MacHaca
Submitted by muffin_gobbler
Machaca is a classic Northern Mexican scrambled egg dish with shredded carne asada, sauteed onion, poblano strips, and minced jalapeño. A hearty desayuno ready in 30 minutes.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
15 minREADY
30 minMachaca is Northern Mexican breakfast comfort, originally from Chihuahua and Sonora. Traditionally made with dried beef that gets rehydrated and scrambled into eggs, this home-style version shortcuts to shredded carne asada left over from last night’s grill. Same flavors, less overnight prep.
The layering is straightforward but matters. Butter melts in a skillet, minced onion softens until transparent (not browned), then the shredded carne asada goes in for a quick two-minute warmup. This deglazes any crusty bits from the onion and starts the beef releasing its juices. Strips of fresh poblano pepper go in next and sauté until they just begin to soften. Poblanos bring mild chile heat and a distinctly Mexican vegetal flavor that sets machaca apart from plain Tex-Mex scrambles.
Beaten eggs pour over, minced jalapeño folds in, and from there it’s scrambled-egg technique: low heat, gentle folds, pull off before the eggs look fully set because residual pan heat finishes them. Serve with salsa picante, warm flour tortillas, and black beans on the side.
Kitchen Tips
- Cook the eggs low and slow. High heat dries them out and toughens the beef. Medium-low with frequent folding keeps everything tender.
- Pull the eggs when they still look slightly wet. Carryover heat will finish the set, and overcooked machaca is the #1 mistake.
- Fire-roast the poblano first if you want deeper flavor. Char over a gas flame for a minute, let steam in a bowl, peel, then slice into strips.
- Warm the tortillas on a dry comal or skillet while the eggs cook. Machaca is best rolled into warm tortillas for tacos.
Variations
- Classic dried beef: Use traditional dried beef or machaca beef rehydrated in hot water for the old-school Sonoran version.
- With tomato: Add a small diced tomato with the onion for a machaca a la Mexicana style.
- Cheese top: Finish with a handful of shredded Monterey Jack or queso Oaxaca for a richer, melty version.
Ingredients
Directions
Melt the butter in a small skillet or omelet pan.
Sauté the onion until transparent, then add the carne asada and cook for a couple of minutes.
Add the poblano strips and continue to sauté until the strips begin to soften.
Pour in the eggs and fold in the jalapeno, and treat thereafter like scrambled eggs.
Serve with salsa picante.
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