was quite festive. This recipe will become a family tradition thanks to you.
Marla says
My husband and I decided to have a non traditional Thanksgiving this year and since we LOVE Chipotle, and no longer have easy access to one, we decided to use this copycat recipe again….it turned out AH-MAZING!!!! I opted to use a pork roast this time and I also made a second pot using chicken…soooo so good!! Thank you for sharing
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you loved it, Marla! I’m also so happy you took the time to get in touch with me and let me know. Thank you for the great rating.
Amparo Gabino says
I would love to try this but what is chipotles in adobo? I was not sure if u meant chipotle peppers in liquid adobo or the adobo seasoning by goya? Also can u plz send me entire recipe. I will send u my results if thats ok. Thank you
Janelle says
This is the fourth time I’ve made this recipe and my fiancee loves it.
Rebecca says
That rocks, Janelle! I’m so glad you both love it!
Leela says
I can’t say how much my family LOVED this recipe! The flavors were perfect. I’m a notorious reader/modifier of recipes as and this one is absolutely perfect as is. The recipe is super easy to follow. We used the leftovers in nachos the next day and they were AMAZING!!! Just perfection again Rebecca!
Rebecca says
Thank you so much, Leela!! I’m also a notorious modifier… but that’s how the best stuff happens! I’m so glad you guys like it as much as we do!
Mel says
This recipe is a huge waste of time and money. It tastes nothing like Chipotle barbacoa! Waaaaay to much ground clove, I cannot get the smell out of my house or my slow cooker. I would give zero stars if I could.
Rebecca says
We’re going to have to agree to disagree on this one, Mel… We eat and enjoy this quite often and we think it tastes as good as or better than Chipotle’s Barbacoa. 🙂 If you opt to try it again, reduce or omit the clove to suit your own preference.
Jeanette says
Hello! I wanted to share my experience making this as a vegetarian. Prior to being a vegetarian Chipotle’s barbacoa was a weakness of mine. I can often taste it even after the years it has been since I ate it…until now ❤️. Rather than beef I used two pounds of mushrooms (note: you can use three pounds – don’t be discouraged by the lack of sauce covering all the mushrooms when you marinate it because that all break down and soaks together in the crock pot) I did all instructions as provided EXCEPT the cooking length because mushrooms aren’t raw meet and don’t need to sit in a crockpot for 8 hours.
THIS IS INSANE! I am so happy I took pictures and sent them to everyone I know!! My husband thinks it’s incredible and requests it be a reoccurring item on our weekly menu!
Thank you so so much for posting this!
Jeanette
Rebecca says
You just made my day, Jeannette!! And that is brilliant modification for this. I’m definitely going to give it a try!
Andrew says
Do you let it marinade over night in the fridge or let it sit out?
I’m at that step now?
Rebecca says
Pop it in the fridge!!
Andrew says
Thanks for the quick reply!
I went ahead and just turned it on now. Now we can have burrito bowls all day long tomorrow lol.
Sharon says
Is the oregano dry or fresh? The package for the fresh says triple the amount if in place of dry.
Rebecca says
Hi Sharon- The recipe is designed to be made with dry oregano, but you can definitely use the fresh if you triple the quantity!
Joel says
Hi Rebecca,
How spicy do you think this is according to your recipe? Would adding a couple jalapenos be too spicy?
Thanks,
Joel
Jesse says
I have doubled the recipe & tried a bit of the sauce. It’s super spicy ? what can I do to calm it down? I am feeding a crowd of kids & adults on a camping trip tomorrow
Rebecca says
Serve it with lots of sour cream and cheese! I would say, too, that you could probably tame it with a bit of tomato sauce added. It will make it a little more saucy, of course!