Gorditas & salsa

Jamie Oliver Gorditas and salsa recipe

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Date Published:
27/08/2009

Jamie: Gordita means 'little fat girl' in Spanish and is meant as a sort of cute, cuddly term of endearment. It's also the name for these sweet little puffy tortillas, which are often made around Easter and other special occasions.

Look at the gorditas as a tasty spoon for carrying all kinds of big exciting flavours. Mexicans put all sorts of things, from beans, to meat, to salsa, on them. I've gone for quite a delicious and delicate apple salsa here - give it a try."

Watch Jamie and Maria cooking gorditas on Jamie's American Road Trip

Makes 16

Ingredients

For the gorditas:

  • 500g fine cornmeal or masa harina (which is similar)
  • ½ level teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 heaped teaspoon baking powder
  • 700ml hot water
  • Plain flour, for dusting
  • Olive oil

For the salsa:

  • 1 red apple, halved and cored
  • 3 large, ripe tomatoes, quartered and deseeded
  • 2 spring onions, trimmed
  • 1 red chilli, deseeded
  • A small bunch of fresh coriander
  • 1 tablespoon pumpkin seeds
  • 1 tablespoon sunflower seeds
  • 1 lime
  • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

To serve:

  • 200g Don Francisco Mexican cheese, or feta (which is similar)
  • Optional: 1 fresh red chilli, very finely sliced
  • 1 lime, cut into wedges

Method: How to make gorditas & salsa

1. Put the cornmeal and salt into a large bowl and make a well in the centre. Mix the baking powder into the hot water and pour this into the well. Using a fork, mix the cornmeal into the liquid, and when it starts to come together use your hands to knead it. Divide the dough into 16 equal squash-ball-sized pieces and dust them lightly with flour. Roll each piece around in your hands, then pat and flatten into a small round roughly the size of the base of a wine glass. Put these on an oiled tray, dust with flour and put aside while you make your salsa.

2. Finely chop your apple, tomatoes and spring onions, and finely slice your chilli. Put them all into a bowl. Pick the leaves from your coriander and put them into a bowl of water until you're ready to serve. Chop the coriander stalks up nice and finely and add to the bowl with the other salsa ingredients. Put a large pan on a medium heat and add your pumpkin and sunflower seeds. Toss them around for a few minutes and toast them. Add them to your salsa with the juice of your lime, a good lug of olive oil and a pinch of salt and pepper. Mix well, then have a taste and add a little more seasoning, lime juice or chilli if you think it needs more attitude. Put the pan back on a medium heat and add a couple of good lugs of olive oil. Cook as many gorditas as will comfortably fit into the pan for about 2 to 3 minutes on each side, or until they’re golden and puff up a little.

3. Serve the gorditas warm out of the pan with a tablespoon of your beautiful salsa, a little hunk of cheese, a couple of your drained coriander leaves and a few slices of chilli, if you fancy, and with lime wedges on the side for squeezing over (watch the video of Jamie cooking these gorditas)

Wine suggestion: French dry white - a Gewürztraminer from Alsace

Not quite what you were looking for? Try these:
Black beans and arepas
Broad beans on toast
Stilton quesadillas
Chilli beans with cheese nachos

Most popular Jamie Oliver recipes:
Pork belly roast
Bone-out shoulder roast
Bone-in shoulder roast
Chilli con carne
Parmesan chicken breasts with crispy posh ham

Jamie's America book cover

Recipe taken from Jamie's America
© Jamie Oliver 2009



Photography Copyright © 2009 David Loftus.

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Comments

  1. I lived in Northern Mexico for 2.5 yrs and ate rather a lot of gorditas. They are eaten daily for a late breakfast, around 10 a.m. They are stuffed not topped with a variety of fillings such as cheese, refried beans and cheese, picadillo (beef and potatoes, onions and chiles) or chicharron (stewed pork scratchings).
    Posted by Deb on 22/10/2009 15:56:50
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  2. Good recipe. However the "apples" on a mexican sauce is really news to me!! We do not do that on mexico!!
    Posted by Manuel Flores on 07/09/2009 18:07:54
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  3. I agree,TOO MUTCH WATER must be a print error, it was more like Gordita soap.going to go tesco and get a El Paso Pack.
    Posted by knight on 04/09/2009 19:07:36
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  4. Followed the recipe but there seemed to be far too much water when making the gorditas. Anyone else have the same problem?
    Posted by Mark on 03/09/2009 19:06:17
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