This Jamaican Oxtails Recipe is fall off the bone tender and full of amazing flavor. It can be made in about an hour with your pressure cooker or cook it low and slow in a slow cooker.
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Full Recipe Ingredients/Instructions are available in the
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If you ever ask me what my favorite Jamaican dish is, I’ll probably say oxtail. It’s a recipe that my mom would make for special occasions. I wish we could have eaten it weekly, but oxtail can be so darn expensive. So it became one of those special Sunday dinners or “let’s celebrate something” dinners.
Oxtails usually take hours to cook. But wow, the flavor and the tenderness the oxtail brings are worth it. Lucky for me, I’m a pressure cooking fanatic and found that using a pressure cooker cuts the time of cooking oxtail by a ton. For this recipe, you can use a pressure cooker or even a slow cooker.
Ingredients Needed
Ingredient amounts and full recipe instructions are on the printable recipe card at the bottom of the post.
- Oxtail - Choose beef oxtail that is medium in size and of similar size. Try and choose oxtail pieces that do not have too much fat on them.
- Marinade Ingredients - Brown sugar, soy sauce, Worcestershire Sauce, salt, garlic powder, black pepper, allspice.
- Other Ingredients - vegetable oil, yellow onion, green onion, garlic, carrots, scotch bonnet pepper (or habanero), beef broth, thyme, cornstarch, water, butterbeans
How to Make Jamaican Oxtails and Gravy
First, I mise en place my ingredients by chopping my onions, garlic, and scotch bonnet or habanero pepper. Make sure to remove the seeds and membrane from the hot pepper, or your oxtail will be too spicy.
Then prepare your oxtails by cleaning them with a little bit of water and vinegar, and then dry them off with some paper towels. I know I know, they say not to wash your meat but my mom would literally cuss me out if I didn’t. So I do.
Next, season your oxtails with brown sugar, salt, black pepper, garlic powder, allspice, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and browning. Use your hands and mix, ensuring that your oxtail pieces are fully covered.
Now you can decide at this point if you feel like marinating or not. If I’m pressure cooking or slow cooking, I usually skip this step, and the flavor is still pretty amazing. If you choose to marinate, marinate in the fridge for 8 hours or overnight.
Pressure Cooking Instructions
Turn the pressure cooker on the “high sauté” setting. If using an Instant Pot, select “Sauté and press the “+” button until it is the “more” setting. Once your Pressure Cooker is “Hot”, add your vegetable oil to the pot.
Next, add your larger oxtail pieces to the pot, flat side down about ¼ inch apart, and brown on each side for about 2 minutes. Make sure you’re watching the oxtails at this browning stage, as you don’t want to burn the oxtail. If you do, your oxtail gravy will taste bitter later on.
You can choose to brown all your pieces of oxtails but I usually only brown the larger pieces of the oxtail. The smaller pieces usually don’t need browning.
Once you’ve browned your oxtail, deglaze your pressure cooker by adding about 2 Tablespoons of beef broth to the insert. Take a wooden spoon and deglaze your pot by removing the brown bits at the bottom. Then add your yellow onions, green onions, carrots, garlic, and scotch bonnet pepper. Stir and sauté for about 5 minutes or until the onions have softened.
Add dried thyme, oxtails (and the liquid from the marinade), remaining beef broth, and ketchup to the pressure cooker insert. All the broth will not cover the oxtail. You don’t need it to.
Press “Cancel” on your pressure cooker. Cover with lid, making sure the valve is set to “Seal.” Set your pressure cooker to cook on High Pressure for 45 minutes.
Once your timer goes off, allow the pressure cooker to naturally release. All this means is that you don’t touch it. If you’re like me, you may anxiously stare at the pressure cooker waiting for your oxtail goodness. After about 25 minutes, all of your pressure should have been released. Double-check by making sure that the pin button has dropped or switch the valve to “Venting” to ensure all the pressure has been released. Press “Cancel” on the pressure cooker and then open the lid.
Remove the oxtail pieces and vegetables from the Pressure Cooker and place in a bowl and set aside. I use a spider strainer for this step.
Then press the “Sauté button on your pressure cooker.
Once your liquid starts to boil, make a cornstarch slurry by whisking the cornstarch with water in a separate bowl. Slowly stir in the slurry into the pressure cooker. Add drained butter beans to the pressure cooker as well and stir them in. Cook for about 5 minutes until the sauce has thickened a little and the butter beans are warmed.
Return oxtails and vegetables to the pressure cooker. Serve and enjoy.
Notes on Pressure Cooker Oxtails
- It’s best if all your oxtails are medium sized oxtails that are similar in size. If you can’t get them the same size, no worries. It’ll still work.
- Oxtail that is too fatty will lead to fatty gravy. You want some fat, just not too much fat. If your oxtail is extremely fatty, use a paring knife to remove some of the excess fat.
- Scotch Bonnet is typically used for this recipe. If you can’t find a scotch bonnet, a habanero can be substituted. You could also use about 1-2 teaspoons of this scotch bonnet pepper sauce.
Looking for recipes to serve this Jamaican Oxtails with? Try these out:
- Jamaican Rice and Peas (Pressure Cooker Recipe)
- Jamaican Rum Punch
- Sauteéd Jamaican Cabbage
Other popular Jamaican recipes:
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If you've made this oxtail recipe or any other recipe on the blog, I'd love to hear your thoughts! Please leave a comment below. Your feedback is always appreciated!
The BEST Jamaican Oxtail Recipe
Ingredients
- 2.5 lbs oxtails
- ¼ cup brown sugar
- 1 Tablespoon soy sauce
- 1 Tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce
- 1 Tablespoon salt
- 2 teaspoons garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 teaspoon ground allspice
- 1 teaspoon browning
- 2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
- 1 yellow onion chopped
- 4 green onions chopped
- 1 Tablespoon garlic chopped
- 2 whole carrots chopped
- 1 scotch bonnet or habanero pepper seeds and membrane removed and chopped
- 1 cup beef broth
- 1 Tablespoon ketchup
- 1 teaspoon dried thyme
- 2 Tablespoons water
- 1 Tablespoon cornstarch
- 1 16 oz can Butter Beans drained
Instructions
- Rinse oxtails with water and vinegar and pat dry. Cover oxtails with brown sugar, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, salt, garlic powder, black pepper, all-spice, and browning and rub into oxtails.
- Set Pressure Cooker on High Sauté and once hot, add vegetable oil. Next, add your larger oxtail pieces to the pot, flat side down about ¼ inch apart, and brown on each side.
- Remove oxtail after browning and place in bowl.
- Deglaze your pressure cooker by adding about 2 tablespoon of beef broth to the insert. Take a wooden spoon and deglaze your pot by removing the brown bits at the bottom. Then add your yellow onions, green onions, carrots, garlic, and scotch bonnet pepper. Stir and sauté for about 5 minutes or until the onions have softened.
- Add dried thyme, oxtails (and the liquid from the marinade), remaining beef broth, and ketchup to the pressure cooker insert.
- Press “Cancel” on your Instant Pot. Cover and cook on high pressure for 45 minutes. Once timer is done, allow pressure cooker to naturally release.
- Once all pressure has released, open lid and remove oxtails and vegetables, leaving liquid behind. Turn Pressure Cooker on sauté. Once liquid begins to simmer, create a corn starch slurry by combining corn starch and water to a separate bowl. Stir into simmering liquid. Add drained butter beans into pressure cooker and allow to simmer for about 5 minutes, until liquid is slightly thickened and butterbeans are warmed.
- Add oxtails and vegetables back to the pressure cooker. Serve and enjoy 🙂
Slow Cooker Instructions
- Prepare the recipe as instructed up until the oxtails need to be browned. Brown oxtail over medium-high heat on the stovetop in a skillet. Once oxtail are browned, deglaze skillet by adding 2 tablespoon of beef broth. Add onions and carrots to skillet and stir until onions have softened. Add these ingredients to the slow cooker as well as all remaining ingredients, except the butter beans. Cook on low heat for 8-10 hours or until oxtail is tender. 30 minutes before serving, create a cornstarch slurry by combining corn starch and water to a separate bowl. Stir into slow cooker along with the drained butter beans.
Stove Top Instructions
- Follow the instructions above and then rather than placing in a slow cooker or pressure cooker, cook it on the stove on medium low heat for about 3 hours, stirring occasionaly or until oxtails are tender. Add the butter beans when there is about 30 minutes left on the cook time.
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Notes
- It’s best if all your oxtails are medium sized oxtails that are similar in size. If you can’t get them the same size, no worries. It’ll still work.
- Oxtail that is too fatty will lead to fatty gravy. You want some fat, just not too much fat. If your oxtail is extremely fatty, use a paring knife to remove some of the excess fat.
- Scotch Bonnet is typically used for this recipe. If you can’t find a scotch bonnet, a habanero can be substituted. You could also use about 1-2 teaspoon of this scotch bonnet pepper sauce.
Audrey says
I use to keep liquid coffee in my fridge.so today I went through the back of my fridge and I was plexed that all I found was an empty jar, but I not stuck, because I still da a bottle Guinness Extra Stout, a bottle of red wine, before I forget I didn’t get to the store to get the Scotch Bonnet peppers, but ... I have a liquid bottle of the scotch bonnet pepper,it is just as on point. I used just 3 drops of it .huhh yep I think I was smart to use just those three drops. Lol so glad I found your page. , I saved it thank you for your posting Ohh !, I am going to also fry up some plantains 🌈🌈🌈🌈✌️✌️✌️💕💕💕😎😎a very happy new year to you
Tiana says
I don’t even trust recipes that much or the comments because people just don’t follow directions... but this is a recipe to definitely try. I made a crock pot of this for Christmas and it was a hit! I made it with coconut ginger rice. I also made about 4-5 lbs of it and doubled the recipe. So good. Trust me, give this recipe a try.
Audrey says
Great recipe! I made this for dinner and my kids loved it. The only change I made was I eliminated the hot pepper (cannot eat spicy food) and I cooked the oxtails on the stovetop and finished in the oven. Delicious!
Tanya says
Thank you so much! Glad you all enjoyed the recipe.
Courtny Vaz says
We have a soy allergy, can we forgo the soy sauce or can we use something in place of that? Granny always made it with soy sauce... So I hope it doesn't throw the flavour too much
Tanya says
Hi Courtney, the soy sauce provides a bit of umami flavor so I'd sub with something similar. Coconut Aminos would be a good substitute.
Nicole says
Thank you! It comes out amazing! I have made this recipe a number of times. My husband enjoys this dish very much. Restaurant quality.
C says
This turned out amazing - so flavorful. thank you for sharing!!!
John says
If I double the amount of meat should I just double all other ingredients?
Tanya says
Hi John, yes.
John says
@Tanya, thanks appreciate the quick response. Going to make it tonight.
Christopher Council says
I made this last night and I’m really happy with how it turned out.
I made a few changes:
* Browned the oxtails in a cast-iron pan over induction, sautéed the veggies in that, then transferred contents to my instant pot
* Used duck stock instead of beef broth (I have a bunch of it in my freezer)
* Used a habanero, couldn’t find a Scotch bonnet
* Used cannellini beans instead of butter beans
* Skipped the cornstarch and the browning sauce (added another tablespoon of brown sugar to compensate)
* Cooked in the instant pot for 55 min (I’m at 2000m altitude, so I have to adjust all pressure cooker times)
Overall it took a lot longer than I expected, and tracking down some of the ingredients was hard, but it was worth it! And the kitchen smelled sooooo good...
Oddly enough, the result reminded me a lot of one of my favorite restaurant dishes anywhere - the Lamb Shank Chettinad at Broadway Masala in Redwood City, California. I’ve been trying to reproduce that for years with no success, but the curry that came from making this dish is strikingly similar. I might just have to try it with a lamb shank next time (and maybe a bit of cumin and turmeric).
Pat says
Perfect. Just as good as the oxtails at the Jamaican restaurants. I also made the rice and beans and cabbage and they were all delicious.
Elaine says
Hi Tanya! My husband and I went round and round for a long time when the Instant Pot and air fryers first hit the market (he speaks "OPERATOR STANDING BY" fluently *eyeroll*). A couple of years ago I relented. I used the AF first thanks to your insanely easy and downright YUMMY tutorials. The IP was more intimidating so I started with hard boiled eggs, LOL. Fast forward to now and I made your Jamaican oxtails. Oh! My. Goodness! It's literally been decades since we've eaten oxtails and this recipe is the *only* one I will so happily make over and over again. Thank you so much for sharing! Looking forward to working my way thru your other IP recipes while we wait for this pandemic to go away (as I "gain another axe-handle").
Ruth Pontiflet says
I made this oxtail recipe about a month ago and couldn’t stop thinking about it! I’m not a big meat eater but this recipe is one of my favorites among a long list of Caribbean favorites. I lived in Trinidad for over10 years and learned quite a few delicious dishes. I’m preparing to make this dish today for the second time. I use white beans instead of the butter beans and I don’t skip marinading over night and I use my trusty Instant Pot!
MissDonna_30 says
Hi, I'm planning to cook this tonight (slow cooker overnight) and I have a question. Do you still add the cornstarch with the slow cooker recipe, also, can the browning be omitted? Just realized I didn't buy any. Thanks, Donna
Tanya says
Hi MissDonna, you can add the cornstarch to the slow cooker to thicken the gravy a bit. Add the cornstarch to the slow cooker during the last 20 minutes. You’ll also want to increase the slow cooker temp to high. You can skip the browning. It'll be fine, it just won't have the same color but it'll still taste delicious.
Jessica says
@Tanya, made this a few times now and it’s a great hit! I had oxtail stew in Jamaica and this was definitely better.. Quick question with the slow cooker you said turn it up to high for the last 20 mins with the corn starch. Both times I’d made it before I had left it for a little while before eating but the last time wanted to serve straight away and wasn’t thick enough I did put the corn starch in but didn’t turn it to high. Will turning it to high for the last 20 mins be enough to thicken it or would you recommend leaving the lid off/half off to help the process?
Tanya says
Hi Jessica, leaving the lid off should help it thicken up. I would also turn it to high for the last 30 minutes.
Brigitte Harding says
Tried it for Thanksgiving and got a lot of compliments. I was very pleased with the outcome and the taste.I never added sugar before but this certainly made it tasty. Will make this one of my oxtails recipe. Thanks for sharing
Tatiana Tucker says
Made this for myself and absolutely love it! So tender and flavorful.
Fresh the chef says
I cooked this for the first time a few month back and everyone loved it, today I’m making it again but bought more oxtails I added more brown sugar since it had more oxtails so you think adding more will make it sweet I don’t want it to be sweet?
Tanya says
Hi Fresh the chef, it might. If it tastes too sweet you can add a little vinegar to cut the sweetness.