Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (2024)

by Kathleen

Kare-Kare is a very famous Filipino dish but unlike adobo and pinakbet, it is not a regularly served dish in Filipino homes but rather, it’s typically ordered at Filipino restaurants or serve only during parties and special occasions. You can, however, cook it as often as you crave it by following our Kare-Kare Instant Pot Recipe. We used simple ingredients, cut down the cooking time, and simplified the process so you can serve our easy Kare-Kare recipe in no time.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (1)

What is Kare-Kare

Kare-Kare is a Philippine stew made of a thick savory peanut sauce. It can be made from a variation base of stewed oxtail, pork hocks, calves feet, pig feet, beef stew meat, and occasionally offal or tripe and complimented with a mix of vegetables and often eaten with a side of sauteed bagoong alamang. At Filipino restaurants, you can order either a Beef Kare-Kare or Seafood Kare-Kare and both will include vegetables.

For this Instant Pot Kare-Kare recipe, I only used oxtail as its base. If you want more meat, especially since oxtail can be quite expensive, I recommend adding more beef cubes to the Kare-Kare. In essence, the oxtail will be your base to create the broth, while adding more beef will give you more yield especially if you’re cooking the Kare-Kare as a potluck dish or serving it at a party.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (2)

Typically, the Kare-Kare peanut stew is flavored with ground roasted peanuts or peanut butter, onions, and garlic. It is colored with annatto and can be thickened with toasted or plain ground rice. To simplify this recipe, I used a Mama Sita Kare-Kare peanut sauce mix instead and added it to the oxtail broth and blended it with peanut butter.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (3)

Kare-Kare Ingredients:

  • Oxtail – $8.99/lb at Seafood City supermarket, I’ve also bought it at Walmart before (half-off)
  • Eggplant – 1 long one, not the Japanese eggplant
  • Sitaw (Long-String Bean) – can be bought pre-cut/pre-package
  • Bokchoy – make sure to wash thoroughly
  • Mama Sita Kare-Kare Peanut Sauce Mix
  • Peanut Butter (my fave is Skippy Peanut Butter with Honey)
  • Bagoong Alamang (condiment, not to be added during cooking) – can be regular, sweet, or spicy

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (4)

Instant Pot Kare-Kare

Cooking the-Kare Kare in an Instant Pot or Pressure Cooker is a 3 part process – tenderizing the meat, blanching the vegetables, and making the Kare-Kare sauce. We first start by tenderizing the oxtail for 35 minutes in the Instant Pot and while that is pressure cooking, you can cut and prepare your vegetables.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (5)

After the oxtail has tenderized, you can steam the vegetables in the Instant Pot by cooking it in the oxtail broth. You will then transfer the broth to a saucepan to finish your Kare-Kare sauce.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (6)

You can also make the Kare-Kare sauce (reduce to right consistency) in the Instant Pot by pressing SAUTE but since I would still be washing the Instant Pot due to the leftover fat particles from the oxtail broth, I decided to just use another pan to finish the sauce.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (7)

I know you’re wondering whether you can just put all the Kare-Kare ingredients in the Instant Pot and cook it all in one time but unfortunately, you will overcook your vegetables and sauce. Cooking Kare-Kare is fairly easy though even if it is a multi-step process and when using the Instant Pot to cook Kare-Kare, you can tenderize your meat in 35 minutes versus 3 hours in a traditional stovetop.

More Filipino Instant Pot Recipes:

  • Chicken Afritada Instant Pot Recipe
  • Tinolang Manok Instant Pot Recipe
  • Bulalo Instant Pot Recipe
  • Chicken Adobo Instant Pot Recipe
  • Arroz Caldo Instant Pot Recipe
  • Pinakbet Instant Pot Recipe
  • Pork Sinigang Instant Pot Recipe
  • Filipino Chicken Curry Instant Pot Recipe
  • Beef Caldereta Instant Pot Recipe

Kare Kare Instant Pot Recipe

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (8)

Kare Kare Instant Pot

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds oxtail
  • 4 cups of water (3.5 cup of the broth will be used to make the sauce after pressure cooking the oxtail)
  • 1 eggplant
  • 3 bok choy
  • 1 bundle of sitaw (long string bean)
  • 1/2 cup peanut butter (creamy)
  • 1 pack Mama Sita’s Kare-Kare Peanut Sauce Mix
  • Bagoong Alamang as side condiment

Instructions

  1. Pour 4 cups of water unto the Instant Pot.
  2. Add oxtail, close the Instant Pot, seal the steam vent, then set to SOUP for 35 minutes.
  3. Prepare the vegetables: Wash then cut the eggplant diagonally into 1/2" thick pieces. Cut & discard the bottom part of the bokchoy, separate the stalks then wash them thoroughly. Cut the long string beans to approximately 3" long then wash. Set aside.
  4. Once the oxtail is cooked, do a quick release to let the Instant Pot steam. Open and set the oxtail pieces in a big serving bowl. Set aside.
  5. To steam the vegetables - Skim fat particles from the oxtail broth and add the vegetables unto the Instant Pot starting with the long string bean, the eggplant, then the bokchoy on top. Seal then set to Instant Pot to STEAM for 2-3 minutes. Once steamed, do a quick release, add the vegetables to the oxtail pieces you've set aside in your serving bowl.
  6. To make the Kare-Kare sauce - using a strainer (to skim fat particles), transfer 3.5 cups of the oxtail broth from the Instant Pot into a saucepan. Add the pack of Mama Sita Kare-Kare Peanut Sauce Powder Mix to the broth and blend well before adding the peanut butter.
  7. Add 1/2 cup of peanut butter unto the sauce mix and mix thoroughly. Then turn on the stove to low to medium heat and reduce the sauce to preferred consistency. Lower the heat if it's bubbling and you haven't achieved the right Kare-Kare sauce consistency you want yet. Once done, pour the Kare-Kare sauce over the oxtail and vegetables.

Pin for later:

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (9)

Don’t forget to cook lots of steam rice and buy a big jar of bagoong alamang to go with you Kare-Kare!

For other Filipino Instant Pot Recipes, you can try our famous Arroz Caldo Instant Pot Recipe and Chicken Adobo Instant Pot Recipe, both are easy to make and unlike cooking Kare-Kare in steps, they are one-pot meals where you can put all the ingredients to cook together. If you’re looking for a Filipino vegetable dish, try our Pinakbet Instant Pot Recipe.

In this Article

Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links. AnyTots.com has made every effort to confirm the information in this article and we try our best to update as often as possible but things can often change so we urge you to confirm every event detail like date, time, location, ticket price from the host of the event or attraction, and actual savings calculation in case of an error on our part. AnyTots does not sell any tickets but only lists reliable sources where you can buy discounted tickets, make sure to check the refund or exchange policy before buying tickets through them.AnyTots is in no way responsible for any injuries or damages you sustain while visiting an attraction or event posted on our website and you assume the sole risk of relying on any of the information in our post.

Kare-Kare Instant Pot Filipino Recipe | Oxtail Peanut Stew (2024)

FAQs

What is kare-kare Sauce made of? ›

The stew is flavored with ground roasted peanuts or peanut butter, onions, and garlic. It is colored with annatto and can be thickened with toasted or plain ground rice. Variations of kare-kare can be made with seafood, such as prawns, squid, and mussels, or exclusively from vegetables.

What is the English of kare-kare? ›

In the Philippines, if something is particularly good or desirable, it's common practice to say its name twice, so since “kare” means “curry,” you could say that a loose translation of kare-kare is “really good curry.”

What is the difference between curry and kare-kare? ›

As you might assume, the name of the dish comes from the word "curry." According to Culture Trip, kare kare essentially translates to faux curry because although it resembles the Indian sauce in appearance, the actual flavor and components are very different.

What is a substitute for peanut butter in kare-kare? ›

Peanut Butter, Sunflower Butter, Almond Butter, or Cashew Butter can be used using the same 1:1 ratio for measurement. If these vegetables are available to you to make the traditional recipe, use Banana Blossoms or Banana Flowers, Chinese Cabbage, Daikon Radish, Okra, and Long Beans or String Beans.

What is in Naam peanut sauce? ›

Naam Sauces are free from additives and preservatives. Ingredients: peanuts, water, onion, coconut milk, soy sauce, garlic, lemon juice concentrate, curry paste (red chilies, garlic, salt, onion, spices), organic crystallized cane juice, vegetable oil, chilies.

What is the old name of kare-kare? ›

According to the Kapampangans, Kare-Kare originated from a dish called Kari. Developed by the Moro people of Southern Mindanao, Kari resembles dishes such as Thai fish curry but does not resemble Kare-Kare; it was only later changed by the Kapampangans to create Kare-Kare.

What to eat with kare-kare? ›

I love eating it with bok choy, string beans, and eggplant. Kare-kare is all about the sauce, which gets its flavor and reddish-bronze color from a dose of annatto seeds and bagoong, or fermented shrimp paste.

What is the difference between kare-kare and Caldereta? ›

Like kare kare, kaldereta is a stew of sorts and always served with white rice. But where kare kare is traditionally made with oxtail, kaldereta is usually made with beef or goat. And here's the interesting, nutty twist: In Cebu and Mindanao, peanut butter is also added to the sauce for an extra kick of flavor.

What is the 7 curry? ›

A famed tradition Indo-Guyana is 7 curry. It is generally served in a water-lily leaf, and is rice with seven different curries, which are traditionally pumpkin, bagee (spinach), catahar, potato/ channa (chick peas), balange (eggplant), edoe, and dahl. A a twist we included chicken as one of the options of curry.

What are the three types of curry? ›

From phal curry based in the UK to madras curry originating from Madras, there are many curry dishes throughout the world with a history as flavorful as the meal itself. Though there are many dishes, curry itself can typically be broken down into three types: red, green, and yellow.

What happens if you over pressure cook meat? ›

Unfortunately, once you overcook a piece of meat in the pressure cooker, there's no going back. You'll be left with a pile of dry, crunchy, tasteless fibers and no amount of additional pressure cooking is going to put that moisture back into the meat.

What animal is oxtail? ›

Oxtail is the tail of a cow. A long time ago, it came from the tail of an ox, but now it comes from the tail of a cow of either sex. The tail is skinned and cut into sections.

Why do you soak oxtail before cooking? ›

By soaking and blanching the oxtail before cooking any impurities are removed. To cook: Oxtail requires long, slow cooking to produce tender, succulent meat.

What is the taste of kare-kare? ›

Kare Kare is a classic Filipino slow-cook stew, usually using oxtail and/or ox tripe, with deliciously thick deep yellow peanut sauce with some vegetables. It has a very subtle taste because it is traditionally unsalted, allowing the flavors of the peanut sauce and the meat to surface and be enjoyed.

What is the difference between Kaldereta and kare-kare? ›

Like kare kare, kaldereta is a stew of sorts and always served with white rice. But where kare kare is traditionally made with oxtail, kaldereta is usually made with beef or goat. And here's the interesting, nutty twist: In Cebu and Mindanao, peanut butter is also added to the sauce for an extra kick of flavor.

What goes with kare-kare? ›

Kare-kare and rice are a classic pairing that hardly needs any elaboration. While delicious on its own, the aromatic stew tastes even better with rice, which helps to mellow out the richness of the peanut sauce.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rob Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 6020

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (68 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rob Wisoky

Birthday: 1994-09-30

Address: 5789 Michel Vista, West Domenic, OR 80464-9452

Phone: +97313824072371

Job: Education Orchestrator

Hobby: Lockpicking, Crocheting, Baton twirling, Video gaming, Jogging, Whittling, Model building

Introduction: My name is Rob Wisoky, I am a smiling, helpful, encouraging, zealous, energetic, faithful, fantastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.