Slow Cooker Carnitas

$7.80 recipe / $0.98 serving
by Beth - Budget Bytes
4.69 from 44 votes
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Okay, this Slow Cooker Carnitas recipe might be the best thing I’ve ever made in my slow cooker. No joke. The combination of the warm spices, orange essence, and richness of the slowly cooked pulled pork is absolutely to die for. I hereby retire my chili rubbed pork recipe in favor of these Slow Cooker Carnitas. I need a stash of this flavorful and tender pulled pork in my freezer at all times for tacos, burritos, and NACHOS. Oh yes, the nachos I could make with this pork would be EPIC. And you just won’t believe how easy it is to make carnitas with a slow cooker! Let’s go!

Overhead view of slow cooker carnitas in a skillet with tongs and an orange on the side.

What is Carnitas?

Carnitas, which translates to “little meats”, is a Mexican pulled pork flavored with warm spices and orange. The dish is traditionally made with a fat-marbled cut of pork, like a Boston butt or picnic roast, which gives the meat an incredibly rich flavor and tender mouthfeel. The pulled pork is often used for tacos, burritos, taquitos, and more.

Ingredients for Carnitas

You don’t need a lot of ingredients to make slow cooker carnitas that are full of flavor and deliciously tender. Here’s what you’ll need for this recipe:

  • Pork: Choose a fatty cut of pork like Boston butt or a picnic roast. The marbled fat is essential to create the correct flavor and texture in this slow cooked pulled pork.
  • Onion and Garlic: These classic savory aromatics create a deep savory base for the flavor profile.
  • Spices: A combination of warm spices like cinnamon, chipotle (smoked jalapeño), cumin, oregano, salt, and pepper give carnitas its intense and aromatic flavor.
  • Orange: The subtle fresh citrus flavor of orange peels and sweetness from the orange juice provide a nice contrast to the warm spices, keeping the overall flavor profile complex and interesting.

How to Make Carnitas Tender and Crispy

One of the reasons carnitas are so good is the tender texture with crispy edges. Cooking the pork low and slow creates a tender meat that shreds easily, but finishing the pork in a skillet, and frying the pork in its own rendered fat, creates crispy edges. It’s best to fry the slow-cooked meat just before serving to get the best crispy edges.

Instant Pot Carnitas

This slow cooker carnitas recipe converts very easily to an Instant Pot. To make Instant Pot carnitas, simply layer all of the ingredients in the Instant Pot like you would in the slow cooker, secure the lid, and cook on high pressure for about 50 minutes. Natural release, shred, and crisp up the meat in a skillet as usual.

How to Serve Slow Cooker Carnitas

This delicious Mexican pulled pork is so good in everything, you will be so happy to have some stashed in your freezer. Try using your carnitas for burritos, tacos, taco salads, nachos, pulled pork sandwiches, quesadillas, and burrito bowls.

To make your carnitas into a full meal, try topping them with some pickled red onions or spicy pickled carrots, and adding some cumin lime roasted sweet potatoes, or corn and avocado salad on the side! And you might as well add some chips and guacamole too!

How to Store and Reheat Leftovers

This recipe has become one of my absolute favorites for meal prep! It freezes well so I can make a huge batch and portion it out as needed before freezing. After cooking, divide and transfer the pulled pork to food storage containers, with the juices, and chill completely in the refrigerator. Once chilled the carnitas will stay good in the refrigerator for about five days, or it can be transferred to the freezer and stored for about three months.

To reheat carnitas from the refrigerator, place the meat in a hot skillet and cook over medium until the liquid evaporates, the meat is heated through, and the edges have become crispy. To reheat from frozen, first allow the meat to thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then reheat in the same manner as the refrigerated carnitas.

Close up of carnitas held in tongs with a bowl of the pulled pork behind it.
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Slow Cooker Carnitas

4.69 from 44 votes
This Slow Cooker Carnitas recipe (Mexican pulled pork) is easy, deliciously tender, and flavorful. It's perfect for tacos, burritos, and more! 
Close up of carnitas in a skillet garnished with cilantro.
Servings 8
Prep 15 minutes
Cook 5 hours 15 minutes
Total 5 hours 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 yellow onion ($0.32)
  • 4 cloves garlic ($0.32)
  • 2 small cinnamon sticks ($0.95)
  • 1/2 Tbsp oregano ($0.08)
  • 1/2 Tbsp cumin ($0.08)
  • 1/2 tsp salt ($0.02)
  • Freshly cracked pepper ($0.05)
  • 1/2 tsp chipotle pepper powder ($0.05)
  • 3 lbs pork butt roast ($5.26)
  • 2 small oranges ($0.67)

Instructions 

  • Dice the onion and peel the garlic cloves. Place the onion, garlic, and cinnamon sticks in the bottom of the slow cooker.
  • In a small bowl, combine the oregano, cumin, salt, pepper, and chipotle powder. Cut the pork roast into 2-inch cubes. Place the cubed meat in a bowl and sprinkle the spice mix over top. Toss the meat in the spices until evenly coated. Place the seasoned meat in the slow cooker on top of the onion, garlic, and cinnamon.
  • Use a vegetable peeler to remove the thin layer of orange zest from one of the oranges. Squeeze about 1/2 cup juice from the oranges. Pour the orange juice over the meat in the slow cooker, than sprinkle the pieces of orange zest over top.
  • Place a lid on the slow cooker, turn it on to high, and cook for 5 hours, or until the meat is tender and falls apart.
  • Use tongs to stir and shred the meat, and remove the cinnamon sticks. Either divide the meat and liquid into smaller containers to refrigerate for later, or transfer the meat and some of the liquid to a skillet (preferably non-stick or cast iron). Cook the meat over medium flame until browned and crispy on the edges. Avoid stirring the meat too much as it will break down into tiny pieces. Use the crispy meat as a filling for tacos, burritos, nachos, or burrito bowls.

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Equipment

Notes

Note: We used a 6-quart slow cooker for this recipe.

Nutrition

Serving: 1ServingCalories: 252kcalCarbohydrates: 7gProtein: 33gFat: 10gSodium: 260mgFiber: 2g
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Overhead view of a skillet full of slow cooker carnitas with an orange on the side.

How to Make Slow Cooker Carnitas – Step by Step Photos

Diced onion, garlic, and cinnamon sticks in the bottom of a slow cooker.

Dice one yellow onion and peel four cloves of garlic. Place the diced onion, garlic cloves, and two small cinnamon sticks in the bottom of the slow cooker.

Close up of a bag of Badia cinnamon sticks.

These are the cinnamon sticks I use. These little packets of four small sticks are found in the Hispanic food section of my local grocery store and only cost $1.89. So, if cinnamon sticks are expensive in the spice aisle, check the international foods aisle as well.

Spice Mix in a small bowl

In a small bowl stir together 1/2 Tbsp oregano, 1/2 Tbsp cumin 1/2 tsp salt, some freshly cracked pepper, and 1/2 tsp chipotle pepper powder.

A packaged Boston butt pork roast.

You’ll also need one pork butt roast, about 3 lbs. If you use a bone-in roast, just get one slightly larger than 3 lbs. and don’t forget to pull the bones out after cooking.

Pork meat coated in spices in the slow cooker.

Cut the pork into 2-inch cubes, place them in a bowl, and sprinkle the spice mix over top. Toss the meat cubes in the spices until they’re evenly coated, then place them in the slow cooker on top of the onion, garlic, and cinnamon.

Orange peels held in the palm of a hand.

Use a vegetable peeler to remove the zest from one of the oranges. You want to get all the nice orange parts with the fragrant oils, but not the white pith, which can be bitter. Also, juice the oranges. You need about 1/2 cup juice.

orange juice being poured into the slow cooker on top of the pork.

Pour the orange juice over the meat…

Orange peels on top of the pork in the slow cooker.

And add the orange peels on top of the pork.

Cooked carnitas in the slow cooker.

Place the lid on the slow cooker, turn it on to high, and cook for 5 hours. See how much liquid comes out of the meat? That’s good stuff right there.

Shredded carnitas in the slow cooker with a pair of tongs.

Use a pair of tongs to stir and shred the meat. Fish out the cinnamon sticks (and bones, if you used a bone-in roast) at this time. You can serve the meat just as it is, or you can crisp it up in a skillet.

Cooked carnitas meat and juices in a food storage container.

OR you can refrigerate it or freeze it for later. If refrigerating/freezing, I highly recommend dividing the meat up into smaller portions before refrigerating (store it with the cooking juices). This helps it cool faster and prevents food safety issues. If you want to freeze some of it, let it chill in the refrigerator overnight before transferring to the freezer. 

Carnitas in a skillet after frying and getting crispy.

To make the carnitas crispy, just cook it in a skillet with some of the juices (because you need the fat from the slow cooker to basically fry the meat) until it’s crispy. I recommend doing this in some sort of non-stick skillet though, like cast iron, ceramic, or Teflon, because the liquified collagen likes to stick to and coat stainless steel. 

Overhead view of finished slow cooker carnitas in a skillet.

And that’s basically it! It’s just that easy to make tender, juicy, and FLAVORFUL slow cooker carnitas. 

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  1. I used larger sticks (didn’t realize it) and now this is CRAZY cinnamon-y. I need to reduce that flavor. Any ideas?

    1. Oh no! you could try adding a bit more of the cumin and chipotle powder to rebalance the flavors a bit, but I’d hate for those to end up too strong as well. Perhaps when you go to serve it, whatever you’re serving it with will mute the flavor of it a bit!

      1. Hey! I actually did something similar. I put it back in the pan with a tiny bit of water. flour, a little bit more salt, cayenne and the chipotle. fixed it right up! I think flour was the real MVP though.

    1. Yes, usually cooking on low requires about double the amount of time, but I’d check it at 8 and see if the meat is tender enough to shred at that point.

  2. I’ve made these probably half a dozen times, and every time I do so I forget just how delicious they are. I frequently can’t find a 3 pound roast, so I usually just double the recipe and freeze the excess meat (it freezes beautifully in the juices). This time I used a premixed combination of cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, and cloves in place of the cinnamon sticks and also added some smoked paprika and just a pinch of cayenne pepper. It was delicious! Rather than making it sweet, the cinnamon just gives it a nice smoky flavor that pairs well with the orange.

  3. Hi, i am so gonna try this recipe! But i want to try it in the pressure cooker as you said it could be made in it. But i have a question. The only liquid in the recipe is 1/2 orange juice. That’s not enough for a pressure cooker. What would you suggest to add? I know the meat makes a ton of juice but still needs liquid to at least come up to pressure properly, right? Any advice? Or should i just pull out my dusty slow cooker (lol) and do it that way? I think my teenaged hangry boys will love this!!

    I also wanted to say while I’ve only used a few of your recipes, so far, i absolutely love them and can’t wait to try more!!

    1. Since we tested this recipe in a slow cooker, that’s the easiest way to achieve equally successful results. While I can only guess how much liquid your pressure cooker requires or how ours differs (but I’m assuming it’s around a cup), I would say to either increase the orange juice to about 1 cup or make up the difference with water/broth depending on your preference! ~ Marion :)

    1. Pork loin is very lean and cooks much quicker than pork butt. I wouldn’t do it.

  4. One of the best recipes on this website, and I’ve been using the site for several years! I always make it with the pickled onions recipe that’s suggested at the top of the page. Makes the best tacos ever!!

  5. Pretty good recipe as written without substitution. I always skip the ‘zest’ ingredient as the skins of the fruits are always where any pesticides might reside (no matter if they say it’s organic oranges or not, I don’t trust them).