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:
Find the full video tutorial on Youtube. Don't forget to click the thumbs-up button and subscribe for more recipe videos.
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.
Erik Reichmann says
"Worcestershire" sauce, not "Worchestire."
Tanya says
lol, thank you 🙂 fixed 🙂
Koya Siebie says
Hello, so excited to work this recipe but while setting up my instant pot the steam release popped off and broke,. I do have a slow cooker, could I get a time adjustment for this recipe?
Tanya says
Hi Koya, so sorry to hear that about your IP. I would transfer the items over to your slow cooker and cook on low pressure for 8-10 hours. Since your oxtails aready started cooking in the pressure cooker, it may be a little less time. They'll be done when they are nice and tender.
Katie B says
AMAZING! QUICK AND EASY!! This was my first time ever making oxtails and using my instant pot. My boyfriend and love Caribbean food so we decided on your recipe. I was slightly intimidated to cook them because 1) my BF mom is an amazing cook 2) I’ve only eaten ox tails maybe 3 times (just recently because my bf loves them) I’m not big on soup and stew like dishes. 3) because it was our first time using our instant pot. Well this recipe was so easy and delicious I will be cooking it regularly from now on. I love the heat from the pepper and sweetness from the brown sugar. I eliminated the beans because neither of us really care for beans. I will add greed n red peppers next time and marinate them overnight to see the difference in flavor. But even with just a quick marinade they were absolutely delicious. Thanks again for the share.
Donna Durham says
Delish! Did everything your recipe called for and hubby loved it! Thank you.
Maria says
I wanted a great recipe for the grass fed oxtails I purchased and was contemplating making them with a Filipino or Chinese recipe via slow cooker and after googling for recipes, your recipe came up. Having visited Jamaica once and remembering the warm spices in the food I had, I decided to try yours and I am soooo glad I did. I've now made this recipe twice and it's amazing each time! The 2nd time I made it, I decided to chop up the habanero (couldn't find Scotch Bonnet) with the seeds and membranes included because I wanted more spice. Halfway through the cooking I got scared because it tasted too hot so I added chopped green bell pepper and some extra carrot. Thankfully it mellowed out at the end of cooking and had the perfect level of spice I wanted. This dish is even more amazing with Jamaican Rice and Peas. Thank you so much for sharing! This is now a recipe I will make regularly. I'm afraid to try other Jamaican Oxtail recipes because yours is too good. 🙂 Also, used Kitchen Bouquet Browning because I couldn't find the Grace brand at the store.
Tanya says
Thank you so much Maria! And yes, Kithen Bouquet Browning is in most grocery stores too. It helps give that beautiful brown stew color. I'm so glad you enjoyed the recipe 🙂
Angie says
Well, I am sure this is the most delicious of Jamaican Recipes. The ingredients look amazing as do the pictures. I wish I could lie and say that I was a beginner cook, but alas I have been cooking for some years! I suppose I am an inconsistent cook, some days amazing, some days totally burnt, some days only a little burnt and other days just on the verge of. This recipe looked amazing! I gather all the ingredients and start my preps. Your recipe calls for 1 TABLESPOON of Salt!? Is this correct? I don't have or cannot find a scotch bonnet chili, so I decide I will just use the powdered chilli...not sure how much but just keeping sprinkling till I think that looks about right! I even make my own browning and as I have no idea what browning is...I looked on YouTube and came across an easy browning recipe...really easy....1/2 cup brown sugar over low heat...now this lovely Jamaican lady keeps emphasizing to keep stirring the sugar so that it does not burn...it will eventually melt turning a gorgeous dark brown color...you then you add water a little bit at a time until you have a lovely brown sauce...I had this on such a low heat, it took me 35 minutes to get it to turn into a sticky liquid..stirring all the time...I am really into this recipe and want to do EVERYTHING correctly (it is my husbands birthday dinner and he has been looking forward to this for 2 days) As this lovely lady pours water into her melted sugar, up comes the steam from her pan...still stirring...more water...still stirring..looks gorgeous...but she does not say to use boiling water...so I add tap water and my sugar mixture...which is looking amazing at this point...turns into a solid block of crystallized sugar....oh well...no browning used then! I put everything into my slow cooker and leave it for 4 hours before tasting it....well, I am not sure which was worse the 1 TBS of Salt or the chili that I had added...I tasted a 1/4 tsp of the sauce and it is not so much as taking my head off, as not sure which part of my body it will take off.....at the moment it is sort of working itself...painfully around my stomach, throat, nose....intestines...very slowly, painfully and gaining momentum....mhhh...I am not sure which is going to be more painful the chili and salt or telling my husband he is having scrambled eggs for his birthday dinner! I will try this again as it really does sound and look great! Sometimes, this is my Forking Life!
Tanya says
Hi Angie, so sorry to hear it didn’t work out for you the first time. Here’s some tips for next time....don’t use chili powder, it will give it a whole different flavor profile. If you can find a fresh scotch bonnet pepper, a fresh habanero pepper or even a jalapeño pepper would work. But not chili powder which can have it’s own added salt and other spices. The 1 Tablespoon of salt is correct but feel free to cut that in half in the rub and then salt to taste afterwards. If you can’t find the browning in the store, you can leave it out. Your oxtails will just be lighter but still taste amazing. Thank you for sharing your experience, it happens, please let me know how it turns out next time,
Royce Brown says
! Good Morning Tanya !
In your receipe the ingredients are for 2.5 pounds of oxtails, if i am cooking more than what is listed, should i increase the ingredients to match the right amount of pounds ?
Tanya says
Yes, increase the ingredients but keep the cooking time the same.
Royce Brown says
What should the cooking time be for a slow cooker.?
Tanya says
8-10 hours on low
Royce Brown says
Good Evening Tanya..I just wanted to drop you a line and let you know how great & tender my oxtails came out. I fixed 8 1/2 pounds of oxtails and my family & friends went crazy over the flavor & tenderness, Thank You so much for the receipe.
Sophie says
Love this recipe!!!! I bought a family pack of oxtails so it took me a bit longer to cook in my instapot(90 mins). I also put 1 pack or McCormick brown gravy in with the cornstarch. Will make again. Thanks!
Tanya says
That sounds like a delicious addition with that brown gravy. Thanks so much for sharing 🙂
K says
Hello,
Question,
For butter beans, do you cook them before adding? Because it says drained. Or do you mean out of a can?
If I buy dry beans, is it the same process??
Ty!!
Tanya says
Hi K, I’ve never made this recipe with dried butter beans as I use canned for this recipe. I’m guessing if you put dried beans in with the ingredients before pressure cooking that it should be ok since it’s a 45 minute cook time. My only fear is actually overcooking them a little with this method.
Lynne Dean-Colfack says
I think the name of your website is priceless.
Tanya says
Thank you ?
Patricia says
I remember my Grandmother soaking the meat in vinegar too! I will try this Jamaican version. Thank you for the memory!!
Nuray Lika says
How do I make on stove top?
Tanya says
Hi Nuray, You would 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 the oxtails tender. I'll update the recipe card to reflect these directions as well, thanks 🙂
Nuray Lika says
Thanks so much ❤️
Tonia Lovejoy says
These are some of the best oxtails I have ever tasted. Forget paying a fortune at the restaurant, I paid a little over $16 for 2.7 pounds of oxtails and most of the ingredients I already had in my pantry, so comparatively, a $12 large oxtails with rice/peas & cabbage doesn't compare. I am about to make your rice/peas (already made by cabbage with carrots & red onions) and if they come out as well as the oxtail, I will be raving about you to everyone I know.
Tanya says
Thanks so much Tonia! Also, I love your name 🙂
Chad L Bailey says
Just a note that Scotch Bonnet and Habanero are the same pepper, with the latter being the name in Spanish.
Javanni DeCordova says
Scotch bonnets and Habaneros are not the same pepper. They’re cousins but not the same, scotch bonnets look like little hats and habaneros have a more traditional pepper shape. They’re both great peppers but different levels of heat and flavor profiles.
Tarnecha says
Hi Tanya
I have 5 lbs of oxtails - what ingredients do I need to increase and how long on the pressure cooker do I need to cook?
Tanya says
Hi Tarnecha, You can double all the ingredients but leave the pressure cook time the same. It'll just take a little longer to come to pressure.