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A website about recipes and family, by Jamie Gates.

Mexican Ground Beef

Disclaimer: I don’t know how truly authentic this Mexican ground beef is. đź™‚

Growing up we had only one favorite restaurant where we loved to eat. It was at a tiny bar in a small town near my small town that served “Mexican” food (this was before there were any Hispanic population in town). It was always poorly lit and cloudy with smoke, you always had to wait for a table (and there was no waiting area), and people were packed in there like sardines. But you got baskets of fresh tortilla chips with their hot, hot, HOT homemade salsa, the nachos were loaded up with cheddar cheese and jalapenos, and we (my sister, brother, and I) were able to order a pitcher of Diet Coke. I loved everything about it. I still do, the location has changed, and of course, there is no more smoking, but their food is still good if even only for nostalgic reasons. Their tacos were made with a soft finely minced ground beef and subtly seasoned. I loved it. It was nothing like the browned ground beef that was seasoned with the premixed salty seasoning packets from the grocery store that we usually had for taco night.

I think I have found the secret to this Mexican ground beef. It might sound a little crazy, but you boil it instead of browning it. This is what makes it so soft and fine. Mmmmm. There is a little preplanning that needs to occur when you cook your ground beef this way since it takes an hour to cook. Good things come to those that wait, right?

We enjoyed this Mexican ground beef for dinner in crispy, crunchy taco shells. The next day I warmed up the leftover meat slightly and had it on top of lettuce for a delicious taco salad. Use it where ever you’d use ground beef.

The bonus is you know exactly what ingredients are in the seasonings so you are guaranteed to have gluten free seasoned taco meat!

On my taco salad:
Iceberg lettuce, leftover Mexican ground beef, black beans, shredded cheddar cheese, cilantro, black olives, chopped grape tomatoes, 1 tablespoon lite Ranch mixed with 1 tablespoon Melina’s salsa I also had some Melina’s tortilla chips for added crunch. If you are feeling really crazy I recommend crushing up some Nacho Cheese Doritos and sprinkling over your salad. Crazy, I know.

These items helped to make this recipe easier:

gluten free taco, Mexican ground beef, soft ground beef, taco salad

Comments

  1. I wanted to let you know I made this earlier this week and it was delicious. Going to make tacos this way all the time. I wonder if you used ground turkey would it end up the same?

    1. IMO it takes very authentic. I moved to TX a year ago and after eating real deal Mexican cuisine, I wondered why my meat was never quite as tasty. I googled “Mexican ground beef” and found quite a few recipes but decided to try this one and I’m soooo glad I did. Now it’s my go-to seasoning mix whenever I make anything remotely Mexican. The kids love it and any taco packets I have in my cabinet are probably stale. Lol. Not sure about the comments on browning 1st; I just add broth to the I browned meat. Turns out great every time!

  2. Does boiling not take the grease out of the meat? When I fry hamburger I dip out the grease as I am frying it.

    1. Diane, boiling does remove the grease from the meat and you can strain it away once it is done cooking. This is how I do it if I use it immediately. If I am making it ahead of time (for a taco party or something) I will refrigerate the strained liquid, spoon off the hardened grease, and add some of the liquid back to the meat to help keep it moist in the crockpot.

  3. I finally found a go to recipe for taco meat! It is delicious and can be made for many different mexican recipes. I’ll never buy the packaged stuff again. My husband normally doesn’t like tacos but he loves them made this way.

    1. I have not tried it in the crock pot before. I am not sure if the meat would be broken down as finely as it does on the stove. If you try it please let me know.

    2. Cooked it in the crockpot all day on low. Used a potato masher to break the meat up and it turned out perfect!!! The family loves this taco meat instead of using store bought seasoning!

    1. I agree, fry it, drain it, season it, sprinkle with flour.stir it, fry till sizzles Then add just enough water or broth to barely cover. Bring to a boil and reduce heat to low and let it simmer down.

    2. The only problem with frying first is the texture. I have tried to figure out why my local authentic restaurant meat is so tender. Boiling the removing fat later is essential to the texture

  4. Just need to clarify the comment about browning the ground beef before adding the broth. Is this for the crock pot method only or the traditional skillet method as well?

    1. HI Lynda! I have never browned the ground beef before adding the broth. I always just add the broth to the raw beef and boil it that way. A reader had commented that she browns the meat then adds the liquid. I can not verify you will have the same end result as the recipe as written.

    2. hi Lynda, that’s for the regular stove top method. However I also make a more gourmet version which I add fresh diced sauteed onions, tomato (not sauteed), peppers, green pepper and cilantro (not sauteed) and of course my spices and broth that I cook in a covered dish in the oven (remove the cover for the last 10 minutes). I always start out with browned & drained ground beef though. I love using vegetable broth for this. I’ve also used one of the very small single serving cans of Snappy Tom with chicken broth before. It was a substitution but oh man did it turn out good. My friend saves corn cobs when they have corn on the cob and simmers one in hers. While you can’t taste the cob something about it makes the flavors really pop.

  5. Is there any faster way to cook the meat? Sometimes I don’t have 1 hour. Tacos are suppose to be quick. Love the flavor.

    1. This is one of those “good things come to those who wait” type recipes. The quickest tacos are made by browning the meat but you aren’t going to achieve the same texture as the boiling method.

  6. Thank you for sharing this recipe and this method
    I tried on my own to replicate but I didn’t realize they boiled the meat
    So tender and juicy
    Nothing like those awful packets of taco seasoning
    Many thanks ! ! !

  7. Okay this is got me all confused.

    Do you brown the meat first? then drain the grease, add seasoning then boil it?

    or do you add seasonings to raw meat and boil it until done?

    1. You add the seasonings to the raw meat and boil until done. Depending on the fat percentage of your meat/your diet preferences you can drain the grease.

  8. Just wonder why do you boil it for an hour? Most recipes I have seen say to boil until done about 10 minutes

    1. Once it starts boiling I turn it down to a simmer for 1 hour. I found that a low and slow simmer made for more tender meat.

  9. Wow I was so excited to find and try this recipe out. I live in Texas now but for years I was wishing I can duplicate the taco meat from a place called “that taco place” in Batavia New York because it is so good and I have been having it since around 1980 or so. This particular recipe got me very close and I got so excited and made them up today. I could hardly believe the taste and I followed through using similar ingredients as the place in Western New York. I cut off a little snippets of green onions instead of using the other kind and then on top of the meat that was in the soft shell taco I used a white medium cheddar that was shredded, and in our area seems hard to find. A few tomato slices halved and then top this off with Frank’s hot sauce sold in most stores and it is just as good as the place that I grew up eating at. Thanks for making my day!

  10. Wow I was so excited to find and try this recipe out. I live in Texas now but for years I was wishing I can duplicate the taco meat from a place called “that taco place” in Batavia New York because it is so good and I have been having it since around 1980 or so. This particular recipe got me very close and I got so excited and made them up today. I could hardly believe the taste and I followed through using similar ingredients as the place in Western New York. I cut off a little snippets of green onions instead of using the other kind and then on top of the meat that was in the soft shell taco I used a white medium cheddar that was shredded, and in our area seems hard to find. A few tomato slices halved and then top this off with Frank’s hot sauce sold in most stores and it is just as good as the place that I grew up eating at. Thanks for making my day!

    1. Awwww! I am thrilled. I love it when I recreate favorites. I’m glad this worked for one of your favorites too. Cheers!

  11. This is exactly the recipe I have been wanting! I am going to try it immediately. We have the most wonderful tacos at our County Fair and the meat is always so fine and delicious. Thank you so much!

  12. This is delicious!! I’ve never tried to make “authentic” ground beef tacos until today and I’m very surprised by this recipe!

  13. Drained it but had to re-season it..used the leftover liquid to make a rue with cornstarch to thicken it and give more texture..I’ll post to let you know how it went

  14. Thank you for this recipe. There is a Mexican restaurant in Chicago that makes a unique ground beef taco. Your recipe helped me find the magic my recipe lacked. I always used salt, onion, garlic and cumin, but the beef broth and extended simmering made it work. I used less chili powder, and toasted El Milagro’s yellow corn tortillas in a smidge of oil.

  15. I love this recipe! I have a large family so I double the recipe, and to that I add 1/2 of a small can of tomato paste, 1 can of beer, and then cover with beef stock instead of water. I don’t brown the meat ahead of time as I have seen some suggest here, but after it’s boiled I brown it before serving. I then store the leftover meat in the liquid,

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