Queso Dip with Chorizo and Green Chiles

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Queso should be smooth enough to cling to a chip and bold enough to stand on its own, and this version does both without turning greasy or grainy. The chorizo brings a smoky, seasoned base, the green chiles keep it bright, and the two-cheese blend melts into a dip that stays scoopable instead of stiffening up on the table.

The trick is in the heat. Chorizo needs a short head start so it renders its flavor into the pan, but the cheese goes in only after the burner drops low. That keeps the dairy from breaking and gives the cheddar and Monterey Jack time to melt together into one clean, glossy sauce. A little cream helps with body, while the milk keeps it from feeling heavy.

Below you’ll find the exact order that keeps queso silky, plus a few swaps and fixes for when you want to make it your own. If your cheese dips usually seize up or turn stringy, the method here will save you a lot of frustration.

The queso stayed silky all the way through the party, and the chorizo gave it enough flavor that nobody missed the jarred stuff. I liked that it thickened up without turning pasty, even after sitting on the warmer for a while.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this chorizo queso for game day, because the silky melt and bright green chile flavor make it the first bowl empty on the table.

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The Heat Is What Ruins Queso, Not the Cheese

Most broken queso starts with impatience. If the pan is too hot, the cheese tightens, the fat separates, and you end up with a dip that looks oily on top and grainy underneath. Low heat gives the dairy time to melt evenly, which is what creates that smooth, elastic texture people are chasing.

The other mistake is dumping everything in at once and walking away. Chorizo needs to brown first so it can season the pan, and the garlic only needs a few seconds before it can turn harsh. After that, the cheese goes in with the cream and milk, and constant stirring keeps the melt uniform from the center to the edges.

  • Chorizo — This does the heavy lifting on flavor. It seasons the queso with smoky spice and enough fat to give the base some depth, so you don’t need to build much else before the cheese goes in.
  • White cheddar — Sharp white cheddar adds the tang that keeps the dip from tasting flat. Buy it in a block and shred it yourself if you can; pre-shredded cheese often carries anti-caking starch that can make the melt slightly less smooth.
  • Monterey Jack — This is the melt-friendly cheese that softens the sharper edges of the cheddar. If you need a substitute, use Oaxaca or another mild melting cheese, but don’t replace both cheeses with something aged or dry.
  • Heavy cream and whole milk — The cream gives body, while the milk loosens the dip just enough to keep it dippable. If you only use cream, the queso can feel heavy; if you skip it and use only milk, it can turn thin.
  • Diced green chiles — These add brightness without making the queso watery. Drain them well so the extra liquid doesn’t thin the dip right when the cheese is trying to emulsify.

Building the Queso So It Stays Smooth

Brown the Chorizo First

Cook the chorizo over medium heat until it’s fully browned and the pan has picked up some of its color and fat, about 3 to 4 minutes. You’re looking for little crisped bits around the edges, not a dry crumble. If there is a lot of rendered fat in the pan, spoon off a little so the queso doesn’t turn oily.

Wake Up the Garlic for Just a Moment

Add the minced garlic and stir for about 30 seconds, just until it smells fragrant. Garlic burns fast in a hot skillet, and burnt garlic can make the whole dip taste bitter. Once it becomes aromatic, lower the heat before anything dairy goes in.

Melt Low and Slow

Add the cheeses, cream, milk, green chiles, and cumin over low heat. Stir constantly until the cheese disappears into the liquid and the mixture turns glossy and unified. If it looks stringy at first, keep stirring gently; if it starts to bubble hard, pull the pan off the burner for a few seconds because aggressive heat is what breaks queso.

Season at the End

Taste after the cheese has fully melted, then add salt and pepper as needed. Chorizo and cheese can already bring plenty of salt, so the seasoning often needs less than people expect. Transfer it to a warm serving dish right away so it holds that silky texture instead of tightening in the pan.

What to Change When You Want a Different Queso

Make It Vegetarian

Leave out the chorizo and start the skillet with a little butter or neutral oil instead. The dip will be milder, so add an extra pinch of cumin and a little smoked paprika if you want that same savory backbone without the meat.

Make It Gluten-Free

This recipe is naturally gluten-free as long as your chorizo is labeled gluten-free. Some packaged chorizo uses fillers or spices that can sneak wheat into the mix, so check the label before you cook.

Turn It Into a Milder Queso

Use mild breakfast sausage or omit the chorizo entirely and add a small spoonful of diced roasted poblano for warmth without the spice. You’ll still get a savory dip, but it will read more creamy and less smoky.

Keeping It Warm for a Crowd

Move the finished queso to a small slow cooker on the warm setting or a warming tray. If it thickens after sitting, stir in a splash of warm milk instead of blasting it with extra heat, which is how the texture goes from silky to greasy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days. It will thicken as it chills.
  • Freezer: Freezing isn’t ideal because the dairy can separate and turn grainy when thawed.
  • Reheating: Rewarm slowly over low heat on the stove or in short bursts in the microwave, stirring often and adding a splash of milk to loosen it. High heat is the fastest way to break the emulsion.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make this queso ahead of time?+

Yes, and it’s one of the better dishes to prep early. Make it, cool it, and refrigerate it in a covered container, then reheat slowly with a splash of milk. The key is gentle heat, because queso that gets blasted will separate before it fully loosens.

How do I keep queso from getting grainy?+

Keep the heat low once the cheese goes in and stir continuously until everything has melted together. Graininess usually comes from overheating or from cheese that was exposed to high heat for too long, which causes the proteins to tighten. If it starts looking rough, pull it off the burner and whisk in a tablespoon of warm milk.

Can I use pre-shredded cheese for this queso?+

You can, but it won’t melt quite as smoothly as freshly shredded cheese. Bagged shreds often have anti-caking agents that can make the texture a little less glossy. If that’s what you have, the queso will still work; just keep the heat low and stir a little longer.

How do I thin queso if it gets too thick?+

Stir in warm milk, one tablespoon at a time, until it loosens back up. Add it slowly so you don’t overshoot and turn the dip thin. Cold liquid can tighten the cheese again, so warm milk blends in more smoothly.

Can I use a different cheese instead of Monterey Jack?+

Yes. Oaxaca is the closest swap if you want a similar melt with a little more stretch, and mild white American cheese will give you an even silkier result. Avoid hard, aged cheeses as the swap, because they don’t melt with the same clean texture and can make the queso feel sandy.

Chorizo Queso with Cheddar and Monterey Jack

Queso made in one skillet until smooth and creamy, with melty cheddar and Monterey Jack plus flecks of browned chorizo and green chiles. This easy Mexican cheese dip is ready fast for chips and parties.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Appetizer
Cuisine: Mexican
Calories: 560

Ingredients
  

Queso base
  • 2 cup shredded white cheddar cheese
  • 1 cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese
  • 4 oz chorizo, crumbled
  • 1 can (4 oz) diced green chiles
  • 0.5 cup heavy cream
  • 0.25 cup whole milk
  • 2 clove garlic, minced
  • 0.5 tsp cumin
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • tortilla chips for serving

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Brown the chorizo and build flavor
  1. In a cast iron skillet over medium heat, cook the chorizo until browned, about 3-4 minutes, stirring occasionally until you see dark, crisped flecks.
  2. Add the minced garlic and cook for 30 seconds over medium heat, stirring just until fragrant and lightly sizzling.
Melt into a smooth queso
  1. Reduce heat to low and add the shredded white cheddar and Monterey Jack, stirring until the cheeses start to soften and look glossy.
  2. Add the heavy cream, whole milk, diced green chiles, and cumin, stirring constantly until completely melted and the mixture is smooth and creamy with no visible cheese lumps.
  3. Season with salt and pepper to taste, stirring for 20-30 seconds so the flavor is evenly distributed.
Serve
  1. Transfer the queso to a serving dish and keep warm on a warming tray until bubbling gently at the edges.
  2. Serve with warm tortilla chips for dipping alongside the bubbling queso.

Notes

Pro tip: keep the heat on low once the dairy goes in—high heat can make queso grainy. Store covered in the refrigerator up to 3 days; rewarm gently on low with a splash of milk if needed. Freeze not recommended for best texture. For a lighter option, use evaporated milk in place of heavy cream and milk, though the dip may be slightly less rich.

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