Flour Tortillas – Truly Texas Mexican!

Flour Tortillas – Truly Texas Mexican!

In the Texas Mexico region, (central, south Texas and northeastern Mexico) ,wheat flour tortillas are fluffy and pliant. They are all-purpose (AP) wheat flour delicacies, and we switch back and forth between these and corn tortillas, depending on the dish we’re enjoying.
We always use a dash of baking powder, which makes ours different from wheat flour tortillas in the other northern regions of Mexican cuisine.  After listening for many years to heated debates about whether or not to put baking powder in wheat flour tortillas, I have come to believe that the debate is fundamentally about whether one understands that Texas Mexican exists as one of over 18 regional styles of Mexican cooking.

These tortillas are what I grew up eating.  My amá made them this way, and that’s the way they are done in San Antonio, Uvalde, Raymondvile, Corpus Christ, and all the way down to McAllen, Harlingen, Del Rio, Brownsville and a bit south of the Rio Grande.  If you travel farther south of the Rio Grande, you will see the tortillas thinner, not fluffy, and with more fat.

I use a food processor because it is so much faster than mixing by hand. I also give precise timing in this recipe because I’ve tested the procedure and it works well.  However, there are so many variables to working with wheat flour that you will have to be attentive and find your way through the process.

To make perfect flour tortillas, make a testal before rolling
To make perfect flour tortillas, make a testal before rolling

There are three things to keep in mind.  First knead the dough thoroughly– put your back into it!  Vigorous kneading changes the structure of the wheat proteins to create strands of gluten that will eventually provide the structure and elasticity in the tortilla. Second, let the dough rest after kneading it.  And third, make a “testal,” by rotating a ball of dough with your hands while pinching the edges and folding them under, to fashion a little round pillow that has an indentation on the underside.  The word “testal” is from the Nahuatl word, “Téxtatl” and refers originally to the ball of corn masa that is used to make corn tortillas.

I  think you will find the learning process worthwhile because these tortillas are really wonderfully soft and delicious.

Recipe for Flour Tortillas

(Recipe (makes 1-1/2 dozen)
This recipe is excerpted from the book: “Truly Texas Mexican: A Native Culinary Heritage In Recipes” published by Texas Tech University Press

Ingredients
4 cups all-purpose wheat flour
1-1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 cup non-hydrogenated palm oil shortening or other non-hydrogenated shortening
1 cup warm or hot water

Method

The bottom of a testal, flour tortilla before rolling
The bottom of a testal, flour tortilla before rolling

1. In a food processor, with the blade attachment, place the dry ingredients and pulse a couple of times.

2. Add the shortening and process until the shortening is completely blended, about 10 seconds. The test to make sure there is enough shortening (there will be no granules) is to squeeze the flour between your fingers, it will stick together.

3. Process again and as you do so, add the water slowly until the flour forms a ball of dough. This will take about 20 seconds.

4. Place the dough in a bowl or cutting board and knead it with gusto for 6 minutes until it is shiny and definitely elastic. Set it aside to rest, covered, for 20 minutes.

5. Divide the dough into 18 balls. Form each ball into a “testal,” a little round pillow with an indentation in the middle as described above. The indentation in the middle and the fat edges will make rolling a snap.

6. Use a “palote”, rolling pin, to roll each round tortilla to a thickness of 1/8 inch. I got my palote from the local hardware store.  Went to the lumber section and cut a 14″ piece from a dowel (1 1/4″ diamter).  Cost me $1.29!

7. Heat a comal (griddle), ungreased, on high heat, 400°F–450°F. Place a tortilla on the comal and cook for 30 seconds. Turn it over and cook another 30 seconds. Turn yet again and cook each side another 20–30 seconds.  Make sure that the tortilla is completely cooked. We do not eat raw or undercooked dough.

I eat these straight off the comal, sometimes with just a small dab of butter.  My childhood and teenage years rise come rushing back to me as as anchoring memories in my palate.

Flour tortillas make the best tacos!
Flour tortillas make the best tacos!

But, of course, the universe intended us to make flour make tacos!

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2 thoughts on “Flour Tortillas – Truly Texas Mexican!”

  • Hi, Gloria. I do as well. You will see in my recipe that you have to knead with your hands. Good luck. let me know how you like the tortillas.

  • I like to knead by hand gives me an accomplishment feeling. I am going to try this recipe very similar to mine.
    Gracias

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