Slow Cooker Tacos With Ground Beef

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My scrumptious slow cooker tacos recipe includes kidney beans, tomatoes, rice, taco seasoning, and ground beef slow-cooked and served with your favorite taco toppings.

Slow cooker ground beef in taco shells.

Looking for a budget-friendly and ridiculously easy weeknight main dish to serve up to your family this week? Well, my slow cooker tacos definitely tick both of those boxes… and then some!

All you need is kidney beans, diced tomatoes, rice, taco seasoning, and ground beef. And all we’re going to do is add all of these ingredients to the crockpot and leave it to slow cook as we go about our day. In the end, we’ll have deliciously seasoned slow cooker ground beef that’s ready for tacos.

Then it’s up to you how you serve your slow cooker tacos. This is more of a concept post that’s going to help you use what you have on hand to pull together an effortless meal that your family will love while saving you money on meat. I’ve included lots of possibilities and suggestions below, but my family and I serve our crockpot taco meat differently every time. One of my favorite ways is to set up a taco salad bar with all of our favorite toppings. 

Alright, who’s ready to make delicious taco meat and the easiest weeknight supper ever?

Ingredients for slow cooker tacos.

Recipe Ingredients

  • Kidney beans
  • Diced tomatoes
  • Rice
  • Taco seasoning
  • Fully cooked ground beef that I dehydrated.

How to Make Slow Cooker Tacos

Add all ingredients to the slow cooker.

So basically I dump it all into my slow cooker along with taco seasoning.

I don’t drain any of my vegetables but you certainly can if you like to. I’m trying to be more conscious of all the nutrients I’m tossing down the drain when I do drain them.

After adding everything to the slow cooker, you need to add the amount of water required for the rice (check the package). I’m also adding 3/4 of a cup of water for the dehydrated ground beef.

Then, stir that up really well. Anytime you add dry rice it is important that you stir it really well because if not you’ll end up with pockets of uncooked rice.

Keep in mind that rice grows! I’m adding less than 1/2 a cup here and the end product will be very rice-filled! The one thing you are going to need to really gauge is at what point you want to add an additional packet of taco seasoning. This recipe could have been done with one or two packets. I used one this time.

Stir ingredients together and then slow cook.

Now put the lid on this puppy and let it cook on low for 7 to 8 hours or high for 3 to 4 hours (or until the rice is done).

Slow cooker tacos in the crock pot.

When it’s ready, this is what it will look like after a good stir. Enough taco gorp there to easily feed an army.

Now at this point, taste it and if you want to add more taco seasoning, just stir another packet in there real quick.

Slow cooker ground beef in taco shells.

Serve in crispy shells, tortillas to make burritos, or as a taco salad with corn chips or tortilla chips. Top with your favorite toppings (more of those below).

Storage

  • Store ground beef leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days and reheat in the microwave or on the stovetop. 
  • You can also freeze leftovers for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge before reheating as above.

Recipe Notes

  • If you don’t have dehydrated ground beef (I don’t expect ya to), you can cook it fresh for this or even put it in raw as long as it is very lean ground beef. Just make sure you break it up beforehand and cook it a good bit. You can also use shredded chicken, pork, shredded beef, or no meat at all.
  • Instead of ground beef, you can use ground turkey. You can also add raw boneless skinless chicken breast to the slow cooker and shred it at the end. If you have leftover bbq meat, skip the slow cooker and make tacos with shredded beef or pulled pork.
  • Substitute the kidney beans for any kind of bean you have on hand. This might be black beans, navy beans, refried beans, or pinto beans. You can also add two cans of beans for a vegetarian meal or to make the recipe more filling.
  • Speaking of, you can also add more vegetables. Canned corn kernels are a good choice, as are diced onion or chopped green chiles. 
  • Another option is to swap the canned tomatoes for a jar of salsa.
  • Now, let’s talk about taco toppings. The world is your oyster, but here are some suggestions: salsa or pico de gallo, chopped fresh cilantro, sour cream, avocado or guacamole, shredded lettuce, sliced jalapenos, black olives, a squeeze of lime, and shredded cheddar cheese or Mexican cheese blend.

Recipe FAQs

Can I cook raw ground beef in the slow cooker?

Yes, you can cook raw ground beef in the slow cooker. You just want to make sure it’s lean ground beef, as normal ground beef will cook up to too greasy.

Can I cook ground beef tacos on the stovetop instead?

Yes, you can! What you want to do is combine everything and bring it just to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer until rice is fully cooked (about 20-30 minutes), stirring every now and then and checking to make sure more water doesn’t need to be added. More water will evaporate on the stovetop than it will in the slow cooker.

How do you make shredded beef slow cooker tacos?

You’ll need a 2-pound boneless chuck roast. Brown all sides quickly in a frying pan, then add it to the slow cooker along with the other ingredients. The cook time remains the same, but once done, you’ll want to remove the roast, shred the beef, then add it back to the slow cooker to soak up all those flavors before serving.

How can I serve my slow cooker taco meat?

There are so many ways to serve your slow cooker taco ground beef:

  • In taco shells or homemade tortillas for hard or soft tacos.
  • Wrapped in flour tortillas to make burritos.
  • As a taco salad (also called a burrito bowl or taco bowl) on a bed of corn chips or tortilla chips.
  • As a pizza topping.
  • Wrapped in a flour tortilla with cheese and toasted to make a quesadilla.
  • Baked in the oven to make enchiladas.

Check out these other tasty taco-inspired recipes:

Fiesta Taco Salad

Taco Pizza Recipe

Taco Tater Tot Casserole Recipe

Sweet Potato and Black Bean Tacos

Taco Soup (The World’s Easiest Supper)

Greek Chicken Tacos

Slow Cooker Ground Beef Tacos

My scrumptious slow cooker tacos recipe includes kidney beans, tomatoes, rice, taco seasoning, and ground beef slow-cooked and served with your favorite taco toppings.
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 7 hours
Total Time: 7 hours 15 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American, Mexican
Keyword: beef, crockpot, slowcooker, taco
Servings: 4
Calories: 75kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 14.5-ounce can kidney beans
  • 1 14-ounce can diced tomatoes
  • 1/2 cup rice, optional
  • 1 cup ground beef
  • 1-2 packets taco seasoning to taste
  • 1 cup water

Instructions

  • Place all ingredients in the slow cooker and stir very well. Cover and cook on low for 7-8 hours or on high for 3-4 hours.
    1 14.5-ounce can kidney beans, 1 14-ounce can diced tomatoes, 1/2 cup rice, optional, 1 cup ground beef, 1-2 packets taco seasoning to taste, 1 cup water
  • Serve in taco shells, tortillas, or as a taco salad. Top with favorite toppings.

Notes

  • If using dehydrated beef, I add equal parts water and beef to the mixture to allow it to reconstitute.

Nutrition

Calories: 75kcal
Tried this recipe?Mention @southernplate or tag #southernplate!

“Whenever possible this summer, enjoy it with your kids.
Work is important, work is necessary, work is required…but work is not living.
Home is where the sweetness of life is stirred.”

~Christy Jordan

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52 Comments

  1. Where did the name Gorp come from? I’ve always known Gorp as a kind of trail mix since it stands for Good Ol’ Raisins and Peanuts.

    We make all of our own seasoning blends—Taco, Chili, Cajun, Seasoned Salt, Lemon Pepper, etc. This allows me to control the amount of salt and heat. We also make our own cream soup mixes so we don’t have to resort to the canned stuff. It’s hardly any more effort to use and tastes soooooo much better.

    1. It just looked like gorp to me 🙂 It’s a bit old pile of gorp 🙂 Someone on Facebook pointed out that same thing about gorp and I told her she could always add peanuts and raisins to this as well 😉
      I shared my cream soup recipes in my last book. I agree, pretty easy to do! I still reach for the can often but it is great to have options and the ability to make your own whenever the need arises. Don’t you just love having a well stocked spice cabinet?

  2. I never thought about adding beans or rice in with my taco meat before but I’m going to try now! Looks delicious and I always need cheap but filling meals with a military salary.

  3. Looks a lot like a casserole I used to make all the time, didn’t have taco seasoning but the basic idea was the same. I can’t eat rice because it spikes my blood sugar too much, but it looks good.

  4. Love this idea! Would be a great base to make premade burritos that can be frozen. Thanks so much!

  5. That looks delicious.

    As for taco seasoning, I make my own. The amounts vary, and lord knows I never measure, but I used chili powder, cumin, garlic powder, salt, pepper, onion powder and my secret ingredient: Smoked paprika. I can make huge batches and keep it in a ziplock bag. Much better tasting and way more economical.

  6. I’ve started adding beans to my tacos all the time now – just to stretch the meat. I usually add a few spoons of salsa to give it an extra kick. I love the ideas of rice and tomatoes!

    1. I add quinoa to all my ground beef recipes, I find I can cut the amount of ground beef in 1/2 most time. I feed 9 ppl daily, and I really work to stretch my meat budget. I use 1 cup of uncooked quinoa to 1 pound of ground beef, I then have enough taco “”meat” to feed everyone (3 or 4 tacos each), with some leftover.

      1. That’s exactly what I’m looking for. We feed 6 daily so I’m really trying to stretch my meat budget majorly. Thanks for the tip. I’m also looking for a blogger who has a large family that recipes will make sense for our family, and of course who know the struggle of stretching a meat budget!

    1. I use left overs from the fridge. can Items What ever I can find. usually better than the restraunts. (sp)

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