Make Slow Cooker Chile Verde for dinner tonight! It has tender pork cooked in a spicy green chile tomatillo sauce. Excellent with tortillas or just over rice.
Green chile recipes are made perfect in the slow cooker. We also make, Salsa Verde Chicken, Green Chile Pork Loin, Salsa Beef Verde and Green Chile Cheesy Chicken.
Can pork verde be made in the slow cooker?
Yes, and it is one of the best things you can make in it too! The low and slow cooking time creates very tender pork chunks, and the flavor of the green chile sauce only gets better the longer it is cooked.
Recipe Ingredients
- Pork shoulder – Use cubed pork shoulder (often called pork butt).
- All-purpose flour – This is used to coat the pork cubes; it will thicken the sauce.
- Cooking oil – For browning the meat.
- Peppers – Poblano peppers, Anaheim peppers, and jalapeno peppers.
- Other vegetables – White onion, garlic, tomatillos, and cilantro.
- Seasonings – Salt, pepper, cumin, and oregano.
- Chicken broth – This thins the sauce. I choose not to use water, for that can dilute the flavor of the sauce. You can use chicken stock if that is what you have on hand.
Step-by-Step Directions
Step One – Start by roasting peppers, garlic, tomatillos, and onion in the oven under the broiler on a baking sheet.
Step Two – Cook until they are roasted and tender and slightly charred. Next add the cubed pork to a ziplock bag and add the flour. Shake. Add oil to a pan set to medium high heat on the stovetop. Brown the pork, then add to the slow cooker.
Step Three – Add the roasted chile peppers, onion, garlic cloves, tomatillos, and cilantro to a blender (or can use a food processor), and that makes a green salsa. Pour that chile verde sauce over the pork. I also add seasonings and a touch of chicken broth. Below is what the chile verde looks like before cooking.
Step Four – I cook this chile verde for 9 hours low. After 9 hours, the pork is very tender, and the sauce has simmered to beautiful perfection. If you have excess fat or grease on top, soak it up with a paper towel.
How to serve:
- Tacos – Make classic pork chile verde tacos by putting the filling on warmed corn tortillas.
- Burritos – Wrap the green chili pork in flour tortillas along with rice and beans.
- Nachos – Great for nachos. Spread out chips on a sheet pan. Spoon over the pork and sauce, top with cheese, then broil until the cheese is bubbly.
- Toppings – Great as is or topped with cheese, sour cream, diced onion, chopped cilantro, avocado, and a squeeze of lime.
Recipe FAQs
Yes! I would say on a scale of 1 to 10 that this chile verde recipe is an 8 in heat. It has a perfect kick to it. To tone down the spiciness, I suggest serving with rice, cheese, and sour cream.
You can use green bell pepper in place of most of the peppers. The jalapenos and poblanos are the hottest.
Suppose you are short on time, use two 16-ounce jars of salsa verde instead of the fresh vegetables. It will do in a pinch if you are craving chile verde.
You can add sliced carrots and quartered gold potatoes to this recipe at the beginning of the cooking time for a beautiful and flavorful green chile stew.
Chile verde in the slow cooker is very flexible. You can cook a few more hours and it only gets more flavorful and the pork even more tender. Though eventual you can burn it if left too long.
This recipe has added flour that will make a nice thick sauce. After your dish is completed and you want a thicker sauce, make a cornstarh slurry with two tablespoons of cold water and two tablespoons of cornstarch. Add to the hot sauce and cook for 15 minutes longer.
This is the BEST chile verde recipe, great for any day of the week, get togehters and even parties!
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Slow Cooker Chile Verde Recipe
Ingredients:
- 3 lbs. pork shoulder, trimmed and cubed
- 2 Tbsp. cooking oil (approximate amount)
- 2 Tbsp. all purpose flour
- 2 poblano peppers
- 2 Anaheim peppers
- 2 jalapenos
- 4 garlic cloves
- 6 tomatillos, husks removed
- 1 large white onion, peeled and quartered
- 1 bunch cilantro, bulk of stems removed
- 3/4 tsp. salt
- 1/4 tsp. pepper
- 1/2 tsp. cumin
- 1/2 tsp. oregano
- 1 cup chicken broth
Instructions:
- Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Place the peppers, tomatillos, garlic, and onion onto a baking sheet. Place the baking sheet in the oven 2 racks down from the broiler. Let the veggies roast for 20-25 minutes or until the veggies are charred, keep an eye on them so they don’t overcook. Let cool down a bit before moving on to step 2.
- Place the veggies into a blender and place the cilantro on top. Place on lid on blender. Pulse until a fine salsa forms, you can make this any texture you desire. If your salsa is too thick to blend up properly, add a splash of the chicken broth from the recipe.
- On a baking sheet or in a ziplock bag coat the pork with the flour. Set a large skillet to medium high heat. Add the enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan. When the pan and oil are hot, brown the flour coated pork on all sides, no need to cook through. You may need to cook the pork in batches if your pan isn’t large enough to do all at the same time.
- Add the meat to the slow cooker. Pour over the salsa, add the salt, pepper, cumin and oregano. Pour over the chicken broth and stir.
- Cover and cook on LOW for 9 hours without opening the lid during the cooking time.
- Serve over tortillas with desired toppings, enjoy!
How to Video:
Sarah’s Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Nutrition info is auto-generated. This information is an estimate; if you are on a special diet, please use your own calculations.
Autum says
This feels like a silly question, but did you remove stems before you threw this in the blender?
Sarah Olson says
Yes, thanks for asking!
Tiffany Kelly says
What about the seeds?
Sarah Olson says
If you want less heat, remove them 🙂
Anonymous says
My sauce is thinner than I would like ideas on something that will thicken it?
Sarah Olson says
You could leave the lid off for a bit, or you could mix a few tablespoons of cornstarch with water and stir in.
Laurie Pellerite says
Adding some (2-3 tablespoons? ) of corn meal might work well, too thicken; I’ve done that with some taco-like soups. Just add to simmering soup and let cook a bit. — Getting ready to make the chili for tomorrow!! — Anyone ever add a can of pinto bean to this recipe…I’m feeling compelled to try??
Shelly in Sunny San Diego says
To go along with the Cuban theme try adding a rinsed can of black beans.
Krissy says
My sauce came out super thick and pretty much burned in the crockpot. Any suggestions on thinnning the sauce
Sarah Olson says
water or chicken broth would do great.
Victoria says
OHMYGOSH this turned out SOOOO good! Just the right amount of spice! The only seasoning I used was salt and it was DELISH!
Anonymous says
Any ideas on time if using an Instant Pot?
Jennifer Bowen says
Made it in my Instant Pot and it came out amazing. Did everything the same; cook on high for 45 min and let it release pressure for 10 min.
Sarah Olson says
Thank you for the info Jennifer! I will have to try.
Andrea Anderson says
doing this tonight for hubs pot luck tomorrow. wish me luck… I have never made chili verde before.
Karie says
About how many did they serve? I have very hungry boys
Sarah Olson says
This makes a lot. But my advise is to use as much pork as you think you would need. There is plenty of liquid to cover a lot.
Berni says
I used 3 lbs. It came out amazingly well. I invited My sister, Brother in law, nephew. It made about 10 small burritos. There wasn’t any more meat left. If i were to do it again i would definitely cook 6 lbs and have leftovers. There was plenty of liquid left to have covered another 3 lbs. Hope this helps.
Janine Nymann says
Made this yesterday…came out Uh-Mazing!!! I cut the pork into thick slices for pan frying bused coconut oil on medium heat. Didn’t cut it up any more, left them in 5 big slices. After 9 hours, it just pulls apart. I did, however, empty the juice before I pulled it apart. Then add juice to your desired consistency. I didn’t want soup! Excellent recipe, highly recommend!
Renee says
Could you prep the Verde salsa the night before?
Sarah Olson says
Yes!
Rosie says
What peppers can I use so that it does not turn out so spicy (hot) but yet it still has flavor?
Lori says
When you pick your jalapenos, or any peppers, pick ones with rounded bottoms. Avoid poiny tips, ones with little cracks, or ones that have different colors like yellow and red. You could also toss in a green pepper, and make sure to remove all seeds from all peppers, as seeds are super spicy. Hope that helps!
PM says
Actually most of the capsaicin is in the ribs (placenta), not the seeds. After roasting the chiles I like to cut them in half and remove the seeds and ribs (wear gloves if you’re sensitive to heat). I’ve done jalapenos this way and the dish didn’t end up spicy. Most recipes recommend removing the skin from the chiles after roasting as well, though I’m not sure why.
Guadalupe Love says
Hi, do you think I can cook on HIGH for half the time instead?
Sarah Olson says
Yes, I think that would work fine.
Guadalupe Love says
Thank you! I just threw everything in the crockpot. I can’t wait! Smells amazing already
Devin Alsobrook says
How did it turn out?
Chelsea Nelson says
Hi Sarah! What would be an alternative to the pork shoulder if I don’t eat pork?
Sarah Olson says
I would do boneless chicken thighs