Sopapillas – Fried Pastry Topped with Cinnamon Sugar and Honey. Time-Tested Recipe.
My friend Kelly Jaggers is back with another wonderful family recipe! Her nostalgic memories behind this recipe, beautifully expressed, make it taste even sweeter. ~ Tori
The year I finished elementary school my family and I moved to Corpus Christy, Texas. We bought a pretty little house in a quiet suburban neighborhood. I was worried about making friends and fitting in, as most kids do at that age, but I sort of hit the jackpot. Across the street from our new house lived a large family with three children around my age – two girls and a boy – and we hit it off from the start.
I spent a lot of time across the street playing with the neighbor kids, and their mother would often invite me to stay for dinner. She was an AMAZING cook. My favorite day to go over and play was Sunday as that was the day their mother would do her baking for the week. She was originally from Mexico, so she would make her family piles of corn and flour tortillas, torta bread, and sopapillas for that evening’s meal. It did not take long for my Sunday visits to become a regular thing, and she never turned me away. In fact, she would often send me home with stacks of fresh tortillas and piping hot sopapillas, which my parents and younger brother always loved.
My mother was VERY keen to have her tortilla and sopapilla recipes, but our neighbor never shared. Not above a little intrigue, my mother asked me to spy on our neighbor while she was baking. I was to see what she used so we could attempt to replicate her recipes. I did my best, but back then I was no culinary pro, so we never got the recipes quite right. Eventually we moved to Dallas and my days of espionage were at an end.
Time passed, and some years later I entered culinary school with the goal of becoming a baker. During one class our teachers decided to combine the baking and cooking classes for a joint meal. The cooks made big pots of spicy chili, and the bakers made fresh, puffy sopapillas. I was thrilled to see if the sopapillas we made were anything like the ones from my memory. We mixed, rolled, and fried, and the results were very good. Not quite as good as my memory, but close.
I took the recipe home and did some thinking. I remembered from my spy days that my neighbor mixed a little milk into her dough, and she always used lard in her recipes. Knowing these two things I tried the recipe again. I mixed, rested, rolled, and fried. Once ready I dusted the sopapillas with cinnamon sugar and drenched them in honey. One bite and I was transported back to her bustling kitchen in South Texas, teetering on a bar stool and trying to learn her secrets. I took some to my mother, and she agreed. These were the ones!
The trick to a perfectly puffy sopapilla is to start flipping the dough in the hot oil after about 3 seconds of frying. The light agitation will encourage the air in the dough to expand evenly, leaving you with a golden brown pillow. Lard gives these the best possible flavor, but you can also use vegetable shortening and get good results. These are best when they are warm from the oil, but if you have extras you can reheat them in a 250°F oven for about 5 to 10 minutes. Try stuffing these with your favorite taco fillings, fajita meat, or serve these with sweetened whipped cream and fresh berries for a fun change of pace.
And if you were wondering, I also solved the tortilla mystery and will be sharing that recipe with you in the weeks to come!
Food Photography and Styling by Kelly Jaggers
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Sopapillas
Ingredients
- 3 cups all purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 3 tablespoons vegetable shortening if you're not keeping kosher or vegetarian, you can also use lard
- 3/4 cup water heated to 110 degrees F
- 1/2 cup whole milk heated to 110 degrees F
- Oil for frying, peanut or corn oil preferred
- 1/2 cup sugar for dusting
- 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon for dusting)
NOTES
Instructions
- In a large bowl add the flour, baking soda, sugar, and salt. Whisk until the mixture is well combined. Add the shortening and, with your fingers, work in the fat until it is completely rubbed into the flour and no large chunks remain. The mixture should look a little like sand.
- Make a well in the center of the flour and add the warm water and milk.
- Mix with a wooden spoon until the dough forms a shaggy ball, then turn out onto a lightly floured works surface and knead until the dough forms a smooth ball, about 5 minutes. Alternately, once the fat is rubbed into the flour you can add the flour, water, and milk to the work bowl of a stand mixer and, using the dough hook, mix for about 8 minutes, or until the dough is smooth and clings to the hook.
- Cover the dough with plastic wrap or a damp towel and allow it to rest for 30 minutes. You can also wrap in plastic and chill for up to one day in the refrigerator. Once rested, divide the dough into 4 pieces.
- Roll each piece out until it is about 1/8-inch thick. Cut the dough into 6 rough squares. Transfer the pieces to a parchment lined baking sheet and cover with plastic while you roll and cut the remaining pieces of dough.
- Fill a deep pot at least four inches deep with oil, making sure the oil is at least three inches from the top of the pot. Heat the oil to 360°F. Add the sopapillas to the hot oil 2 or 3 at a time. After 3 seconds use long tongs or frying chopsticks to carefully turn the sopapillas frequently until they have fully puffed, then fry them until they are golden brown on both sides, about two minutes per side.
- Drain on a rack over a paper towel lined sheet pan.In a small bowl mix together the sugar and cinnamon until well combined. As the sopapillas come out of the hot oil dust them lightly with mixture.
- Serve warm with a generous drizzle of honey.
Gray Anderson says
Ohhhhh…my????
Pieri says
Can these be baked instead of fried? and still become ‘puff pillows’?
Thanks….
Ashley at ToriAvey.com says
Hi Pieri, Tori’s assistant Ashley here. This recipe was shared by our contributor Kelly Jaggers, but I have done a quick Google search and it looks as though baking sopapillas does not give them the nice puffy texture and appearance you would get when they are fried. I don’t think I’d recommend baking.
Becky says
I made these with my nephew for his school. It was easy and they turned out perfect! Everyone was very impressed. Thank you so much for sharing the recipe.
Clara says
I followed every step and my sopapillas didn’t look the same. The taste was good though but the texture was different.
I don’t know what I did wrong. But this recipe I am not trying again. However, I found a different one and my sopapillas turned out very delicious. I got complimented.
Donna says
What recipe are you using that’s even better?
Lorraine says
Thank you so much for sharing this recipe kelly. I used to love these as a kid but did not know what they’re called. I can’t wait to give it a try, at long last, I finally found a recipe for the pastry that was such a treat way back when.
Arnold says
Great recipe, right on for taste and texture. If you keep flipping these in the hot oil, they end up golden, and truly hollow. Do the cinnamon sugar dusting and serve them. Bite a corner off, and POUR the honey into each as you munch them down.
DianaQ says
Nice! I can understand your neighbor, haha. Most of my Abuelita’s recipes remain a mystery to everyone outside the family.
Stephanie says
I used to make these when I was a kid. Its funny, because I totally forgot about them until I saw this post! 🙂 Thanks again Tori.
Ilana says
Wow, I need to forget about my diet lol!
chriaty says
Mouth watering and also are a butter sweet dip for it.delish!