sopaipilla recipe – use real butter (2024)

sopaipilla recipe – use real butter (1) Recipe: sopaipillas

Over the weekend, we lost a longtime family friend. He was the father of one of my childhood besties. Even though he wasn’t related to me, I called him Uncle. That is how I was taught to address friends of the family – Uncle or Auntie. But I always thought of him as an uncle. He was a positive, kind, gentle, soft-spoken, and even-tempered man with a sense of humor and a genuine sincerity. He had a sweet smile and a demeanor that put people at ease. I loved him like family.

I shed my share of tears on and off throughout the weekend while Jeremy quietly handed me tissues and squeezed my hand. I know better than to think that the people we love will be there forever, and yet it still knocks the wind out of me when they are no longer here. Despite the frigid temperatures, I needed to get outside and move – get the blood pumping and take deep breaths of mountain air with each glide of my skis on silent snow. It’s how I sort my thoughts, heal a broken body or a broken heart, try to answer the unanswerable questions. It’s where I seek comfort.


frosty

sopaipilla recipe – use real butter (2)

I’m not much of a comfort eater. I don’t seek comfort in food. Typically, if I am in need of comforting, I’m not eating. But I do enjoy the occasional “comfort” food like anybody else. When I made chile rellenos over the holidays, we both felt as if something was missing… that finishing touch. The majority of the restaurant meals I’ve enjoyed over the past 20+ years in New Mexico ended with sopaipillas. It’s a simple fry bread served as hot pillows of dough with a bear-shaped bottle of honey on the side and little fanfare. New Mexicans love their sopaipillas.


flour, water, milk, vegetable oil, baking powder, salt, sugar

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mix the dry ingredients together

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work the oil into the flour with your fingers

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stir in the milk and water

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The recipe is simple enough, but what kept me away for so long was the frying. Man, I hate frying. I just don’t like dealing with the oil afterward – the clean up, the filtering, the storage (Boulder recycles used vegetable oil, so I save it up to recycle every few years which is better than the alternative). Every now and again it is worth the trouble though. I call those items fry-worthy and sopaipillas are most certainly fry-worthy.


mix it into a sticky dough

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knead until “earlobe” soft

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rest under a damp cloth

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divide into three balls and rest some more

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The first time I made sopaipillas, I followed the recipe instructions and made a batch of 12. They were cute and little – about the size of my palm. Jeremy informed me that these were on the small side, that typical sopaipillas were larger. On my second attempt, I made a batch of 8 and these were exactly like the ones we enjoyed in restaurants. I also got New Mexico’s native son’s approval.


roll out a ball of dough to about 1/4-inch thickness

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cut into quarters

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ready to fry

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The key to rolling out the dough is to not manhandle it. Roll it out, but try not to press it down. Don’t overwork the dough or re-roll the dough either. The goal is to get a nice puffy pillow when you fry it and that won’t happen if you squash the hell out of the dough. Another important tidbit is to use fresh oil. Apparently, the smoke point of oil decreases with each use. The oil needs to be pretty hot in order to get the sopaipillas to puff properly. I used my frying oil a second time for the second batch and while they came out fine, I did notice more inconsistency in the frying on the second batch of sopaipillas. And finally, when you place the dough wedges into the hot oil, as soon as they rise to the top, ladle hot oil over the tops of the sopaipillas. This encourages them to puff up, which is what you want. It all happens quickly, so I don’t recommend trying to multi-task when making sopaipillas. Give them the undivided attention they deserve.


frying and puffing

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serve hot

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dessert sopaipillas are usually served with honey

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There is no better sopaipilla than a fresh, hot sopaipilla. Carefully grab one, taking care not to burn your fingers, and pull a corner off. Drizzle honey into the opening as you turn the sopaipilla in such a way as to drizzle honey all over the interior of the fry bread. Jeremy’s mom recounted how, as a kid, Jeremy (or maybe it was his younger brother) once filled his sopaipilla full of honey. Oy.


tear off a corner (eat or reserve for later to dip in honey)

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drizzle the honey

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Jeremy and I both agreed that these were exactly like the sopaipillas we have enjoyed in New Mexico. It reminded him of home. The crisp outside and soft, doughy inside are perfectly paired with sweet, gooey honey. And they’re fun to eat. It would surprise me if one didn’t find some comfort there.


best when fresh

sopaipilla recipe – use real butter (19)


Sopaipillas
[print recipe]
from The Border Cookbook

2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsps sugar (optional)
1 1/2 tsps vegetable oil
1/2 cup lukewarm water
1/4 cup milk, at room temperature

Whisk the flour, salt, baking powder, and sugar (if using) together in a large mixing bowl. Work the vegetable oil into the flour mixture with your fingertips. Stir the water and milk into the flour mixture until you get a sticky dough. Turn the dough out onto a floured work surface and knead it until it is “earlobe” soft (about a minute). Form it into a ball and let the dough rest, covered with a damp cloth, for about 15 minutes. Divide the dough into 3 balls (2 balls if you prefer larger sopaipillas). Cover the dough balls with the damp cloth and let rest for 15-30 minutes. At this point you can refrigerate the dough for up to 4 hours. Dust your work surface with flour and roll out a ball to a 1/8- to 1/4-inch thick circle. If you have any protruding edges, trim and discard to get a circle. Take care that you don’t re-roll the dough because it results in a dense dough. Cut the circle into quarters. Repeat for the rest of the dough balls.

Heat about 2 inches of fresh oil (canola, peanut, vegetable) in a deep pan to 400°F. Use fresh oil because the smoke point of oil drops with each use. Carefully add 2-3 wedges of dough at a time. As they rise to the surface of the oil (this happens in about 10 seconds), ladle hot oil over the tops to promote ballooning. I found I only needed to ladle oil over the tops once. When the sopaipillas are puffed and the bottoms are golden (30 seconds to a minute), flip them over and continue to fry until golden (30 seconds to a minute). Remove from hot oil to paper towels. Serve hot with honey. Makes 12 small sopaipillas or 8 large sopaipillas.

January 13th, 2013: 11:47 pm
filed under bread, dessert, pastries, recipes, sweet

sopaipilla recipe – use real butter (2024)

FAQs

What are Mexican sopapillas made of? ›

Sopapilla Ingredients

Flour: This sopapilla recipe starts with all-purpose flour. Shortening: Shortening, not butter, ensures perfectly soft and fluffy sopapillas. Baking powder: Baking powder acts as a leavener, which makes the dough rise. Salt: A pinch of salt enhances the overall flavor of the sopapillas.

What is the difference between a beignet and a sopapilla? ›

Sopaipillas look really similar to French beignets and taste similar to American donuts. All three pastries are made from deep fried dough but beignets are made from a more bread-like yeast dough where sopapillas are a little more light and flaky.

Are sopapillas Mexican or Native American? ›

Origin of Sopapillas / Frybread / Sopaipilla

The sopapilla frybread, spelt sopaipilla in Spanish, is a bread that was developed during the American territorial phase of New Mexico. The bread is a puffed fried flatbread created by Native Americans and Hispanos.

Do Mexicans eat sopapillas? ›

Sopapillas are popular in New Mexican cuisines and are served in almost every New Mexican-style and Tex-Mex restaurant. Mexican cuisines doesn't usually include sopapillas, but have a dish called buñuelo, a very similar sweet pastry type food.

Are sopapillas authentic Mexican? ›

Sopapillas are made from a deep fried dough that was introduced to Mexico and South America by the Spanish during the Columbian exchange. Throughout Spain, the sopapilla recipe varies.

What are the ingredients for sopaipillas? ›

It's a treat that is very easy and quick to make, and it only uses a few common ingredients. To make Sopapillas, you will need flour, water, shortening, sugar, baking powder, and a few other ingredients that almost everyone has in their pantry.

What nationality are sopapillas? ›

A sopaipilla, sopapilla, sopaipa, or cachanga is a kind of fried pastry and a type of quick bread served in several regions with Spanish heritage in the Americas. The word sopaipilla is the diminutive of sopaipa, a word that entered Spanish from the Mozarabic language of Al-Andalus.

What is a sopaipilla in English? ›

noun. , Mexican Cooking. , plural so·pai·pil·las [soh-pahy-, pee, -, uh, z, saw-pahy-, pee, -yahs]. a small pastry made of deep-fried yeast dough and usually dipped in honey.

Is there a sopapilla mix? ›

Morrison's Sopaipilla Mix offers the authenticity of a Mexican Dessert Treat at home. Since 1886, we have been milling our own flour to deliver superior quality and delicious Morrison's Sopaipilla Mix. Morrison's Sopaipilla Mix offers the authenticity of a Mexican Dessert Treat at home.

Do sopapillas contain yeast? ›

First, you stir ingredients such as flour, salt, butter, sugar, and yeast to make the sweet dough. (Some recipes call for shortening or lard, but I prefer the flavor of butter.) You let it rise, and then roll it out with a rolling pin, cut it into triangles, and fry each in vegetable oil for a couple of minutes.

Are fry jacks the same as sopapillas? ›

Fry Jacks are essentially fried dough. They are kind of like French beignets, or Latin American sopapillas. A traditional Belizean breakfast will have, fry jacks, salsa or tomatoes, refried beans, eggs and an additional protein like chicken or fish.

What is a fun fact about sopapillas? ›

A sopaipilla, sopapilla, sopaipa, or cachanga is a kind of fried pastry and a type of quick bread served in several regions with Spanish heritage in the Americas. The word sopaipilla is the diminutive of sopaipa, a word that entered Spanish from the Mozarabic language of Al-Andalus.

What are 3 foods that are indigenous to Mexico? ›

Today's food staples native to the land include corn (maize), turkey, beans, squash, amaranth, chia, avocados, tomatoes, tomatillos, cacao, vanilla, agave, spirulina, sweet potato, cactus, and chili pepper.

What Indian tribe are Mexicans from? ›

Many of these Indigenous Mexican-Americans hail from the indigenous people of Oaxaca, with California being home to between 100,000 and 150,000 indigenous Oaxacans.

What is the secret of soft buns? ›

The secret to soft, light rolls, if you're looking for something like a dinner roll, is an enriched dough that contains butter or other dairy, eggs, or both. If you want something more bread-like, you want a high hydration dough that's been properly kneaded and given at least two bulk fermentations before shaping.

Can you reheat sopapillas? ›

Place them in an airtight container or freezer bag, and they will last for about 3 months in the freezer. To reheat frozen sopapillas, place them in the air fryer at 350°F for 2-3 minutes, or until they are heated through and crispy again.

Why are my Bunuelos sticking? ›

The batter is stuck to my buñuelo mold, how can I fix it? Your oil or your buñuleo mold is too hot. Make sure your oil is exactly 350°F degrees and that you are only heating it up in the hot oil for about a minute.

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