Best 5 Mexican Pozole Recipes

facebook share image   twitter share image   pinterest share image   E-Mail share image

Pozole, a traditional Mexican soup, derives its name from the Nahuatl word "pozolli," meaning "foamy," referring to the froth that forms when hominy, the main ingredient, is cooked. While there are many regional variations of pozole, its essence remains the same: a rich, flavorful broth simmered with hominy, tender meat, and a medley of spices. Pozole is not only a culinary delight but also holds cultural significance, often served at festivals, gatherings, and celebrations, bringing people together to savor its deliciousness. If you're looking to embark on a culinary adventure and discover the authentic taste of Mexican pozole, this guide will provide you with the essential steps, tips, and variations to create a mouthwatering pozole that will transport you to the heart of Mexico.

Here are our top 5 tried and tested recipes!

AUTHENTIC MEXICAN POZOLE



Authentic Mexican Pozole image

I've learned this recipe from a friend from Mexico. I don't eat menudo, because the tripe or pig's feet made me nauseous. She always celebrated with this soup and I can eat everything in it without being grossed out! It's very delicious and everyone always get seconds or thirds! Don't forget to garnish! I add lots of lemon juice to my bowl and a dash of salt.

Provided by razzle dazzle

Categories     Stocks

Time 1h25m

Yield 10 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 17

1 1/2 lbs pork shoulder
2 garlic cloves, peeled
1 tablespoon cumin powder
1 onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, chopped
2 tablespoons oil
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne
2 tablespoons california chili powder
1 tablespoon salt
1/4 teaspoon oregano
4 cups canned white hominy, drained and rinsed
3 -5 cups pork broth, from cooking pork shoulder
1 cup canned diced green chilis (optional)
salt
2 whole fresh jalapenos, chopped (optional)
3 whole ancho chilies, seeded and stemmed (garnish) (optional)

Steps:

  • This recipe requires a simple prep.
  • Prepare the onion, peel the garlic, chop the onion, peel and chop the 2 garlic cloves, chop the green chilies and jalapenos if you are using them and get the hominy drained and rinsed.
  • I boil my ancho chilies in a separate small pot for the garnish part(read below).
  • Now you are ready to cook.
  • Place the meat in a large saucepan and just cover with lightly salted water.
  • Add 1/2 chopped onion, the 2 cloves peeled garlic, pepper, cumin, and oregano.
  • Bring to a boil over medium heat, skim off any foam that rises, reduce heat, cover and simmer for 45 minutes.
  • Remove meat and broth, reserving both.
  • Saute the remaining chopped onion and garlic in oil until translucent.
  • Add the remaining spices, stir for a minute.
  • Cut the reserved pork into 1 inch cubes and add to the pan.
  • Stir in the canned hominy, pork broth (if there is not enough pork broth, add chicken stock, I like to add it anyway for flavor, about 2-4 cups, eyeball the amount you like), green chilies and jalapenos (optional).
  • Cook at a simmer, covered, for 45 to 60 minutes until the meat and hominy are tender.
  • If necessary, cook for up to an additional 60 minutes until the chilies and onions are well blended into the broth.
  • Degrease the stew, taste for salt, and serve in soup bowls.
  • This is a delicious recipe and well worth the effort to make.
  • Garnishes that are always served with are:.
  • lots of lime/lemon wedges.
  • sliced radishes.
  • chopped cilantro.
  • Shredded cabbage(not red).
  • fresh/ packaged fried corn tortillas.
  • When my ancho chilies are soft from boiling(takes about 15 minutes), then i put them in the blender with 1 1/2cups of water, 1 clove of garlic and about 2 tablespoons diced onion, and about 1 tablespoons of salt and pepper. I blend this thin, then strain it to get the liquid separated from its "pulp". I throw the pulp into the soup for the flavor i like but you can discard if too spicy for you. The remaining liquid you put in a serving dish for guests to add in their own bowl, if desired. Beware! It's HOT!

AUTHENTIC MEXICAN RED POZOLE, POSOLE ROJO MEXICANO AUTENTICO



Authentic Mexican Red Pozole, Posole Rojo Mexicano Autentico image

The most wonderful memories I have is remembering my grandmother making Pozole for the holidays. This was a two day process. Dried white hominy corn was soaked first overnight, the next day it was slow cooked for six hours. In this recipe I will tell you where to get your dried hominy how to cook it. What to add to it and how to...

Provided by Juliann Esquivel

Categories     Other Soups

Time 6h

Number Of Ingredients 33

2 lb dried hominy, boiled for 1 hour and let soak over night
5 Tbsp slaked lime or pickling lime add to soaking water
~~red chile sauce~~
6 large dried chile anchos, seeds, veins and stem removed
6 large guajillo chiles, seeds, veins, and stem removed
1 large head of fresh garlic cloves, all peeled
1/4 large tablet mexican chocolate, abuelita or iberia brand
1 large white vidalia onions or sweet onion chopped
1 tsp ground cumin seed or ground cumin powder
1/2 tsp mexican oregano
2 tsp salt or to suit your taste.
1/2 c all purpose white flour
1/2 c canola oil or shortening
~~~pork meat soup~~~
4 1/2 lb bone in pork shoulder, cut into 3 or 4 pieces
2 large vidalia onions, cut into slices
8 large cloves fresh garlic peeled and smashed
3 lb boneless pork loin cut in pieces
8 qt cold water
1 c canola oil or shortening, for searing the meat
2 tsp garlic powder, and 1 tsp. ground black pepper
2 Tbsp salt or to your taste
4 large dressed pigs feet each split in half. have butcher do this
~garnishes/condiments/accompaniments~1
1 large head lettuce shredded fine
2 c fine shredded cabbage
1 lb cleaned, diced chopped radishes
8 large limes cut into wedges
3 large vidalia onions finely chopped
2 large ripe avacados peeled and diced
1 large bowl of my mexican red salsa see recipe posted
1 jar(s) dried mexican oregano or regular oregano for dusting pozole
20/30 large corn or flour fresh hot tortillas to serve with pozole

Steps:

  • 1. Bring the corn to a boil then shut off and soak in this water all night. Next day Drain and Rinse. Measure about 10 quarts water into a very large pot such as a canning pot. If using Ranchgordo hominy you need not add any lime. If you have regular dried hominy add 5 tablespoons lime to the water and add the corn. Bring to a boil, partially cover pot and simmer gently over medium-low heat. Boil dried hominy for 4 hours. Add water as necessary to keep the water level more or less constant. Slower, longer cooking is the secret for making a delicious pozole. This is not a hurry up dish. Next shut off and let cool. When you are able to handle corn drain all the water and rinse your pozole several times with cool or cold water. Rub the grains aganist each other with your hands. You will see the hulls come off the grains easly. Wash and rinse several times until all the hulls have come off the grains. You will have to wash and rinse you hominy several times until all the hulls are off. You will be left with little puffs of white corn. This process takes at least a good 20 or 30 minutes. I have rinsed my hominy at least six to eight times; making sure the hulls are discarded and hominy is rinsed clean of the lime. Once rinsed drain all of the water out of the pot. Set cooked hominy aside. Note: You hominy still needs another hour of cooking time at this point.
  • 2. Meanwhile while the corn is gently cooking, cook your meat. Cut your pork shoulder in 3 or 4 large pieces. Season meat with the salt, garlic powder and black pepper. Cut your pork loin in smaller pieces and season as well. Add pork bones and the pig feet optional. Next in a large pot heat the the canola oil add your pork meat a little at a time searing and browning on all sides. You are not cooking the meat only searing it. When the meat is all seared drain off as much oil as possible add the sliced onion and smashed garlic to the meat pot. Add 8 quarts cold water to the meat pot. Bring up to a boil; skim off any foam that may rise to surface. turn heat down, add an additional tablespoon of salt, cover and gently simmer the meats for about 2 1/2 hours. "Do not use any type of smoked ham bone or smoked pork product". Shut off the heat after 2 1/2 hours of cooking. The pork meat will not be done and should still need about one more hour of cooking time. Do not finish cooking the meat. Let pot cool down.
  • 3. After meat has cooled down completely. Refrigerate overnight the next day with a large spoon remove and discard any congeled fat of the top of the meat and broth pot. Put the pot back on the stove over medium heat add the semi cooked hominy and begin to slow cook again over medium -low heat. Meat and hominy will need about one or two more hours of cooking time. Add more water if needed to the pot.
  • 4. While meat and hominy are slow cooking make your Red Chile Sauce. Clean and remove the seeds, vein and stems from the dried chiles. Wipe each chile the outside with a damp paper towel. Toast the chile ancho and guajillo chiles in a dry frying pan over medium-low heat. Do not add any oil. Be carful to not scorch the chiles. If you should scorch them they will become very bitter and you will have to start over again. Turn them constantly several times cooking until they become pliable and fragarant, about 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer chiles to a deep pot and add two or three cups water and two peeled garlic cloves. Bring to a hard boil. Once boiling turn off the heat and let stand covered for 20 to 25 minutes. Next in a blender combine the chiles, some of the soaking liquid, chopped onion, and some of the fresh garlic cloves that have been peeled. Add 1/2 teaspoon salt, and a 1/4 of a piece of the Mexican chocolate tablet. Puree until all is smooth. Do all of the chiles like this using the rest of the garlic, onion, the chocolate and a little more soaking liquid.
  • 5. Next in a deep frying pan heat a quarter cup of canola oil. Add 1/2 cup white all purpose flour to the oil. Make a roux with the flour and oil until the flour is a dark blonde. Careful not to scorch. If you do you will have to start over again. Add one cup of the chile paste into the roux and with a wisk begin to stir chile paste with the roux. Do not worry the paste will start to get real thick and look as if it's glumping up. Quickly lower heat and add two cups of the simmering pork broth to the chile paste and roux. Continue to wisk very fast until all the chile sauce gets smooth; at this point you may have to add another one or two cupfuls of pork broth. Continue wisking until all is very well incorporated and the sauce is smooth. Now add all remaining spices, oregano, cumin powder and continue to stir very well. Now add you chile sauce to the pot of broth, meat and hominy. Stir well until all of the broth turns a deep red. Taste the broth to see if you have enough salt. Continue to simmer the Pozole until the corn is soft, tender and the meat is fork tender about one hour to a hour and a half. Serve in deep bowls, add a teaspoonful of diced sweet onion, fine shredded lettuce, or shredded cabbage, diced radishes, lime wedges, avacado slices, My hot red salsa, see my recipe posted and dried whole leaf oregano. Before serving garnishes over the pozole it is customary to rub a little dried oregano between your palms, dusting over the pozole then garnish with the accompaniments. Have these garnishes in large bowls set on the table. Pass the fresh hot tortillas. Yes its a lot of work but you have never had pozole like this. Once you make like this you will not want any other way. I cut corners by making my chile paste ahead of time and freeze in little quart freezer bags. I just defrost and make my chile sauce. See my recipe posted for Mexican Red Chile Sauce. Enjoy

POZOLE (MEXICAN PORK AND HOMINY STEW)



Pozole (Mexican pork and hominy stew) image

Pierre Franey, who for decades was an integral contributor to The Times's food report, delivered this recipe for pozole in 1983. At the time, he said: "A genuine pozole is a tedious but incredibly simple food, rather like a hearty soup, made of pork and hominy (the dried kernels of corn). It is served with the cooking liquid plus assorted garnishes, including chopped onion, ground hot chilies, sliced radishes, shredded lettuce and lime wedges, which are passed at the table and added according to taste." Which doesn't sound tedious at all. Still, he designed this recipe so that it could be cooked within an hour.

Provided by Pierre Franey

Categories     dinner, weekday, main course

Time 1h50m

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 13

4 pork chops, about 1 1/2 pounds
2 chicken legs plus thighs, about 1 1/2 pounds
6 cups water
1 onion, about 1/4 pound, peeled and quartered
1 large clove garlic, peeled
Salt to taste if desired
2 tablespoons chopped hot green chilies, optional (see note)
12 peppercorns
2 1/2 cups drained canned hominy, available in shops and supermarkets that deal in Spanish and Puerto Rican foods
1 small head iceberg lettuce
12 radishes
1 lime
1/2 cup finely chopped Bermuda onion

Steps:

  • Cut bones from chops but reserve both meat and bones. Cut meat into one-inch cubes. Put meat and bones in small kettle and add chicken legs and thighs. Add water, quartered onion, garlic, salt, chilies and peppercorns. Bring to boil and cook, uncovered, 45 minutes or until meat is quite tender. Remove pork and chicken.
  • When cool enough to handle, remove and discard skin and bones from chicken. Cut meat into bite-size pieces.
  • Strain broth into another small kettle or saucepan. Add meats, hominy and bring to boil.
  • Meanwhile, shred lettuce, slice radishes, quarter lime and chop Bermuda onion. Serve in individual serving dishes, to be added to soup according to taste.
  • Serve soup in individual heated soup bowls.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 603, UnsaturatedFat 19 grams, Carbohydrate 26 grams, Fat 33 grams, Fiber 6 grams, Protein 50 grams, SaturatedFat 9 grams, Sodium 2297 milligrams, Sugar 7 grams, TransFat 0 grams

POZOLE ROJO (MEXICAN PORK AND HOMINY STEW)



Pozole Rojo (Mexican Pork and Hominy Stew) image

The traditional Mexican dish in the red version: pork and hominy in a thick broth colored and flavored with guajillo chiles. Serve with tortilla chips.

Provided by Consuelo Aguilar

Categories     Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes     Soup Recipes     Pork Soup Recipes

Time 3h53m

Yield 8

Number Of Ingredients 16

2 (16 ounce) cans white hominy, drained
water to cover
1 head garlic, cloves peeled
salt to taste
1 pound boneless pork shoulder, cubed
1 pound boneless pork loin, cubed
½ pound pork neck bones
1 large plum tomato
4 ounces dried guajillo chiles, stemmed and seeded
1 clove garlic
¼ teaspoon dried oregano
1 pinch ground cumin
2 cups water
1 head iceberg lettuce, finely shredded
1 small onion, diced
4 limes, quartered

Steps:

  • Place hominy in a large pot; cover with water. Add 1 head garlic and salt to taste. Cook over medium heat for 2 hours.
  • Place pork shoulder, pork loin, and pork neck bones in the hominy mixture and cook until meat is tender and cooked through, about 1 hour.
  • Place tomato and guajillo chiles in a pot and add enough water to cover; bring to a boil. Cook until chiles have softened, 15 to 20 minutes. Drain.
  • Place tomato and chiles with salt, 1 clove garlic, oregano, and cumin in a blender; add 2 cups water. Blend until smooth. Strain mixture through a fine-mesh sieve and set chile sauce aside.
  • Transfer pork to a work surface and shred with 2 forks. Discard the pork bones.
  • Pour chile sauce into hominy mixture; bring to a boil. Return shredded pork to pot. Simmer pozole until flavors have blended, about 3 minutes.
  • Ladle pozole into serving bowls and top with lettuce and onion and serve lime wedge on the side.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 407.7 calories, Carbohydrate 35.3 g, Cholesterol 81 mg, Fat 17.2 g, Fiber 9.1 g, Protein 29.8 g, SaturatedFat 5.6 g, Sodium 517.1 mg, Sugar 4.6 g

TRADITIONAL MEXICAN POZOLE



Traditional Mexican Pozole image

This is the best recipe I've found- it uses the flavors of cloves to balance the spiciness of the chili.

Provided by godluvsmommas

Categories     Pork

Time 1h45m

Yield 8-10 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 19

1 1/2 lbs pork shoulder
1/2 onion, stuck with
2 cloves
2 garlic cloves, peeled
5 peppercorns
1/2 teaspoon whole cumin seed
1 pinch oregano
1 onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, chopped
2 tablespoons oil
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon clove
1/2 teaspoon cayenne
4 cups white hominy, drained and rinsed
3 -5 cups pork broth, leftover from cooking pork shoulder
1 cup canned diced green chiles
1 teaspoon salt, to taste
2 jalapenos, chopped (optional)

Steps:

  • Prepare the onion with the 2 cloves, peel the garlic, chop the onion, peel and chop the 2 garlic cloves, chop the green chilies and jalapenos if you are using them. Drain the hominy rinse. Now you are ready to start cooking.
  • Place the meat in a large saucepan and just cover with lightly salted water. Add the clove studded onion, 2 cloves peeled garlic, peppercorns, cumin seed, and oregano. Bring to a boil over medium heat, skim off any foam that rises, reduce heat, cover and simmer for 45 minutes. Remove meat and broth, reserving both.
  • Sauté the chopped onion and garlic in oil until translucent. Add the remaining spices, stir for a minute. Cut the reserved pork into 1 inch cubes and add to the pan. Stir in the canned hominy, pork broth (if there is not enough pork broth, add chicken stock), green chilies and jalapenos (optional).
  • Cook at a simmer, covered, for 45 to 60 minutes until the meat and hominy are tender. If necessary, cook for up to an additional 60 minutes until the chilies and onions are well blended into the broth. Degrease the stew, taste for salt, and serve in soup bowls.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 306.6, Fat 19.6, SaturatedFat 5.9, Cholesterol 60.4, Sodium 590.1, Carbohydrate 15.4, Fiber 2.9, Sugar 2.4, Protein 16.4

Tips:

  • Prep ahead: If you're short on time, soak the hominy overnight or use canned hominy instead.
  • Use a variety of chiles: Different chiles will give your pozole a different flavor profile. For a mild pozole, use ancho or guajillo chiles. For a spicier pozole, use serrano or habanero chiles.
  • Don't overcook the hominy: Hominy should be tender but still have a slight bite to it. Overcooking will make it mushy.
  • Serve with toppings: Pozole is traditionally served with a variety of toppings, such as shredded cabbage, radishes, diced avocado, cilantro, and lime wedges. You can also serve it with tostadas or tortilla chips.
  • Make it your own: There are many different ways to make pozole. Feel free to experiment with different ingredients and flavors to create a pozole that you love.

Conclusion:

Pozole is a delicious and versatile Mexican soup that can be enjoyed by people of all ages. It's a great way to warm up on a cold day or to celebrate a special occasion. With so many different variations, there's sure to be a pozole recipe that everyone will enjoy. So next time you're looking for a new soup to try, give pozole a try. You won't be disappointed!

Related Topics