We've been trying to be more cautious about what we eat. We have been doing our best to avoid GMO products and use only Organic produce.
We found a good recipe for Homade tortillas. It's time consuming but worth it.
How to make nixtamal and then masa
How to make a corn tortillas with a press
Materials needed:
Tortilla Press, Bowl, Scale (optional), Plastic bag (cut into a square to fit both sides of your press with 3 openings and one edge), cast iron pan (comal, griddle or whatever flat surface you prefer), neutral cooking oil.
Neither do I this is how I do it.
Divide your dough up into 1 1/2 inch sized balls. Roll them a little bit in your hands until smooth. Cut out 2 6 inch circles of parchment paper. They don’t have to be perfect circles. Just roundish. Grab yourself a heavy plate/pot/pan. I like to use a glass pie dish so I can how big the tortilla is getting. Place a dough ball between the parchment circles. Use the circle shaped thingabobber to press the tortilla to about 6 inches diameter and 1/8 inch thick. Then follow steps 8-14.
We found a good recipe for Homade tortillas. It's time consuming but worth it.
How to make nixtamal and then masa
- 4 cups of water- Bring to boil. Drop to 200F and maintain.
- Pour 2 cups Dry Blue Flint Corn into the boiling water.
- Add 1/4 cup of cal (flake lime, calcium hydroxide) or only 2 Tbsp of pickling lime.
- Stir very well, Cover with a lid, Turn off Heat
- Remove the top after 45-60 minutes, or when the corn is soft enough to remove the outer skin by pressing it against the palm of your hand. The corn should absorb some of the water and look a little plump and be firm yet soft enough to eat.
- Remove the top and let stand for 8-12 hours. The corn will nearly absorb all of the water in this time.
- Remove the nixtamal (corn at this stage) from the excess water. Lightly rinse large container. The husks/shells will flow over the top of the rim if you set the faucet on a slow and steady stream stir with you hands to get the bottom husks up. Try not to wash too vigorously.
- Begin grinding. If using a kitchen aid meat grinder set the speed to 5 or 6 max and work in small batches, have water handy to adjust consistency and improve the grind. Basically the same process for hand grinders or metates but a lot more effort and time is involved. If you have a stone masa grinder, one grind will suffice, just ensure you have the right setting, fine or coarse. add 1/2 tsp of Kosher salt. Adjust to your taste.
How to make a corn tortillas with a press
Materials needed:
Tortilla Press, Bowl, Scale (optional), Plastic bag (cut into a square to fit both sides of your press with 3 openings and one edge), cast iron pan (comal, griddle or whatever flat surface you prefer), neutral cooking oil.
- Check the masa and if needed add water and mix until the masa is wet enough to leave a bit of moisture on your hand but come off easily and not so much as to be tacky or sticky.
- Heat your cooking surface and apply a bit of oil to coat the pan. Not too much oil. Medium high heat.
- Take a clump, weigh if you have a kitchen scale handy 30-35 grams makes a nice 5" tortilla, adjust up or down to your preference.
- Gently roll between your hands. Rubbing the back sides of your opposite palms together with the ball resting in the heart of your palm works well. You need not have a perfect sphere the press does a good job with anything close.
- Place the ball between the sheets of plastic on the press base 1/3 away from the hinge).
- Close the handle lightly and press down firmly. You are not trying to complete the tortilla in one stroke, so keep that in mind when applying pressure.
- Open the press, look at the dough and turn 90 degrees or 180 degrees to complete rounding out the tortilla with one or two more less firm presses.
- Remove the tortilla encased in the plastic. Carefully open the plastic, peeling back like removing a sticker off a container, yet apply a light pressure to ensure the dough sticks to the other side.
- Flip the tortilla dough into your other palm and carefully peel off the other side. Again, light pressure.
- Place in hot pan, gently but deliberately.
- Cook under the edges begin to curl up (about a 1/4 " wide) and the dough looks to be drying out.
- Flip and cook for about 20 secs.
- Flip again with 20-30 more seconds.
- Put in a container or wrap in a towel to keep warm. Or pop it into your mouth. watch out, it's hot.
- Re-heating cool tortillas is a snap. Same pan, same heat, sprinkle a bit of water (Or use a mister, which works best) on the non pan facing surface. Flip once it has absorbed. Serve with ingredients or your dreams.
Neither do I this is how I do it.
Divide your dough up into 1 1/2 inch sized balls. Roll them a little bit in your hands until smooth. Cut out 2 6 inch circles of parchment paper. They don’t have to be perfect circles. Just roundish. Grab yourself a heavy plate/pot/pan. I like to use a glass pie dish so I can how big the tortilla is getting. Place a dough ball between the parchment circles. Use the circle shaped thingabobber to press the tortilla to about 6 inches diameter and 1/8 inch thick. Then follow steps 8-14.
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