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If you’ve ever been to Utah you’ve probably had Cafe Rio, specifically Cafe Rio Sweet Pork. We’ve perfected the Cafe Rio Sweet Pork Copycat Recipe! It’s a tender pulled pork recipe with a Coke or Dr Pepper sauce that Utah loves!

an entire pan of shredded cafe rio sweet pork copycat recipe with chopped cilantro on top
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I know I’ve posted about a few copycat recipes from Cafe Rio like the cilantro lime rice, Creamy tomatillo Cilantro Ranch and slow cooker Cafe Rio chicken, but this recipe is so dead on I had no choice but to post. I’m letting you in on all the secrets!

This recipe is clearly a little different because it uses Coke, but trust me it’s the way it’s prepared that is key. Doing a slow roast on the pork with a spice mixture, those root veggies and preparing the sauce separate makes for an identical result.

When we go to Cafe Rio, I pretty much always get the salad to split (this is quite rare as the hubs DOES NOT split anything. EVER.), but occasionally I’ll get the quesadilla because it’s gooey. That’s the only reason, it’s just gooey. In fact you can make the quesadilla at home too with our Cafe Rio Sweet Pork Quesadilla recipe…you’re welcome! Go goo goo for gooey with that one!

read more: If you love this copycat sweet pork recipe, you’re bound to love our BBQ Pulled Pork Recipe too!

Ingredients for Cafe Rio Sweet Pork

I’m going to give you two versions of this recipe, one is a quick version and the other is a more authentic version. You can choose the version that best fits your needs. Here are the ingredients you’ll need for each version:

Authentic Version

  • Seasonings and Herbs: Garlic Powder, Chili Powder, Cumin, Smoked Paprika, Kosher Salt, Black Pepper, Onion Powder and Dried Oregano
  • Pork Shoulder or Pork Butt: bone-in with a nice fat pad on top
  • Bouquet Garni: Carrots, Celery, Onion and Bay Leaves
  • Sauce: Cornstarch, Water, Enchilada Sauce, Brown Sugar, Garlic Powder, Coke or Dr Pepper

Quick Version

  • Red Enchilada Sauce: grab a can of store-bought enchilada sauce or a sauce packet to make at home
  • Brown Sugar: adds sweetness
  • Root Beer, Dr Pepper, or Coke: My preference is Coke, but any of these sodas will work fine. Just make sure they are the fully loaded sugar soda, no diet or zero sugar.
  • Garlic Powder: adds flavor

The details and measurements of each ingredient for both versions of the recipe can be found in the recipe card at the end of the post.

an entire pan of shredded cafe rio sweet pork copycat recipe with chopped cilantro on top

What Kind of Pork Should I Use for Cafe Rio Sweet Pork?

If you want a true copycat of the Cafe Rio sweet pork recipe, you have to use a bone in pork shoulder/butt with a nice fat pad on top. Cuts of pork are not created equal! A pork roast or pork tenderloin is going to be too lean and won’t turn out exactly like Cafe Rio. The pork shoulder/butt has the fat and flavor you need!

Pot Herbs or a Bouquet Garni

Have you ever seen a chef create a bundle of herbs and place it in a pot or with a roast to cook then it gets discarded? That’s one of the secrets to this Cafe Rio Sweet Pork Copycat Recipe. The aromatics totally make a difference, but you throw them out after it’s done cooking.

So What is Pot Herbs or a Bouquet Garni?

First off, “bouquet garni” is pronounced exactly how it looks, so don’t get hung up on that! It is a bundle of aromatic herbs and sometimes vegetables that are used to enhance the flavor of soups, stews, stocks, poaching liquids and even braised dishes. It is discarded after cooking and can be made with either fresh or dried herbs, root veggies etc.

These items are bundled up in cheesecloth, tied off with string and throw into the dish with the food.

If you don’t have cheesecloth, don’t stress! Merely arrange everything in the dish with the pork and get rid of it after baking. Yes, the onions will get quite dark, but it’s ok.

What to Add to the Bouquet Garni:

  • carrots
  • celery
  • onions
  • bay leaves

This will add the perfect flavor to this pork!

an entire pan of shredded cafe rio sweet pork copycat recipe with chopped cilantro on top

Is Pork Better for You Than Beef?

If you are trying to lose weight, pork is a better choice than beef, because pork is lower in calories. But both have a good side, for example the protein and iron is awesome in beef.

A 4 oz. serving of beef provides 11 g of fat, with 4.5 g of saturated fat, while a 4 oz. serving of pork contains 4.5 g of fat, with 1.5 g of saturated fat.

Pork and beef have about the same amount of protein, with beef being slightly higher, so really, it just depends on what you’re looking for.

Can You Make Sweet Pulled Pork in a Slow Cooker?

Using a slow cooker is an easy way to make pulled pork. This Copycat Cafe Rio Sweet Pork recipe does much better in the oven as it really brings out the flavor, but a crock pot will work just fine. Sometimes making a slow cooker sweet pork just fits into your schedule better, I totally get that! Set it and forget it…that’s why we love that slow cooker!

Prepare everything the same, but set the pork and bouquet garni (see section below) in a slow cooker for 8-10 hours. Shred as normal, preparing the sauce separate and toss to combine.

Make It Authentic!

Want to make it authentic? Just cook up some fresh flour tortillas with a little sprinkle of cheese and throw in those recipes for the cilantro lime rice and tomatillo sauce. You can put this sweet pork into a salad, in a burrito, in enchiladas, on top of nachos, in a rice bowl, or in a quesadilla like we already discussed above. It’s is good any way, shape or form!

My favorite way to eat it this sweet pork is in a salad. Place a freshly cooked tortilla down in a large shallow bowl, add some cilantro lime rice and black or pinto beans, top with a generous serving of the sweet porn then some chopped romaine lettuce, fresh pico de gallo, a scoop of guacamole and sprinkle of cotija cheese. Lastly, drizzle the tomatillo dressing all over the top. Heaven!

I really am not exaggerating when I say that we have tried pretty much every single Cafe Rio Pork recipe that’s out there and while many are quite delicious, they just aren’t close enough to the real version. We have spent YEARS, much like we did for the perfect Melt in Your Mouth Buttermilk Pancakes and The Very Best Banana Bread, searching out exactly how this pork is made. While we don’t have the actual recipe, we literally cannot taste a difference.

We should set up a taste test for the neighbors and see if people can tell which is which. I’m liking this idea!

Best Cafe Rio Sweet Pork Copycat

Through the years we’ve had many friends who have moved on to new adventures in places other than Utah (though Cafe Rio is spreading like crazy across the country…now in CA, AZ, CO, FL, ID, MD, MT, NV, VA, WA, and WY!) They crave Cafe Rio! It is on their must-eat list when they come back to visit every single time. I get it! It’s THAT good! Crave no longer my friends! You can now make Cafe Rio Sweet Pork at home! Try it and let us know if your Cafe Rio cravings are satisfied!

Indulge in the savory goodness of a homemade Café Rio Sweet Pork that rivals the restaurant’s famous recipe! This copycat version is a perfect balance of tender, slow-cooked pork that melts in your mouth, infused with a tantalizing blend of brown sugar, tangy enchilada sauce, and a perfect blend of seasonings and herbs.

More of our Favorite Mexican Recipes:

Watch How This Cafe Rio Pork is Made…

4.76 from 25 votes

Cafe Rio Sweet Pork

By Carrian Cheney
Prep20 minutes
Cook12 hours
Total12 hours 20 minutes
Servings6
Indulge in the savory goodness of a homemade Café Rio Sweet Pork that rivals the restaurant’s famous recipe! This copycat version is a perfect balance of tender, slow-cooked pork that melts in your mouth, infused with a tantalizing blend of brown sugar, tangy enchilada sauce, and a perfect blend of seasonings and herbs.
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Ingredients 

  • 1 Tablespoons Garlic Powder
  • 1 Tablespoon Chili Powder, Heaping
  • 1 Tablespoon Cumin
  • 1 Tablespoon Smoked Paprika
  • 1 Tablespoon Kosher Salt, Heaping
  • 2 teaspoons Black Pepper
  • 2 teaspoons Onion Powder
  • 3 teaspoons Dried Oregano
  • 3 Pounds Pork Shoulder/Butt , Bone in with a nice fat pad on top
  • 2 Carrots, Large cut in half
  • 2 Stalks Celery, Halved
  • 1 Onion, Large Halved
  • 2 Bay Leaves

Sauce

Quick Version

  • 10 ounce Red Enchilada Sauce, or a sauce packet
  • 1 ½ Cups Brown Sugar
  • 2 Cans Rootbeer, Dr Pepper, or Coke
  • 1 teaspoon Garlic Powder

Instructions 

  • Heat the oven to 225°
  • In a small bowl, mix together the garlic powder, chili powder, cumin, smoked paprika, salt, pepper, onion powder, and oregano.
    1 Tablespoons Garlic Powder, 1 Tablespoon Chili Powder, 1 Tablespoon Cumin, 1 Tablespoon Smoked Paprika, 1 Tablespoon Kosher Salt, 2 teaspoons Black Pepper, 2 teaspoons Onion Powder, 3 teaspoons Dried Oregano
  • Rub the seasoning mixture all over the pork and place in a 9×13″ pan, fat pad facing up.
    3 Pounds Pork Shoulder/Butt
  • Arrange the carrots, celery, onions, and bay leaves around the pork, or place in a square of cheesecloth (the traditional way), pull up the corners and tie it shut with a string. Wedge the bundle next to an end of the pork.
    2 Carrots, 2 Stalks Celery, 1 Onion, 2 Bay Leaves
  • Set the uncovered pork butt in the oven and bake for 12 hours.
  • Remove from the oven and allow to rest for 1-2 hours.
  • Pour the juices into a fat separator.
  • Shred the meat well, discarding large pieces of the fat pad.
  • Pour 1/3 cup of the juices back onto the pork and toss to combine well.
  • In a small bowl, whisk together the cornstarch and water.
    1 teaspoon Cornstarch, 1 teaspoon Water
  • Meanwhile, in a pot, add the enchilada sauce, brown sugar, garlic powder and Coke. Whisk to combine.
    10 ounce Enchilada Sauce, 2 ⅓ Cups Light Brown Sugar, 1/2 teaspoon Garlic Powder, 1 Cup Coke
  • Bring to a boil and whisk in the cornstarch mixture. Turn to a simmer and cook for 5 minutes.
  • Pour the sauce all over the pork and toss to coat.
  • Place the meat in a warming oven with tin foil over it until ready to use or for at least 20 minutes to let the meat soak up the sauce a bit.

For the Slow Cooker

  • Prepare everything the same, but set the pork and bouquet garni in a slow cooker for 8-10 hours.
  • Shred as normal, preparing the sauce separate and toss to combine.

For the Quick Version

  • Sprinkle the pork with the garlic powder and roast in a slow cooker on low for 8 hours.
    1 teaspoon Garlic Powder
  • Shred the meat.
  • Mix the Sauce packet, brown sugar and pop and bring to a simmer over medium high heat until thickened a little. Toss with the shredded meat and cook an additional 30 minutes.
    10 ounce Red Enchilada Sauce, 1 ½ Cups Brown Sugar, 2 Cans Rootbeer

Recipe Notes

Rumor has it that Dr Pepper or Coke are the preferred pops for Cafe Rio, choose whichever you prefer
Store in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
NOTE: The nutritional information is based on the full recipe ingredients (not the quick version).

Nutrition

Serving: 1g, Calories: 605kcal, Carbohydrates: 101g, Protein: 29g, Fat: 11g, Saturated Fat: 4g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g, Monounsaturated Fat: 5g, Cholesterol: 93mg, Sodium: 1755mg, Potassium: 831mg, Fiber: 4g, Sugar: 92g, Vitamin A: 4786IU, Vitamin C: 5mg, Calcium: 148mg, Iron: 4mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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About The Author

Carrian Cheney

Carrian Cheney is the creative force behind ‘Oh, Sweet Basil,’ a food blog she co-authors with her husband, Cade. She creates fresh, family-friendly recipes that encourage togetherness in the kitchen.

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4.76 from 25 votes (23 ratings without comment)

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134 Comments

  1. Whitney says:

    I have made this recipe several times (we love it) and suddenly I can’t find the Old El Paso sauce at the grocery store we’ve always gotten it at. I found a sauce packet by Frontera. It’s red chile enchilada sauce with roasted tomato and garlic. Hoping it turns out!

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Oh no! I hope the store doesn’t stop carrying them!

    2. Alison says:

      How did it turn out?

    3. Shelby says:

      I’d love to know if this turned out well for you! I love this recipe and can’t find any sauce either. I saw the Frontera one and want to know if it turned out similar.

  2. Michelle says:

    Have you made this and froze it for use later? And if so, how did you re-heat it? I’m so excited to try this. Hoping to take it on a trip we are going on next week.

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Hi Michelle,

      I have actually! I do not like the taste of frozen cooked meat so I do two things. Either I toss everything in a bag with the meat and freeze it then pop it in the slow cooker on low for 10-12 hours or I cook it and allow it to cool completely then put in bags (we separate into two meals since our family is small) and freeze for up to 1 month. I don’t go longer than that as each week the flavor seems to fade a little in my opinion. Hope that helps!

      1. Michelle says:

        Perfect! Thank you so much. Can’t wait to make it.

  3. Kanani says:

    Just made this recipe for the second time. We have tried a few “Cafe Rio Pork” recipes because we love it and live in a state where there is, sadly, no Cafe Rio. While it isn’t spot on (I think it would be very hard to get it right), it is very tasty. We especially like it in quesidillas. Yum!

  4. Christine says:

    I made it exactly per the directions. It doesn’t taste like cafe rio pork at all. It’s a good sweet pork recipe but it’s definitely not the cafe rio one. A bit disappointed but it’s still yummy

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Sorry Christine, but thanks for trying it. We feel like the Cafeo Rio pork, at least the one by us, tastes totally different than it did years ago which is a bummer too.

  5. judy tharp says:

    How do you serve this pork? We Don’t have Cafe Rio in Michigan. Do you serve this as a pulled pork sandwich on a bun or on a tortilla? Sounds yummy.

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Oh, I wish you did! It’s so yummy! So they do a fresh flour tortilla, a little cheese, cilantro rice (recipe is on my blog as well as the cafe rio tomatillo dressing), beans of choice, meat, lettuce, salsa, guacamole, and the special dressing with crisp tortilla strips. Or they make, tacos, tostadas, burritos and quesadillas with the pork

  6. Heidi says:

    Hi! I am doubling the recipe. Should cook time stay the same or would you suggest longer?

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      If your slow cooker is big enough you should be ok with the same time. 🙂

  7. Jestep says:

    Finally got around to making this in the crockpot yesterday. I couldn’t find the old elpaso sauce packets so I ended up using a 10oz can of red enchilada sauce and adding an entire small head of crushed garlic to it.

    I haven’t tried the old elpaso version, but this is very close to the cafe rio flavor.

    I was definitely skeptical about adding that much sugar but it came out about perfect. Also, did not take 8 hours in our crock pot, more like 6 total.

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Ours always appears to be done at 6 as well but I like how the flavor builds when going to 8 hours. 🙂 Try Walmart or Smiths for Old El Paso sauce packets. Ours are now by the Mexican aisle and the italian tomato sauces.

      1. Anita Lucente says:

        I need guidance. I am likely the only person in the world that couldn’t get this to work for me. Used the above ingredients on low. I used pork butt and my meat was thought at 6 hrs and I can’t even shred. I’m going to have to slice and it absorbed no flavor. Can you tell me what I maybe did wrong?

      2. Sweet Basil says:

        Hi Anita,
        What size of cut did you use? If it was bigger than 3-4 pounds it just needed more like 8-12 hours.

      3. Jestep says:

        As far as pork butt/shoulder goes, if it’s not shred-able, just keep cooking. This applies to braising or smoking or an oven roast.

        You’re not making something that needs to be cooked to a temperature, so unless you cook to the point where the meat starts dissolving, which is possible, you can’t really over cook it.

      4. Natalie says:

        Really? I have had pork butt get tough before, and good results other times even cooking around the same amount of time with about the same size butt! So I didn’t cook it too long when that happened – I actually need to cook it longer and it will get more tender? I figured some butts/shoulders were just tougher.

      5. Sweet Basil says:

        The longer the better. Sometimes at 7 hours it’s even still a bit tough and then 8 hours and it’s falling apart.

      6. Natalie says:

        You are awesome – I’m glad I read this! I did it for 8 hours and it was falling apart… YUM!

      7. Sweet Basil says:

        Oh good! I always hope my replies are seen, but I’m never sure as spam loves to take my emails. So happy you enjoyed it!

  8. Alice says:

    This looks so good! I wonder if I can use chicken for pork? Would I be able to reduce the amount of cooking time in that case?

    Thank you for sharing!

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Absolutely! You could do the same cooking time if you have 4-6 pieces in there or less you should be able to do low for 4 hours. 🙂

      1. Alice says:

        Thank you! I’ll have to try chicken next time. I did try the recipe as is and loved it! The only modifications I made were to add some salt and sliced onions. The result was excellent! Thanks again!

      2. Sweet Basil says:

        oh, I bet the onions were so good!

  9. Kaylee says:

    Thank you for this easy recipe! We have moved to a state that doesn’t have Cafe Rios and needed to recreate it! 😉 I’m actually so excited about this that I’m going to make it as a crockpot freezer meal for my freezer exchange group, too!

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      No Cafe Rio?!! My neighborhood would go crazy without one.

      1. Kaylee says:

        Haha I know! We moved from Utah to Mississippi and it’s nowhere around!

  10. Jessica Ford says:

    This was delicious!! Not quite the same as Cafe Rio, but I’ll definitely make it again! My family loved it! Thanks!

    1. Sweet Basil says:

      Glad you enjoyed it Jessica!