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A popular Mexican stew, Chile Colorado includes tender pieces of beef simmered in a bold, flavorful red chile sauce made from dried Mexican chiles, broth and spices.
If you love amazing, authentic Mexican recipes as much as I do, try our favorite Mole Enchiladas, Carne Asada Tacos, or Empanadas.

You may hear the name “Chile Colorado” and think this is some sort of chili based out of the state of Colorado. Not quite! Try reading the name of the dish again with your best Spanish accent; “Chile color-ado”…it takes on a different meaning! Colorado in Spanish translates to “colored red,” so essentially Chile Colorado is a Mexican style stew made with a red chile sauce.
I think of it as similar to Chile Verde, but with a red sauce instead of green.
About the chiles:
Dried chile peppers are the star of this dish and they are essential to this recipe to achieve the authentic taste and color of Chile Colorado. Depending on your location, you may find very inexpensive dried Mexican chiles in the Mexican isle at your local grocery store, or try a local Latin/Mexican market. Amazon sells all types of Mexican dried chiles as well (including dried ancho and guajillo peppers for this recipe), but I've found they're more expensive than at my local stores.
How to Make Chile Colorado:
1. Cook the chiles: Remove the stems (and seeds if you want, for milder heat) from the dried chiles, rinse them under cold water, place them in a saucepan, and cover them with broth. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, for 20 minutes.
2. Prep the meat: Cut the meat into ½ inch cubes and season it on all sides with salt and pepper and sprinkle with flour. Brown the meat in hot oil until browned on both sides.

3. Blend peppers and onion: sauté the onion and jalapeño and add them and the cooked chiles to a blender (along with the broth). Blend until smooth and set aside.
4. Add to pot: Return browned beef back to the pot, strain the chili sauce from the blender through a fine mesh strainer, into the pot. Add oregano, cumin, paprika, garlic powder and stir well. Add bay leaf.
5. Simmer: Bring to a slow boil, then reduce heat to low, cover and simmer for about an hour, or until the meat is tender. Uncover and stir in lime juice and cornstarch slurry. Cook for a few more minutes, until the sauce has slightly thickened.

How to serve Chile Colorado:
- As a stew, with tortillas for dipping and a side of Mexican rice and Refried Beans.
- Inside enchiladas or burritos.
- As a “bowl” with rice, beans, lettuce and toppings.
- For breakfast on a corn tortilla, topped with a fried egg.
Make Ahead And Freezing Instructions:
To make ahead: Make Chile Colorado first thing in the morning or prep it a day or two ahead of time. Store leftover stew in the fridge for about 2-3 days depending on the freshness of the beef. Reheat on the stove.
To freeze: Make the dish as instructed and allow it to cool completely. Add to a freezer safe container and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and rewarm slowly on the stove. For best results, make and freeze the sauce only and brown the beef, simmering it in the sauce, the day of.
Variations:
- Different Meat: feel free to substitute pork shoulder/butt.
- Add beans: for a more American chili feeling add 1-2 cans of black beans or your favorite chili beans.
- Vegetarian Chile Colorado: omit the beef and add 4 yukon gold potatoes, cubed (and any other desired veggies, like carrots, mushrooms, onions). Simmer in sauce until tender.
- Instant Pot Chile Colorado: Add prepared sauce and seared meat to the instant pot and cook on high pressure for 35 minutes, with a natural release.
- Slow Cooker Chile Colorado: Add prepared sauce and seared meat to slow cooker and cook on low for 5-6 hours.
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Chile Colorado
Ingredients
- 4 dried ancho chiles, , or pasilla or mulato
- 5 dried guajillo chiles, , or New Mexican chiles
- 4 cups chicken broth
- 1 small onion, , chopped
- ½ of a jalapeno, , minced (optional, for more heat)
- 2 teaspoons Dried oregano
- 1 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon smoked Paprika
- 2 ½ lbs stew meat, , or cubed beef shoulder/butt roast*
- Salt and pepper
- 3 Tablespoons flour
- 2 Tablespoons oil
- 1 bay leaf
- Juice from 1 small lime
- Cornstarch slurry (1 Tablespoon cornstarch mixed with 1 Tablespoon water)
For serving (optional):
- Tortillas, , corn or flour
- chopped fresh Cilantro, , for garnish
- Sliced radishes
- Mexican rice
Instructions
- Remove meat from fridge and cut into ½ inch cubes. Set aside.
- Remove the stems (and seeds if you want, for milder heat) from the dried chiles while rinsing them under cold water. Place chiles in a saucepan and cover with broth. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, for 20 minutes.
- Meanwhile, prepare the meat. Season on all sides with salt and pepper and sprinkle with flour. Add oil to a skillet over medium high heat. Once hot, add meat and cook until browned on both sides. Depending on the size of your pan you will need to do this in a few batches to keep from overcrowding.
- Remove meat to a plate and set aside. Add onion and jalapeno to the pan and saute for several minutes.
- As the onions cook, pour the softened peppers and the broth into a blender. Add the sautéed onion and jalapeno and blend until smooth. Set aside.
- Return browned beef (and accumulated juices) back to the pot. Strain the chili sauce from the blender through a fine mesh strainer, into the pot. Add oregano, cumin, paprika, garlic powder and stir well. Add bay leaf.
- Bring to a slow boil, then reduce heat to low, cover and simmer for about an hour, or until the meat is very tender.
- Uncover and stir in lime juice and cornstarch slurry. Cook for a few more minutes, until the sauce has slightly thickened.
- Serve as a stew with tortillas for dipping and a side of Mexican rice and beans.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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HAVE YOU TRIED THIS RECIPE?!
RATE and COMMENT below! I would love to hear your experience.
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This is my second chili Colorado recipe I’ve tried and will be my go to moving forward. It was delicious and my 17 year old son kept saying “man this is good”. I served it over my homemade Mexican rice with sour cream, avocado, lime and tortilla chips. The only thing is, like a couple other people mentioned, I had to simmer this way long than an hour it was more like 2.5 hours to get the meat tender enough for my liking but was still super good, and I planned for the longer cooking based on others comments so I was prepared for that.
Fantastic recipe .
Amazing! Thank you!
Absolutely AMAZING!!!!
Made this today turned out wonderful…. Great flavor… And not hard to make at all…..
My husband I are like you. We could eat Mexican ever day of the week. I plan to make everyone of the recipes. Sometimes I have a problem finding the peppers and few other things, if I can’t find them I just leave it out or try to find a substitute. I’m sure we will enjoy these just like the others. Don’t stop sending them.
Thank you and God bless
can I substitute beef for pork?
Yes, sure!
This was phenomenal. I used the Instant Pot for the last part. My only deviation was actually quite by accident.. I added the spices to the chiles before blending. After straining, I realized my mistake, so knowing I had lost a significant portion f the flavor, I added in the spices (half the quantity this time) again to the strained puree.
Everyone raved about it! Thank you for a great recipe.
P.S. Regarding the many comments about the bitterness of the sauce, it is very bitter until after its final cooking. The chiles need a chance to meld with the other flavors. I also add 1/2 tsp of sugar per lb of meat anytime I am making a stew with acidic or bitter ingredients. You don’t taste it, but it helps to mellow it out in the end. So don’t taste for seasoning until the end…have faith!
This was such a wonderful recipe! I have shared it with many of my friends and family and they are all as pleased as I am. The way the house smells when this is cooking…….YUM!
My chilies were a bit bitter any suggestions on taming thi bitterness
Add a little bit of honey, not enough to make it sweet but just enough to eliminate the bitterness.