Short Rib Chili Nachos
Updated April 26, 2024

- Total Time
- 3 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4pounds bone-in beef short ribs, patted dry
- 5teaspoons coarse kosher salt, more to taste
- 1½teaspoons black pepper
- 5garlic cloves, smashed and peeled
- 2jalapeño or serrano peppers, halved lengthwise, seeded if desired
- 1onion, peeled and quartered lengthwise
- 1(28-ounce) can chopped tomatoes
- ½cup coarsely chopped cilantro stems, and ¼ cup chopped leaves
- 2teaspoons dried oregano
- 2tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 to 2tablespoons chile powder, to taste
- 2teaspoons ground cumin
- 2teaspoons ground coriander
- 1tablespoon tomato paste
- 1(12-ounce) bottle Mexican lager, like Negra Modelo
- 1(13-ounce) package corn tortilla chips
- 8ounces white Cheddar cheese, grated (2 cups)
- 4avocados, peeled, pitted and diced
- Juice of 1 lime
- 1½cups store-bought fresh salsa, preferably salsa verde
- 1cup Mexican crema or sour cream
- Hot sauce, optional
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 325 degrees. Season short ribs with 3 teaspoons salt and the black pepper. Let rest while you prepare sauce.
- Step 2
Place a large, dry Dutch oven over high heat. Add garlic, peppers and onion to the dry pan. Cook, turning occasionally, until lightly charred all over, about 10 minutes.
- Step 3
Transfer garlic, peppers and onion to a blender. Add tomatoes with juice, cilantro stems, oregano and 1 teaspoon salt. Purée until smooth.
- Step 4
Return Dutch oven to medium-high heat. Add olive oil. Sear short ribs in batches, until well-browned all over, about 20 minutes. Transfer browned ribs to a bowl.
- Step 5
Stir chile powder, cumin and coriander into pot and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Stir in tomato paste and cook until it begins to caramelize, 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in tomato-pepper purée and beer and bring to a simmer. Return short ribs to pot, cover and transfer to oven. Bake for 1½ hours, then uncover pot, give meat a stir, and continue baking until ribs are fork tender and falling off bone, 30 to 45 minutes longer, for a total cooking time of 2 to 2¼ hours. (If you have time, let short ribs mixture cool, refrigerate overnight, then remove fat before proceeding.)
- Step 6
Once ribs are cool enough to handle, remove from pot, reserving sauce. Shred meat and discard bones and gristle. If sauce seems thin, simmer on stove until it thickens enough to coat a wooden spoon. Return meat to pot.
- Step 7
Heat broiler. Spread tortilla chips on a rimmed baking sheet. Top evenly with meat and sauce. Sprinkle cheese over the top. Broil until hot and cheese is melted, 1 to 2 minutes.
- Step 8
In a small bowl, mash together avocados, lime juice and 1 teaspoon salt, or to taste.
- Step 9
Dollop avocado, salsa and sour cream over hot nachos and drizzle with hot sauce if desired. Scatter the chopped cilantro leaves over top.
Private Notes
Comments
Great recipe, simple to execute with excellent results. The meat can be used in other dishes too like a filling for baked potatos. I've done this recipe few times and got better results by lowering oven temp by 15 degrees and adding 40 mins extra cooking time--as usual, low and slow produces best results. Nine meat was more tender and sauce acquired deeper flavour.
Wonderful recipe! Definitely make sure to take your time charring the aromatics and and browning the meat, because that is where the flavor comes from.
I made this for my birthday party and now my friends think I am a fabulous cook. A winner!
So good--a true halftime show stopper--but I've also made the short ribs as a taco filling and almost preferred them that way. Not quite as bacchanalian, though, if that's what you're looking for :)
Utterly, insanely delicious. It was a scrum when I put these down on the table; I would have captioned the photo "What Super Bowl?". The (very easy to make) sauce is killer. I admit that when I saw directions to put it on the nachos, my crispy-loving heart sank but it absolutely works. Basically a perfect recipe.
These are in the oven right now and smell amazingly delicious! A QQ for the more cultured cooks out there (I’m a good cook but one always seeking to maximize the output to effort ratio): it seems like steps 2 and 3 make, what amounts to, a delicious homemade salsa that functions as the base for braising. If one were in a time crunch, I’m wondering if a nice, store-bought salsa would get the sauce 80% of the way there for 10% of the effort? Curious for your thoughts.
Salsa really wouldn't be the same; the sauce is a thick puree of wonderful char and flavors that a salsa couldn't replicate (and would also be far more likely to get the chips soggy). The whole process took less than 10 minutes--my veggies charred really quickly and then it was zip-zap in the blender. Take the extra few minutes!
This was a tremendous hit at a recent Monday Night Football party. However, there were a couple of things I didn't understand. I cooked the peppers and onion in the dry pan. Unfortunately, the pan took forever to clean. Cooking garlic over high heat for 10 minutes seemed like a recipe for burnt garlic. Not my favorite flavor. Otherwise the recipe works well as written.
My pan deglazed really easily with the beer/tomato sauce addition...no need to clean between steps, if that's what you did.
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