Here’s a traditional Mexican Menudo Rojo recipe—rich, comforting, and perfect for weekends or celebrations 🇲🇽🍲
Ingredients (6–8 servings)
For the broth
- 3 lbs (1.3 kg) beef tripe (honeycomb), cleaned and cut into bite-size pieces
- 1–1½ lbs beef feet or beef shank (optional but traditional, for gelatin & flavor)
- 1 small white onion (halved)
- 6–8 cloves garlic
- 2 bay leaves
- Salt, to taste
- Water
Chile sauce
- 10–12 dried guajillo chiles, stems & seeds removed
- 2–3 dried ancho chiles (optional, for depth)
- 3 cloves garlic
- 1 tsp dried Mexican oregano
- ½ tsp ground cumin
- 2 whole cloves (optional, very traditional)
To finish
- 2 (15-oz) cans hominy, drained & rinsed
Traditional garnishes (essential)
- Finely chopped white onion
- Fresh cilantro
- Dried oregano (crushed in your hands)
- Crushed chile piquín or árbol
- Fresh lime wedges
- Warm corn tortillas or bolillos
Instructions
1. Clean the Tripe (Very Important)
- Rinse tripe thoroughly under cold water.
- Rub with salt and a little vinegar or lime, then rinse again.
- Bring tripe to a boil in plain water for 10 minutes, drain, rinse, and discard water.
2. Cook the Broth
- Place cleaned tripe (and beef feet/shank if using) in a large pot.
- Add onion, garlic, bay leaves, salt, and enough water to cover by 2–3 inches.
- Bring to a boil, reduce to a gentle simmer, cover, and cook 2½–3 hours until tripe is tender.
3. Prepare the Chile Sauce
- Toast dried chiles lightly in a dry skillet (do not burn).
- Soak chiles in hot water 15–20 minutes until soft.
- Blend chiles with garlic, oregano, cumin, cloves, and soaking liquid until very smooth.
- Strain the sauce for a silky broth (traditional step).
4. Combine & Simmer
- Add chile sauce to the pot.
- Stir in hominy.
- Simmer uncovered another 30–45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Adjust salt and consistency (add water if needed).
5. Serve
Serve piping hot with garnishes on the side so everyone customizes their bowl.
Traditional Tips
- Menudo is better the next day—flavor deepens overnight.
- Keep it at a gentle simmer, never a rolling boil.
- In many regions, it’s served without garlic bread or rice—just tortillas and lime.
Variations
- Menudo Blanco: No chile sauce (common in parts of the north).
- Menudo Norteño: Fewer spices, cleaner broth.
- Menudo con Pata: Beef feet only, very gelatinous.
If you’d like, I can also share Menudo Verde, pressure cooker/Instant Pot instructions, or tips for extra-clean tripe.