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Sopes

Recipe courtesy Diana Kennedy, From My Mexican Kitchen: Techniques and Ingredients, Clarkson Potter, 2003

Show: Sara's SecretsEpisode: Small Plates

Rated: 5 stars out of 5Rate itRead users' reviews (2)

  • Cook Time:

    20 min

  • Level:

    Intermediate

  • Yield:

    12 sopes

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Times:

Prep
2 hr 0 min
Inactive Prep
--
Cook
20 min
Total:
2 hr 20 min
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Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups masa harina
  • Scant 1 cup warm water
  • Oil or melted lard, for reheating
  • 1/2 cup Frijoles Refritos, recipe follows
  • 1 1/2 cups Chorizo y Papa, recipe follows
  • 1/2 cup Salsa de Jitomate, recipe follows
  • 1 cup finely shredded lettuce or cabbage
  • 1/2 cup finely chopped white onion
  • 1/3 cup finely grated anejo cheese or crumbled queso fresco

Directions

Put the masa harina in a bowl and add the warm water, reserving about 1/4 cup of water until you see how much the flour will absorb. Work well with your hands until smooth. Cover with a damp cloth and set aside in a cool spot for about 1 hour. This gives the starch particles time to swell and absorb the moisture thoroughly, giving more flexibility to the dough. Alternatively, make the Dried Corn Tortilla Masa (see recipe).

Work the masa until very soft and smooth, and divide into 12 equal parts. Roll each into a ball about 1 1/4 inches in diameter and cover with a damp cloth while you work. Warm an ungreased comal over medium heat.

Take 1 of the balls and press out gently in a lined tortilla press or by hand to a disk about 3 1/2 inches – it will be thicker than a tortilla, about 1/4-inch. Place carefully on the comal and cook over medium to low heat until the underside is opaque and speckled with brown, about 2 minutes. Turn the sope over and cook on the second side for a further 2 minutes. Remove from the comal and immediately (although you may burn your fingers a little) pinch up the dough around the periphery of the sope, return it to the comal, and cook briefly until the dough is firm and cooked through, about 2 minutes more. Continue with the rest of the balls.

Heat a very small amount of the lard or oil in a skillet and let the sopes heat through for about 1/2 minute on each side. Spread with the bean paste and top liberally with the rest of the ingredients. Serve immediately.

Refried Beans: Frijoles Refritos:

About 1/3 cup lard, melted

1 heated tablespoon finely chopped white onion

3 1/2 cups cooked pinto beans in their broth

Heat the lard in a heavy 10-inch skillet, add the onion and fry over medium heat without browning, until translucent, about 30 seconds. Gradually add the beans and their broth and continue cooking over fairly high heat, mashing them down to a paste texture, about 10 minutes.

Yield: 3 cups

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes

Ease of preparation: easy

Chorizo and Potato Filling: Chorizo y Papa:

Approximately 1 tablespoon lard or vegetable oil

1 Mexican chorizo, about 3 ounces

6 ounces waxy new potatoes, diced and cooked al dente, about 1 rounded cup

1 chipotle in adobo, chopped

Sea salt

Melt the lard in a small skillet. Skin and crumble the chorizo, add to the pan, and cook over low heat until the fat has been rendered out. Add the potatoes and chile, if using, and continue cooking over medium heat, scraping the bottom of the skillet from time to time to avoid sticking, until well seasoned, about 8 minutes. Season with salt. Set aside to cool a little before using.

Yield: 1 cup

Salsa de Jitomate:

2 garlic cloves

4 serrano chiles, asado, and roughly chopped, technique follows

Sea salt

1 pound tomatoes, asado, technique follows

About 1/3 cup finely chopped white onion

About 1/3 roughly chopped cilantro leaves

Crush or blend the garlic, chiles and salt to a paste. Gradually add the tomatoes (unpeeled), grinding well after each addition. The sauce should be texture and the skin will never all completely disappear.

Sprinkle the top with the onion and cilantro and serve.

Yield: 2 cups

Chiles Asado:

Place the whole chilies on an ungreased griddle over medium heat and turn them from time to time until the flesh is fairly soft; there will be brownish patches on the skin and the color will have faded somewhat. Then, if they are to be ground with other ingredients, chop roughly before blending. Note well: they are to be neither peeled nor seeded.

Tomatoes Asados:

The whole tomatoes are cooked on a ungreased comal or griddle until they are slightly charred and mushy to guarantee a specially delicious table or cooked sauce. About half the cooks I know then skin the tomatoes, while others – including me – blend them unskinned. While the appearance of the sauce may not be as attractive, the flavor and texture are incomparable. This method of cooking tomatoes is particularly recommended for freezing and storing for the months when tomatoes are not at their best (not a problem in Mexico).

You may want to broil them in a more practical way. Choose a shallow pan in which the tomatoes will just fit in 1 layer – not too large or the juice that exuded will dry up. (I used to line the pan with foil, but no longer. It is high time that we gradually ease foil out of the kitchen or use it very, very sparingly. The mining of bauxite for the production of aluminum has destroyed far too many tropical forests on this planet.) Place the pan about 2 inches below a heated broiler and broil until the top halves of the tomatoes are soft and the skin is blistered and slightly browned. Turn the tomatoes over and repeat on the other side. The exuded juice will be sweet and syrupy so save it to blend with the tomatoes.

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Read more Comments & Reviews (2)

Comments & Reviews

  • recipe Sopes
    Dave Jamaica Plain, MA 12-18-2009

    Flag

    simple, perfect

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    This is the best sope recipe I've been able to find. Most recipes say to deep fry them, which is gross. The best sopes in... Mexico are prepared on a big dry comal with little to no oil, basically as this recipe describes. You'll probably burn the tips of your fingers but callused fingertips are the first thing you need if you want to cook like a Mexican grandma! I don't have a tortilla press so I used two plates and pressed them together. I just followed the dough recipe on the Maseca package, which uses 2 cups of the flour, and it gave me just 10 sopes. Though they were probably a little thicker than they should have been. I recommend using Goya's hot Salsa Taquera, the closest thing to the red salsa they use at anotijitos stands in Mexico you can get without making it yourself. Also, a great cheese for this if you can find it is Queso Cotija. Read more
  • recipe Sopes
    Megan Manassas, VA 05-04-2008

    Flag

    Tasty and easy

    Rated: 4 stars out of 5
    First time I've made sopes, and it was easy. My one comment would be that the recipe says it makes 12 sopes. I got 4, though... they were large. I started out by dividing the dough into 8 balls, but there was no way to make 1/4" thick disks as wide as the recipe says. (I always have yield issues with masa harina, what am I doing wrong?) They cooked up wonderfully, though, and were delicious. I used my own filling - refried beans, diced chicken and goat cheese, put it all under the broiler, then served it with mango salsa. Yum!Read more
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