If you’ve never had a California burrito, here’s what makes it legendary: it has fries inside. Not rice, not beans — actual crispy French fries, tucked right alongside the carne asada, guacamole, and melted cheese. It’s a San Diego invention, born from the late-night taqueria culture of a city where Mexican and American flavours have been fusing for decades. This carne asada burrito recipe is my attempt to bring that exact street-food energy into your kitchen, and I’m confident it’ll earn a permanent spot in your rotation.
In my kitchen tests, the carne asada marinade is where this recipe either soars or falls flat. Citrus acid, bold spice, and a proper high-heat sear are the three pillars. Cut the beef against the grain after resting and you get fork-tender, juicy slices that hold their own against the richness of everything else packed into that tortilla.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
The California burrito defies the logic that starch-on-starch is redundant. The fries inside provide a crispy, salty, textural counterpoint to the tender, juicy carne asada — they’re doing something the beef can’t, and vice versa. Add guacamole’s cool creaminess, sour cream’s tang, and melted cheese’s richness, and you have a burrito that covers every dimension of flavour and texture in a single, glorious package.
I’ve found that the choice of tortilla matters more than most people realise. A large, freshly warmed flour tortilla is pliable enough to roll without cracking and provides a neutral, slightly buttery wrap that lets the fillings shine. Don’t skip the griddle-toast step at the end — it creates a slightly crisped, golden exterior that transforms the whole eating experience.
The Butcher’s Selection
Carne asada is traditionally made with skirt steak or flap meat (sirloin flap), both of which are thin, well-marbled cuts that cook fast at high heat and have an open grain structure that absorbs marinades brilliantly. Skirt steak has a bold, beefy intensity; flap meat is slightly more tender. Either will deliver exceptional results — the critical step is slicing both against the grain after cooking.
- 1.5 lbs (680g) skirt steak or beef flap meat
- Juice of 2 oranges
- Juice of 2 limes
- 4 garlic cloves, minced
- 2 tbsp soy sauce
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 1 tsp cumin
- 1 tsp chili powder
- ½ tsp smoked paprika
- ½ tsp dried oregano
- Salt and black pepper to taste
- 4 large (12-inch) flour tortillas
- 2 cups (230g) shredded cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese
- 2 large russet potatoes, cut into thin fries and fried
- 2 ripe avocados, mashed into guacamole
- ½ cup (120g) sour cream
- ½ cup fresh pico de gallo
- Salt, lime juice, and cilantro for guacamole seasoning
How to Make a California Burrito
- Marinate the Steak: Whisk together orange juice, lime juice, garlic, soy sauce, olive oil, and all spices. Submerge the steak in the marinade, cover, and refrigerate for at least 2 hours — up to 8 hours is ideal. Do not marinate longer than 8 hours; prolonged acid exposure begins to break down surface proteins in an unpleasant way.
- Fry the Potatoes: Cut the russet potatoes into thin matchstick fries. Soak in cold water for 20 minutes, pat dry. Double-fry: first at 325°F (163°C) for 4 minutes, rest 10 minutes, then at 375°F (190°C) for 3 minutes until golden and crackling. Season immediately with salt.
- Make the Guacamole: Mash the avocados with lime juice, salt, and a handful of chopped cilantro. Keep chunky — a California burrito needs guacamole with body, not a smooth paste.
- Sear the Carne Asada: Remove the steak from marinade and pat dry (wet meat won’t sear). Heat a cast-iron grill pan or skillet over screaming-high heat. Sear the steak 3–4 minutes per side for medium-rare, or until internal temperature reads 130–135°F / 54–57°C for optimal tenderness. Rest for 5 minutes, then slice thinly against the grain.
- Warm the Tortillas: Heat each flour tortilla directly over a gas flame or in a dry skillet for 20–30 seconds per side. It should be pliable and lightly freckled. A cold, stiff tortilla cracks when you roll — warmth is non-optional.
- Load & Roll: Lay the warmed tortilla flat. Spread sour cream across the centre third. Layer carne asada, a handful of fries, cheese, guacamole, and pico de gallo in the centre. Fold the sides in first, then roll tightly away from you, pressing firmly to compress the fillings.
- Griddle-Toast: Place the assembled burrito seam-side down on a hot dry skillet or griddle. Press gently and cook 60–90 seconds per side until golden and slightly crisped. This seals the burrito and creates the San Diego taqueria exterior every California burrito deserves.
Pro Cooking Tips
The order of filling matters. Sour cream and guacamole should be directly against the tortilla (the fat helps insulate the tortilla from steaming fillings), with the hot steak and fries in the centre. This thermal layering keeps the tortilla from going soggy before you finish rolling.
For a detailed breakdown of another California-inspired California burrito recipe from Hilda’s Kitchen, including regional variations and salsa options, it’s a strong complementary read. If you love the smashed, high-heat cooking technique used on the carne asada, my smash burger recipe applies the same principle to ground beef with spectacular results.
Recipe Variations
Slow Cooker Carne Asada
Cook the marinated steak on LOW for 6 hours for a shredded version. Less char, more tenderness. Perfect for feeding a crowd without standing over a grill.
Chicken California Burrito
Substitute the skirt steak with marinated boneless chicken thighs, grilled to 165°F (74°C). The same citrus marinade works beautifully with chicken.
Breakfast California
Add scrambled eggs and swap the guacamole for fresh avocado slices. Morning hangover remedy, objectively. Serve with hot sauce and strong coffee.
Loaded Queso Version
Replace the shredded cheese with a poured queso blanco sauce. It melts into the fries and steak in a way solid cheese can’t — indulgent and spectacular.
What to Serve With This Dish
The California burrito is a complete meal — it has protein, starch, fat, and freshness all in one package. Keep sides light and acidic to balance the richness.
- Street corn (elote)
- Pickled jalapeños
- Agua fresca or horchata
- Mexican rice
- Lime wedges and extra pico
- Cold Mexican lager
Storage & Meal Prep
Nutritional Information
Per serving (1 fully assembled California burrito with fries, guacamole, and cheese):
| Nutrient | Amount | % Daily Value |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 820 kcal | 41% |
| Protein | 48g | 96% |
| Total Fat | 38g | 49% |
| Saturated Fat | 14g | 70% |
| Carbohydrates | 72g | 26% |
| Dietary Fiber | 7g | 25% |
| Sodium | 1,080mg | 47% |
| Potassium | 920mg | 20% |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Slicing skirt steak parallel to the long muscle fibres produces tough, chewy pieces that require significant effort to eat. Always identify the grain direction first, then slice perpendicular to it in thin strips.
The citrus acid that tenderises the steak will eventually begin to cook the surface proteins if left too long, creating a mushy, pale exterior that won’t sear properly. The sweet spot is 2–8 hours.
More filling does not equal more flavour — it equals a burrito that splits on the first bite and drops its contents. Err on the side of a tighter roll; the compression itself improves the eating experience.
The final sear on the assembled burrito isn’t optional if you want the authentic experience. That golden, slightly crisped exterior is structural — it holds the roll together and adds a final layer of flavour.
FAQs
What makes a California burrito different from a regular burrito?
The defining feature is French fries inside the burrito itself — a San Diego-specific innovation that adds crunch and heartiness you won’t find in a standard carne asada burrito. It’s also typically larger and less saucy than mission-style burritos.
Can I use ribeye instead of skirt steak?
Ribeye works beautifully and is even more marbled, but it’s significantly more expensive and the extra fat can make the burrito greasy. Skirt steak gives the best value-to-flavour ratio for this application.
Do I have to double-fry the potatoes?
For true crispy fries that hold up inside a burrito, yes. A single fry produces a soft interior and pale exterior. The double-fry method is what every professional kitchen uses — it’s not optional if crunch is the goal.
Can I grill the steak instead of pan-searing?
Absolutely — a charcoal or gas grill over screaming-high heat produces a smokier, more complex crust than a cast-iron pan. It’s the traditional approach and adds a genuine outdoor-taqueria quality to the carne asada.
Made This California Burrito?
Pin it and save it — this is the recipe your burrito nights have been waiting for.
📌 Save to PinterestCalifornia Burrito Recipe – Loaded, Hearty & Legendary
A San Diego-style burrito with carne asada, guacamole, cheese, and French fries inside a large flour tortilla
- 1.5 lbs pounds skirt steak or beef flap meat
- 2 oranges orange juice
- 2 limes lime juice
- 4 cloves garlic minced
- 2 tbsp tablespoons soy sauce
- 2 tbsp tablespoons olive oil
- 1 tsp teaspoons cumin
- 1 tsp teaspoons chili powder
- 0.5 tsp teaspoons smoked paprika
- 0.5 tsp teaspoons dried oregano
- salt and black pepper to taste
- 4 tortillas large flour tortillas 12-inch
- 2 cups cups shredded cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese
- 2 potatoes russet potatoes cut into thin fries
- 2 avocados ripe avocados mashed into guacamole
- 0.5 cup cups sour cream
- 0.5 cup cups fresh pico de gallo
- salt, lime juice, and cilantro for guacamole seasoning
How to Make a California Burrito
Marinate the steak in a mixture of orange juice, lime juice, garlic, soy sauce, olive oil, and spices for at least 2 hours or up to 8 hours.
Fry the potatoes in two stages: first at 325°F for 4 minutes, then at 375°F for 3 minutes, until golden and crackling.
Make the guacamole by mashing avocados with lime juice, salt, and cilantro.
Sear the steak in a hot cast-iron grill pan or skillet for 3-4 minutes per side, or until medium-rare.
Warm the tortillas by heating them directly over a gas flame or in a dry skillet for 20-30 seconds per side.
Assemble the burrito by spreading sour cream across the center third of the tortilla, then layering carne asada, fries, cheese, guacamole, and pico de gallo in the center.
Griddle-toast the assembled burrito in a hot dry skillet or griddle for 60-90 seconds per side, until golden and slightly crisped.
- cast-iron grill pan or skillet
- gas flame or dry skillet
- hot dry skillet or griddle
A legendary San Diego invention, this burrito combines the best of Mexican and American flavors
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Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.




