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Migas in the morning

“Austin is long on music, migas and markets”—Molly Ivins

If you’ve ever had breakfast in Austin, chances are you’ve had a plate of migas. This dish of eggs scrambled with fried corn tortilla strips, salsa, and cheese is ubiquitous in some of the Texas capital city’s most popular breakfast spots.

I have fond memories of spending lazy mornings in bustling Austin cafés, scooping spoonfuls of the crunchy, cheesy eggs and bacon-laced refried beans into fluffy flour tortillas. There’s no better way to start the day.

I took a holiday from my office last week and subsequently decided to take a holiday from the Internet as well. Do you remember what life was like before we became beholden to the Interweb machine? I had forgotten, and it was satisfying spending most of my time in the real world.

Though I have to admit that not only did I upset my mom when I didn’t respond to an e-mail from her within 24 hours but I am also now woefully behind on correspondence with others. No matter, I haven’t felt this recharged in years!

One of the things I insisted on doing every morning was starting my day with a satisfying meal, the kind of food that normally I just don’t have the time to either make at home or linger over in a breakfast spot.

One of the things I craved was migas. You won’t find migas on menus here in New York City but there is something a bit similar, chilaquiles, which someone I know insists is just a fancy-pants way of saying migas. But I have to disagree.

Migas | Homesick Texan

There have been endless debates if chilaquiles and migas are the same thing. There’s no need to question this further: there is indeed a difference, however slight. Chilaquiles, which are also made with fried tortilla strips, traditionally are just the tortillas, salsa and cheese; you don’t need eggs for the dish to qualify as chilaquiles.

Furthermore, to make chilaquiles the salsa is added to the pan with the fried tortilla strips before anything else is added to the pan, whereas with migas the salsa is added at the end. Likewise, Tex-Mex migas are nothing without eggs; they don’t come any other way.

Then, to make things even more confusing, you have your Spanish migas, a dish I ate every Saturday morning when I spent time in Granada my junior year. The word migas in Spanish means “crumbs” and like Tex-Mex migas, Spanish migas are a way to use up something stale, in this case bread instead of corn tortillas. The bread is torn into pieces, soaked in water overnight and then cooked in chorizo fat and served with said sausage and fried eggs. A hearty way to start the day, much like Tex-Mex migas.

(Though the chorizo in the Spanish version is dried, whereas Mexican chorizo is fresh. There is a chilaquiles dish that makes a sauce with this sausage known as chilaquiles toluqueños, which is also worth learning more about.)

Migas | Homesick Texan

This dish is designed to use up your old stale tortillas, though if you only have fresh ones the end result will not suffer. You can use any kind of salsa you have on hand as well—migas taste just as good with a green salsa as with a red.

While cheese is pretty much a must, you can also jazz these up with crumbled Mexican chorizo, chopped poblanos, bacon, pico de gallo, onions or whatever else you have lying around. And that’s the beauty of migas—as long as you have your fried tortillas, eggs, cheese and salsas, you can add anything else you like.

How do you eat your migas?

Print
5 from 4 votes

Migas

Servings 4
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • 8 large eggs
  • 1/4 cup milk or half-and-half
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/3 cup peanut oil
  • 4 corn tortillas cut into strips
  • 1/2 medium yellow onion, diced
  • 4 jalapeño peppers, seeded and diced
  • 1 cup shredded Cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese
  • 1 1/2 cups salsa, for topping
  • 1/4 cup cilantro, for garnishing
  • Refried beans, for serving
  • Flour tortillas, for serving

Instructions

  • In a bowl, whisk eggs together with milk. Stir in the salt and pepper.
  • In a large iron skillet, heat up peanut oil on medium-high, and place tortilla strips into skillet, cooking for about 3 minutes, turning once. Remove the tortilla strips with a slotted spoon to a paper-towel-lined plate. Drain the oil from the skillet leaving 2 tablespoons in the skillet.
  • Add the onions and jalapenos to the pan, and cook for a couple of minutes.
  • Add the egg mixture and tortilla strips to the skillet and let eggs sit for about one minute or until set on the bottom and then gently stir. Sprinkle cheese on top of eggs and continue to cook until melted.
  • Top eggs with salsa and cilantro. Serve hot with flour tortillas and refried beans.

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Recipe Rating




103 Comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    Great recipe. You can also add diced tomatoes with the onion pepper step. I like to add additional cheese on the top and then coverthe pan for about a minute to let the chees on top melt. Also goes good with a dollop of queso on top!

  2. Tracy Whitehead says:

    I make mine by sauteing thin sliced onions and sliced corn tortillas then add egg whites and finish off with tabasco sauce…yummmm

  3. My roommate had 9 of her jersey friends staying for the weekend and I wanted an easy egg dish to make for them…I made them migas…none of them had heard of it and thought it was weird I was putting tortillas in it. They thought it was amazing and that, combined with biscuits and gravy (they had never had white gravy either!) they were AMAZED.

    Thanks for the Lobo tip…I go there whenever I crave fried okra but hadn't tried it for brunch yet 🙂

  4. I know this was posted a long time ago but I just came across it. I had formed this idea that migas, properly made, should be baked and not cooked in a skillet. I had them at El Azteca once (a private event; I don't think they were on the menu) and they had baked the migas like a casserole. I know whenever I ordered migas from the old Tamale House, I had a wait longer for them and I assumed it was because they baked them (but I really have no idea).

    BTW Tamale House on Airport closed a few years ago and El Azteca is reportedly closing next month (Sept. 2016).

  5. Thanks for the recipe! It brought me back to Austin where I lived for ten years.

    1. Lisa Fain says:

      Maxine–You’re welcome! I love that the recipe took you back to Austin!