Tortilla Recipe 25
Tortillas are one of the staples of Mexican cuisine, served up fried as tacos, rolled into soft burritos or layered as enchiladas. The history of tortillas dates back to 10000 BC. Later, it was popularized when a peasant prepared this flat corn bread to the Mayan king. Missionaries later spread the recipe for tortillas throughout California, and today flour tortillas are favored over white bread for their versatility and low fat content. Hi, Im Jason Hill of Chef Tips outside the Mission Tortilla Factory in Anaheim. Lets head back to the kitchen and learn how to make homemade tortillas. To prepare this flour tortilla recipe, you only need four ingredients: flour, baking powder, vegetable shortening or lard and salt. First, stir 4 cups all purpose flour and 1/8 teaspoon baking powder in a large bowl. Next add 1/2 cup of shortening or lard into the mixture and work the fat into the flour with your hands. Dissolve 1 1/2 teaspoons of salt into 1 1/2 cups of warm water. Drizzle this slowly into the flour mixture and mix until you have a soft dough. Knead for 1 minute, adding flour or small amounts of lukewarm water if needed. The dough should not be too wet or dry. Once it is at the right consistency, turn bowl over to cover the dough and let it rest for about 20 minutes. Next, divide the dough into 12 pieces and form into balls. As you form and roll the balls, coat your hands with a little bit of shortening. Flatten and cover balls with plastic wrap and let rest for 20-30 …
@ventanassincristales dont be so mean hes showing people who dont know the “true” ingredients and other replacements
@ventanassincristales
You are right. These are not real corn tortillas.
This is not the recipe for real corn mexican tortillas. This man is using flour and vegatable shortening. Original recipe doesnt need vegetable shortening.This sucks!
Made it,liked it.Making it whenever im having cravings for mexican food.Thanks Jason
I’m saving up a nice amount of money here not having to buy them for the store because they cost wayy to much in my country…
i use plastic wrap over the doughthen flatin it
It looks more like chapati except it is dry and chapati is softer
@RebeccaLessay Yes!
So when you fry these you get a taco shell, right?
you could use some weed butter instead of shortening and end up with some pretty good green tortillas =-)
I used organic extra virgin olive oil. I will try Coconut oil in next batch.
My 3 year old helped me make them and had a blast! Wondering if Almond flour would work for those that can not have gluten.
@cbsunshine
Not sure how that would work. Will you try and let us know?
I am going to make organic version and wanted to know if I could use coconut oil instead of shorting?
@ShyGirlShimmy
Hi. I have not used whole wheat flour to make these. I am sure they can be made with whole wheat, but I would use half whole wheat and half AP flour.
Can you use whole wheat flour instead? Would it make a difference?
That looks just delicious !
I am going to try out this recipe !
Yes, according to Wikipedia and several other sources: “The first tortillas, which date back to approximately 10,000 BC, were made of native corn with dried kernel.”
@ChefTips I wasnt doubting it, just surprised. i am a history buff, and i didnt even know they had established civs that far back in south america.
I am sure it’s debatable, but that’s what I read when I researched tortillas.
10 000 bc?!?!
@beaum1cah
De nada! =]
gracias amigo
me gusta
Merci, I found it !!
We have recipe print-outs on our CookingSessions Web site, which you can reach by clicking the banner on our Chef Tips page. Enjoy!
can you please write down the measures you have put for this recipe ( in french if you can )? because i can’t see it properly ( because of the internet here South Pacific Island very slow connection! ! )
Merci beaucoup !
0:31 – Cheesyy :L