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Pressing matters: making corn tortillas

I forgot I had a tortilla press. When I was recently riffling through my cabinet on the hunt for an errant springform pan, I came across it buried under a pile of Chinese delivery menus and a rolling mat. There it sat—dusty, rusty and unloved. I felt so unappreciative, especially as my tortilla press had been a gift from my mother.

When I lived in Iowa in the early ’90s, the only flour tortillas I could find were at the health-food co-op, and they were the color and texture of cardboard, heavy with grains and just way too nutritious for me. I wanted fluffy, thick white-flour tortillas that came spotted with brown specks from the comal, still warm in the bag they were so fresh. But that wasn’t happening, so I realized I needed to take matters in my own hands and learn how to make flour tortillas at home.

After doing much research, I settled on a recipe from Diana Kennedy. I don’t know if it was my inadequacies or her directions, but something wasn’t right. Working with the dough was like pulling elastic—I’d roll it out and just when I thought I’d formed a perfect tortilla, it would snap back to where I had started.

I don’t know much about chemistry, but a friend suggested the proportion of fat to flour was incorrect. So I tested the dough with different types and measurements of fat in an attempt to achieve the perfect blend. But to little avail, the flour tortillas I tried to make were nothing like they should be. When I told my mom what I was doing, she said, “I hope you don’t die in your apartment. Someone will find you and think you expired because of all those tubs of shortening and lard in your kitchen.” Well, I didn’t die. And since I kept on living despite the copious intake of pig and vegetable-oil fat, she said she would send me her tortilla press to help me along with my cooking adventure.

Her offer was a sweet gesture. But a tortilla press is used for making corn tortillas and back then I was all about flour tortillas. And by the time her gift arrived, not only had I grown tired of trying to replicate those airy, white-flour tortillas from home, but she had also included several packages of my favorite flat bread in my care package: my needs were met. I treated the flour tortillas she sent like gold, and while they were precious, I was satisfied. So my tortilla press (which had been used by my mom when I was a kid to make amazing homemade corn tortillas) spent the past 14 years languishing in multiple kitchen cabinets in three different states. Until yesterday.

corn tortillas | Homesick Texan

I’m fortunate that in New York, Whole Foods sells decent flour tortillas—thick, fluffy and delicious—I don’t have to mess with making them from scratch for a quick fix. But the corn tortillas found here are another story. They’re plentiful, yes, but they are the rubbery variety that comes stacked in perfect 30-count cylinders, completely devoid of any human touch. They have no soul.

I’ve been getting into the flavors of corn tortillas lately—there’s nothing quite like a hot corn tortilla spread with a pat of butter and a dash of salt. It’s the perfect snack. Not to mention how well corn tortillas wrap around a variety of fillings such as beans, pork, chicken, and beef. When I found my forgotten friend, I knew I should tackle making homemade tortillas again, only this time they’d be corn instead of flour.

There are slight variations in how people make corn tortillas at home. Some cooks prefer a wooden press, while others, like me, use a cast-iron one. Some suggest using wax paper on the press while others say you can cut circles out of a plastic bag. But while there may be a couple of differences in approach, every recipe I saw for the corn-tortilla dough was the same (heck, that common recipe was even on my bag of masa harina), and the instructions for cooking them are universal as well. And when it comes to taste, well, that should go without saying: anyone who has had a freshly fried corn tortilla hot off the skillet will agree, there’s just no comparison to the machine-pressed ones you buy at the store. They’re so different in texture and taste, you almost wonder how the two are related.

So I welcome my tortilla press back to the land of active cooking. I’m delighted I found it and it will never go unused and unloved again.

Print
5 from 4 votes

Corn tortillas

Servings 12 tortillas
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • 2 cups masa harina
  • 1 1/4 cups warm water

Instructions

  • Cut from a freezer bag 2 circles of plastic, the width of your tortilla press.
  • Mix the masa harina and warm water until a dough is formed.
  • Knead dough for about 2 minutes or until smooth. Divide into 12 equal-sized balls and cover.
  • Heat a dry skillet, griddle, or comal on medium-high until hot. Place the plastic on the tortilla press and then place between the plastic a ball of dough. Press out the tortilla.
  • Take the tortilla wrapped in plastic off the press, gently peel off tplastic and place in the hot skillet. Cook 30 seconds on one side, flip it, and cook a minute on other side. It should start to puff a bit. Flip it again and cook 30 seconds on the first side.
  • Place cooked tortilla in a basket lined with cloth or, if you have one, a tortilla warmer. Repeat process for remaining balls of dough.

Notes

Note: If you don’t have a tortilla press, you can pat the balls into flat discs or roll them out with a pin. You can also place the balls (with the plastic) between two very heavy books and press them out that way.

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5 from 4 votes (3 ratings without comment)

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65 Comments

  1. Sprittibee says:

    I send countless people to your blog – especially for this and your flour tortilla recipe. I have a friend living in Italy right now going through Tex-Mex withdrawal. I’m surprised she’s alive still (or her husband who is a hot-food fanatic). Not only do they have the problem with getting flour or corn tortillas, but they have ITALIAN CHEESE and nothing similar to our cheddar and Mexican varieties. Poor things. The only hot sauce they have there is tabasco (for a price)… and they don’t have CILANTRO! Heaven forbid. I’d sure like to visit Italy, but man – an OCEAN between me and Tex-Mex would be the final straw!

  2. Anonymous says:

    For those people that live over here in Europe, yes even Italy one can find ingredients for tex-mex just under different names, for example cilantro is called coriander and if it cant be found in the local supermarket, one can check the local Asian food market where one can find fresh hot peppers to make hot sauce. If not Asian then check African and even Indian food stores which also have masa harina. As for cheese yes cheddar is hard to find, but jack cheese is quite common, its just named different, its usually made with cream and rennet no special flavors. Typical farmers cheese not aged. Just go to the cheese counter and sample cheeses that look like jack cheese

  3. I live in Thailand, and when I started my quest to make corn tortillas -I had to make the masa myself!

    If anyone else is struggling to find masa, it took me a while to figure this out – but popcorn works great when mixed with the lime. Just takes a little elbow grease to run it through the hand grinder!

    Ah – the things we do for tortillas! Great blog post

  4. Anonymous says:

    Any tips on getting the plum sized ball of masa to stretch to a full 6 inches? I made a batch last night and, while they were tasty, they were so thick it was like folding a pita. Maybe my $12 press from the latin market doesn’t provide enough pressure?

  5. Lisa Fain says:

    Anon–Are you using an iron or a wooden press? I use an iron one, and if I press real hard with both hands, it becomes thin enough. You could, after pressing, always roll it out a bit more with a rolling pin. Good luck!