Traditional Posole

Traditional Posole

Prep 20 min Cook 150 min Total 170 min Serves 8 servings Difficulty Easy 390 Cal Heat Medium 4.9 (87) Jump to recipe

If you grew up in New Mexico, this traditional posole is the dish you remember from cold winter evenings and big holiday tables — the same bowl of slow-simmered pork, hominy, and red chile they ladled out at school cafeterias and church suppers. It is humble, hearty, and deeply rooted in the food traditions of our region. Spell it posole the way we do here, or pozole the way you will see it on most menus — it is the same beloved pork-and-hominy stew either way.

This particular recipe comes straight from our family kitchen, where Mom always had a pot going on the stove when the weather turned cool. She made hers with pork tenderloin, and honestly, you can too — but pork shoulder gives you that extra richness that makes the broth absolutely irresistible after a long, slow simmer. Five generations of growing chile in the Hatch Valley have taught us that the best red posole is built on patience and good chile, not a long ingredient list.

What is posole — and why the hominy matters

Posole is a brothy stew of pork and hominy — field corn that has been treated with an alkaline solution (nixtamalized) so the hulls slip off and the kernels puff up tender and chewy. That puffed corn is what people mean when they search for “pozole corn” or “corn for pozole.” It is not the same as the canned sweet corn in the soup aisle, and it is not the same as posole made from scratch with dried field corn either. Our posole hominy is the genuine prepared corn this dish is built on — it holds its bite through a long simmer instead of dissolving into mush.

Red posole, the New Mexico way

Most New Mexican posole is posole rojo — red. The earthy, sun-dried flavor comes from Hatch red chile, and that is the single ingredient that decides whether your stew tastes authentic or flat. You can build the red base from our Hatch red chile powder stirred into the broth, or from a jar of our pure Hatch red chile sauce when you want it done in one move. Either way, no store-bought taco-aisle “enchilada sauce” will get you there — the depth has to come from real New Mexico chile.

Pork, and how to pick it

Pork shoulder (also sold as pork butt) is the cut we reach for. It has enough fat and connective tissue to go silky over a two-hour simmer, and it shreds beautifully at the end. Pork tenderloin or country-style ribs work in a pinch — just know a leaner cut gives you a lighter broth. Brown the pork hard before it goes in the pot; those caramelized edges are free flavor.

Substitutions and a chicken version

Plenty of families make pozole rojo de pollo — red posole with chicken — especially when they want something lighter or faster. Swap the pork for bone-in chicken thighs or a whole chicken, simmer until it pulls apart, and shred it back into the pot. The hominy and red chile stay exactly the same, so you still get authentic chicken pozole without changing the soul of the dish. Want it meatless? Skip the pork entirely and lean on the hominy, red chile, and a good vegetable broth.

Stovetop, slow cooker, or Instant Pot

This recipe is written for the stovetop because that is how Mom made it, but it adapts cleanly. For Instant Pot posole, brown the pork on sauté, add everything, and pressure cook 35 minutes with a natural release — you get the same fork-tender pork in a fraction of the time. In a slow cooker, brown the pork first, then 6–8 hours on low. The chile and hominy are forgiving; only the timing changes.

Toppings, serving, and storage

Posole is a build-your-own bowl. Set out shredded cabbage, thin-sliced radishes, diced onion, a wedge of lime, dried oregano, and warm tortillas, and let everyone dress their own. It is even better the next day — the chile deepens overnight — so make a big pot. It keeps 4 days in the fridge and freezes beautifully for 3 months; add a splash of broth when you reheat. Set this one up in the morning, and by dinnertime your whole house will smell like New Mexico.

The recipe

Traditional Posole

4.9 from 87 reviews
  • Prep20 min
  • Cook150 min
  • Total170 min
  • Yield8 bowls
  • Calories390
Easymedium heat
Made with Posole (Hominy) — grown in the Hatch Valley.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Season the cubed pork with salt. Heat the oil in a large heavy pot over medium-high heat and brown the pork on all sides in batches, then set aside.
  2. Add the onion to the same pot and cook until soft, about 5 minutes. Stir in the garlic and cook 1 minute more.
  3. Stir in the red chile powder (or sauce), posole seasoning, oregano, and cumin and toast for 30 seconds until fragrant.
  4. Return the pork to the pot, add the hominy and broth, and bring to a boil.
  5. Reduce the heat to low, cover, and simmer 2 to 2 1/2 hours, until the pork is fork-tender and the broth is rich and red. Stir occasionally and skim any foam.
  6. Taste and adjust salt. Ladle into bowls and serve with cabbage, radishes, onion, lime, and warm tortillas so everyone can dress their own.

Pantry

Shop the chile used in this recipe

Posole (Hominy)

$10.95

Sold out

Posole Seasoning

$10.95

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Hatch New Mexico Red Chile Powder

$10.95

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between posole and pozole?
There is no difference in the dish, only the spelling. New Mexicans tend to write "posole," while most Mexican menus use "pozole." Both name the same slow-simmered stew of pork and hominy in a chile broth. Our family uses "posole," but the recipe is the classic pozole rojo.
What corn is used for pozole?
Pozole is made with hominy: field corn treated with an alkaline solution so the hulls slip off and the kernels puff up tender and chewy. It is not sweet corn. Use prepared posole hominy, which holds its bite through a long simmer instead of turning to mush.
Can I make red pozole with chicken instead of pork?
Yes. Pozole rojo de pollo is a popular lighter version. Swap the pork for bone-in chicken thighs or a whole chicken, simmer until it pulls apart, then shred it back into the pot. Keep the hominy and Hatch red chile exactly the same for authentic chicken pozole.
How do you make pozole in an Instant Pot?
Brown the pork on the saute setting, add the onion, garlic, red chile, hominy, and broth, then pressure cook on high for 35 minutes with a 15-minute natural release. You get the same fork-tender pork and rich red broth as the stovetop version in far less time.
Where can I buy hominy for posole?
We sell prepared posole hominy at the Hatch Chile Store at /products/hominy-posole. It is the genuine nixtamalized corn this dish needs, and it pairs with our red chile powder and posole seasoning so you can build an authentic red posole start to finish.
How spicy is traditional New Mexican posole?
Traditional red posole is warmly spiced rather than fiery, landing at a medium heat. The Hatch red chile gives earthy depth more than burn. You control the heat by how much chile powder or sauce you add, so it is easy to make it milder for a family table or hotter for chile lovers.
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