Braised oxtail is a rich, slow-cooked dish where beef oxtail becomes fall-off-the-bone tender in a deeply flavored sauce. It’s popular in Caribbean, Korean, Southern, and European cuisines, usually served with rice, mashed potatoes, or polenta.
Basic Braised Oxtail (Home Style)
Ingredients
- 1.5–2 kg oxtail, cut into segments
- Salt and black pepper
- 2–3 tbsp oil
- 1 large onion, chopped
- 4–6 garlic cloves, minced
- 1–2 carrots, chopped
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 1–2 cups beef stock (or water)
- 1 cup red wine (optional but recommended)
- 2–3 bay leaves
- 1 tsp thyme (or fresh sprigs)
- 1–2 tbsp soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce (optional for depth)
Method
- Brown the oxtail
Season well with salt and pepper. Sear in hot oil until deeply browned on all sides. This step builds the base flavor. - Sauté aromatics
Remove oxtail, then in the same pot cook onions, garlic, and carrots until softened. - Build the sauce
Stir in tomato paste and cook for 1–2 minutes. Add red wine (if using) and reduce slightly. - Braise
Return oxtail to the pot. Add stock, bay leaves, thyme, and soy/Worcestershire sauce. Liquid should mostly cover the meat. - Slow cook
Cover and simmer gently for 2.5–4 hours (or bake at 160–170°C). Stir occasionally until the meat is tender and the sauce thickens. - Finish
Remove bay leaves, adjust salt, and skim excess fat if needed. The sauce should be glossy and rich.
What makes it special
- Oxtail is collagen-rich, so slow cooking turns the sauce naturally silky.
- The flavor gets deeper the next day—many people prefer leftovers.
- It’s forgiving: the longer and slower, the better (as long as it doesn’t dry out).
Common variations
- Caribbean style: allspice, scotch bonnet pepper, butter beans
- Korean style (kkori gomtang): lighter broth, garlic-heavy, often served as soup
- Italian-style: red wine-heavy with rosemary and pancetta
If you want, I can tailor it to what you have at home or show a quicker pressure-cooker version.