Carne con Chile Rojo (Chuck Braised in Chile)
Published Dec. 23, 2020

- Total Time
- 4½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2tablespoons maple or raw sugar
- 1tablespoon coarse sea salt
- 2pounds boneless bison or beef chuck roast
- ¼cup olive oil
- 4cups vegetable broth
- 2ripe tomatoes
- ½medium white onion
- 10dried California or New Mexico chiles (2½ ounces)
- 2fresh sage sprigs
- 2fresh or dried bay leaves
- ½cup pure maple syrup
- 10dried guajillo chiles, stemmed
- 4dried chiles de árbol, stemmed
- 2garlic cloves, peeled
- ¼medium white onion
- 1teaspoon coarse sea salt, plus more to taste
- 2tablespoons olive oil
For the Braised Bison
For the Chile Rojo
Preparation
- Step 1
To make the bison: Heat oven to 275 degrees.
- Step 2
Sprinkle the sugar and salt all over the roast. Heat the oil in a large Dutch oven over high heat. Add the roast and sear until dark brown on all sides, 7 to 10 minutes. Transfer to a plate and reduce the heat to medium. Carefully add 1 cup broth (the hot fat will spatter) and scrape up all the browned bits from the pan. Return the roast and any accumulated juices to the Dutch oven and add the tomatoes, onion, chiles, sage, bay leaves, syrup and remaining 3 cups broth. Bring to a boil, then cover and transfer to the center of the oven.
- Step 3
Braise until the meat is very tender, about 3½ hours. A fork should slide through easily. Uncover and cool for 15 minutes, then transfer the roast to a large bowl. Finely shred the meat using your hands if cool enough to handle or with two forks. Strain the cooking liquid and reserve.
- Step 4
To make the chile rojo: Bring a medium saucepan of water to a boil. Add all of the dried chiles, reduce the heat to medium, and simmer steadily until softened and lighter in color, about 10 minutes. Transfer the chiles to a blender, along with the garlic, onion, salt and 2 cups of the braising liquid. Save any remaining braising liquid for another use (see Tip). Blend until very smooth.
- Step 5
Heat the oil in a large, deep skillet over high heat until shimmering. Carefully add the chile sauce (it will splatter) and immediately reduce the heat to medium. Simmer, stirring often, until thickened and brick red, 8 to 10 minutes. Add the shredded meat and any accumulated juices and stir to evenly coat. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 10 minutes. Season to taste with salt. Serve immediately or cool to room temperature to use as a filling for tamales. The sauced braised meat can be refrigerated for up to 5 days or frozen for up to 3 months.
- If you’re making the Tamales de Chile Rojo, use the remaining braising liquid for the masa.
Private Notes
Comments
Amy tips for making a no-sugar version of this? I eat keto so the brown sugar and maple syrup are non-starters. I’ll likely try it with monkfruit sweetener or xylitol but really don’t want to risk wasting a whole roast on the experiment.
I wonder about the direction to throw the chiles into the blender with the skins on. I learned decades ago while living in southern California to soak chiles in hot water, then split them, throwing away the stems and seeds, then scraping the pulp from the skins and discarding the skins. The skins are bitter.
Delicious! I seeded all peppers.
I am somewhat confused - make your own nixtamal but then add almost 3/4 of a cup of maple syrup and maple sugar?
Made it for tamales—I cut the sugar and the syrup completely and subbed a can of fire roasted tomatoes for the fresh tomatoes. Definitely making again for tacos, or bowls. It is delicious!
Thanks to the good advice from fellow Sonoran cooks, I left out the sugar and the maple syrup, went light with two tomatoes from a can of Muir Glen Fire Roasted whole tomatoes (cut in half), and ended up with a braise as good as any I've had in Tucson! Really happy with how it came out and hope the sauce is as stellar. Hoping to make Red Chili Tamales for Christmas with this.
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