Crispy chicken birria tacos hit the table with a shatteringly crisp shell, a smoky red broth, and shredded chicken that stays juicy instead of drying out. The real magic is the dip: each tortilla gets coated in consomé before it ever touches the pan, which gives you that deep red color and the savory, slightly oily crust people chase in good birria tacos.
This version leans on dried guajillo, ancho, and chipotle chiles for layered heat without burying the chicken under smoke. Blending the chile sauce smooth, then straining it, matters more than it sounds like it would. That extra minute keeps the broth silky and gives the tacos a cleaner, richer finish instead of a gritty one.
Below, I’ve included the timing that keeps the chicken tender, the one step that keeps the tortillas from tearing, and a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s already in the pantry.
The consomé came out rich and smooth, and dipping the tortillas before frying gave them that deep red crust without falling apart. My kids even asked for extra broth on the side.
Save these chicken birria tacos for the night you want crispy tortillas, shredded chicken, and a bowl of smoky consomé for dipping.
The Corn Tortilla Dip That Gives Birria Its Signature Crust
The biggest mistake with birria tacos is treating the tortilla like an afterthought. If you fry a dry tortilla straight in oil, it can go blistered in spots and still taste flat. Dipping it in the consomé first does two jobs at once: it colors the tortilla and gives the outer layer the savory fat that fries into that crisp, almost lacquered shell.
The second thing people miss is heat control. The skillet should be hot enough to crisp the tortilla fast, but not so hot that the chile coating scorches before the filling warms through. If the tortilla darkens in seconds, pull the heat back; you want a steady sizzle, not a burn.
- Consomé — This is the flavor source for the tortilla itself, not just the dipping broth on the side. Strain it before frying so the coating goes on smooth and even.
- Chicken thighs — Thighs stay tender during the long simmer and shred with almost no effort. Chicken breast can work, but it dries out faster and loses the rich texture that birria needs.
- Dried chiles — Guajillo gives color and mild fruitiness, ancho adds depth, and chipotle brings smoke. If you skip one, the broth will still work, but it won’t taste as layered.
- Corn tortillas — Use fresh tortillas if you can. Older tortillas crack when they hit the consomé, and cracked tortillas leak filling before they crisp.
How to Build the Broth Before It Ever Hits the Tortillas
Waking Up the Chiles
Toast the dried chiles just until they smell fragrant and slightly smoky. If they go dark or bitter, the whole pot picks up that burnt edge, and there’s no fixing it later. Soak them in hot water until they’re soft enough to blend without fibrous bits pulling at the blade. A smooth puree is what gives the broth its body.
Straining for a Silky Consomé
Blend the chiles with the onion, garlic, vinegar, spices, and just enough soaking liquid to keep the blender moving. Then strain it. This is the step that keeps the broth velvety instead of pulpy, and it matters even more because the tortillas will pick up that sauce directly. If the mixture looks too thick to pour, loosen it with a splash of broth before it goes into the pot.
Simmering the Chicken Until It Shreds Cleanly
Once the sauce hits the pot, let it cook for a few minutes before adding the broth and chicken. That short cook removes the raw edge from the chiles and deepens the color. Keep the pot at a gentle simmer, not a hard boil, or the chicken tightens up and turns stringy before it has time to soften. When it’s done, the meat should pull apart with a spoon and the broth should taste round, smoky, and a little concentrated.
Frying, Dipping, and Filling
Work one tortilla at a time. Dip it quickly, let the excess drip off, then lay it in the hot skillet so it sizzles immediately. Fill only one side with chicken and toppings; overstuffing makes the taco split before the shell crisps. Fold it, press lightly, and let each side cook until the edges turn deep red and the surface feels dry and crisp to the touch.
How to Adapt These Chicken Birria Tacos Without Losing the Point
Dairy-Free and Still Rich
These tacos are naturally dairy-free as written unless you add cheese. Skip the cheese or use a dairy-free melting style if you want the classic gooey finish without changing the broth. The consomé carries enough richness on its own, so you won’t miss butter or cream here.
If You Only Have Chicken Breast
Chicken breast will work, but cut the simmer time back and check early so it doesn’t dry out. Pull it as soon as it shreds easily, because breast meat keeps cooking in the hot broth even after the burner is off. The tacos will taste lighter and less juicy than the thigh version.
Making It Milder
Leave out one of the chipotle chiles if you want a softer heat level. The guajillo and ancho still give you the deep red color and the earthy backbone, while the chipotle is what pushes the smokiness forward. Removing it tones the tacos down without flattening them.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the shredded chicken and consomé separately for up to 4 days. The broth may gel a bit when cold, which is normal.
- Freezer: The chicken and broth freeze well for up to 2 months. Cool completely, then freeze in airtight containers or freezer bags with some headspace.
- Reheating: Reheat the broth gently on the stove until steaming, then warm the chicken in it so it stays moist. Fry the tortillas fresh; reheating already assembled tacos makes them soggy fast.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Chicken Birria Tacos
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Toast the dried guajillo chiles, ancho chiles, and chipotle chiles in a dry skillet over medium heat for 30-60 seconds until fragrant. Add them to hot water and soak for 10 minutes so they soften visibly.
- Blend the softened chiles with the onion, garlic, apple cider vinegar, cumin, oregano, and 1 cup of the soaking liquid until fully smooth. Stop and scrape the blender so no chile bits remain.
- Strain the sauce and cook it in a large pot with olive oil over medium heat for 5 minutes. Add the chicken thighs and chicken broth, then bring to a simmer and ensure small bubbles break at the surface.
- Cook uncovered for 60 minutes until the chicken is very tender and easily shreds. You should see active simmering with the sauce darken to a deep red.
- Remove the chicken and shred it in the pot until strands are ready to fill tacos. Strain the consomé into a serving bowl and keep it hot so steam rises when you dip.
- Heat oil in a cast iron skillet over medium-high heat and fry corn tortillas until crispy and lightly blistered, about 30-60 seconds per side. Dip each fried tortilla into the consomé, fill with shredded chicken, and top with shredded cheese, diced onion, and cilantro.
- Serve immediately with a cup of consomé for dipping. Keep the bowl covered between dips to maintain visible steam.