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On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 21:57:39 -0700, "Julie Bove"
> wrote: > > "sf" > wrote in message > news ![]() > > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 15:53:56 -0500, Ema Nymton > > > wrote: > > > >> I have never seen a tostada made out of a flour > >> tortilla, or folded in the middle. > > > > I've seen the "tostada deluxe" of olden days made with a flour > > tortilla. It's a chain restaurant type variation. > > Here, "deluxe" means that it comes with sour cream and guacamole or avocado. > Served in a fried flour tortilla basket (higher in the back than the front) to hold everything? Not a real tostada... or even a real tostada deluxe for that matter, IMO. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 21:47:51 -0700, "Julie Bove"
> wrote: > > "sf" > wrote in message > ... > > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 10:09:39 -0700, "Julie Bove" > > > wrote: > > > >> Tostadas can come in all sizes. I've had tiny ones. But they use a > >> thin corn tortilla. The Chalupa seems to have a thicker one make like a > >> Sope or Sopita or even a Gordita that hasn't been filled. There is also > >> something called a Papusa. Or maybe it's a Pupusa. I was going to try > >> that > >> last Sat. But we couldn't get into the restaurant. They were packed. > >> Had > >> my taste buds all set to try that and some Posole. But it was not to be. > >> Maybe this Saturday. > >> > > > > I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near a > > chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the differences > > between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco > > Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about > > that one. > > I think that Taco Bell did use that name but that's not what a real one is. > They take Masa Harina. I did make them. I think the only other ingredient > was water. You form them into balls, then flatten them a bit and fry them > in a little oil. I pan fried them. They don't get crisp like a crisp taco > shell but they are also not as soft as a corn tortilla. They will puff up > as you fry them. Then you split them open and fill them. They're very good > but very filling! > I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about now. Sorry, but I know that whatever it is you're trying to describe isn't a pupusa. It sounds like a sopapilla made with masa, but I can't imagine something like that working. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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![]() "sf" > wrote in message news ![]() > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 21:57:39 -0700, "Julie Bove" > > wrote: > >> >> "sf" > wrote in message >> news ![]() >> > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 15:53:56 -0500, Ema Nymton > >> > wrote: >> > >> >> I have never seen a tostada made out of a flour >> >> tortilla, or folded in the middle. >> > >> > I've seen the "tostada deluxe" of olden days made with a flour >> > tortilla. It's a chain restaurant type variation. >> >> Here, "deluxe" means that it comes with sour cream and guacamole or >> avocado. >> > Served in a fried flour tortilla basket (higher in the back than the > front) to hold everything? Not a real tostada... or even a real > tostada deluxe for that matter, IMO. No. It's not usually served in that sort of thing. But some places do that. Normally it is on a flat, crisp corn tortilla. It just has the extras if it is "deluxe". |
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![]() "sf" > wrote in message news ![]() > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 21:47:51 -0700, "Julie Bove" > > wrote: > >> >> "sf" > wrote in message >> ... >> > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 10:09:39 -0700, "Julie Bove" >> > > wrote: >> > >> >> Tostadas can come in all sizes. I've had tiny ones. But they use a >> >> thin corn tortilla. The Chalupa seems to have a thicker one make like >> >> a >> >> Sope or Sopita or even a Gordita that hasn't been filled. There is >> >> also >> >> something called a Papusa. Or maybe it's a Pupusa. I was going to >> >> try >> >> that >> >> last Sat. But we couldn't get into the restaurant. They were packed. >> >> Had >> >> my taste buds all set to try that and some Posole. But it was not to >> >> be. >> >> Maybe this Saturday. >> >> >> > >> > I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near a >> > chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the differences >> > between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco >> > Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about >> > that one. >> >> I think that Taco Bell did use that name but that's not what a real one >> is. >> They take Masa Harina. I did make them. I think the only other >> ingredient >> was water. You form them into balls, then flatten them a bit and fry >> them >> in a little oil. I pan fried them. They don't get crisp like a crisp >> taco >> shell but they are also not as soft as a corn tortilla. They will puff >> up >> as you fry them. Then you split them open and fill them. They're very >> good >> but very filling! >> > I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about now. Sorry, but I > know that whatever it is you're trying to describe isn't a pupusa. It > sounds like a sopapilla made with masa, but I can't imagine something > like that working. Lemme see if I can find the recipe that I used. This is the first one I pulled up. Had I seen this, I would have known how big to make them. I don't remember putting salt in mine but maybe I did. http://www.lacocinadeleslie.com/2010/03/gorditas.html This recipe is for pupusas. http://www.whats4eats.com/breads/pupusas-recipe No salt in this but as you can see, the ingredients are the same. But this one calls for you to cook it *with* the filling in it. I don't think this is always the case because the taqueria where I saw them sells them with no filling in them. They are cooked in a greased skillet which is how I did my Gorditas but it does say that they are often deep fried. |
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On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 20:16:14 -0700, sf > wrote:
>On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 10:09:39 -0700, "Julie Bove" > wrote: > >> Tostadas can come in all sizes. I've had tiny ones. But they use a >> thin corn tortilla. The Chalupa seems to have a thicker one make like a >> Sope or Sopita or even a Gordita that hasn't been filled. There is also >> something called a Papusa. Or maybe it's a Pupusa. I was going to try that >> last Sat. But we couldn't get into the restaurant. They were packed. Had >> my taste buds all set to try that and some Posole. But it was not to be. >> Maybe this Saturday. >> > >I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near a >chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the differences >between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco >Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about >that one. Not a Taco Bell creation, several variations out there depending upon region of origination http://tinyurl.com/2448jt In my area, I am most familiar with the one made with a flour tortilla that is deep fried. Others are made with masa. Fillings vary. Janet US |
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On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 12:35:28 -0700, gtr > wrote:
>On 4/11/2013 8:51 AM, barbie gee wrote: >> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sope> >> >> In addition, I think we need to keep in mind that there are regional >> differences in what foods are named, both here in the US and in the >> countries they came from originally. >> >> For sure, a Taco Bell "chalupa" would have ZERO resemblance to a chalupa >> made in Mexico. > >Reminds me that TB use to have an "enchirito" in the 70's. I remember >it have three clices of black olive on it. I wonder what the hell THAT >was, and also what it was INTENDED to be. See here http://tinyurl.com/buzydkk Janet US |
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On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 01:41:19 -0700, "Julie Bove"
> wrote: > > "sf" > wrote in message > news ![]() > > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 21:47:51 -0700, "Julie Bove" > > > wrote: > > > >> > >> "sf" > wrote in message > >> ... > >> > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 10:09:39 -0700, "Julie Bove" > >> > > wrote: > >> > > >> >> Tostadas can come in all sizes. I've had tiny ones. But they use a > >> >> thin corn tortilla. The Chalupa seems to have a thicker one make like > >> >> a > >> >> Sope or Sopita or even a Gordita that hasn't been filled. There is > >> >> also > >> >> something called a Papusa. Or maybe it's a Pupusa. I was going to > >> >> try > >> >> that > >> >> last Sat. But we couldn't get into the restaurant. They were packed. > >> >> Had > >> >> my taste buds all set to try that and some Posole. But it was not to > >> >> be. > >> >> Maybe this Saturday. > >> >> > >> > > >> > I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near a > >> > chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the differences > >> > between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco > >> > Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about > >> > that one. > >> > >> I think that Taco Bell did use that name but that's not what a real one > >> is. > >> They take Masa Harina. I did make them. I think the only other > >> ingredient > >> was water. You form them into balls, then flatten them a bit and fry > >> them > >> in a little oil. I pan fried them. They don't get crisp like a crisp > >> taco > >> shell but they are also not as soft as a corn tortilla. They will puff > >> up > >> as you fry them. Then you split them open and fill them. They're very > >> good > >> but very filling! > >> > > I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about now. Sorry, but I > > know that whatever it is you're trying to describe isn't a pupusa. It > > sounds like a sopapilla made with masa, but I can't imagine something > > like that working. > > Lemme see if I can find the recipe that I used. > > This is the first one I pulled up. Had I seen this, I would have known how > big to make them. I don't remember putting salt in mine but maybe I did. > > http://www.lacocinadeleslie.com/2010/03/gorditas.html So a Gordita is a thick tortilla? We have a local tortilla brand (La Palma) that makes the thick ones, but they are just called "hand made" tortillas" (vs the thinner machine made). > > This recipe is for pupusas. > > http://www.whats4eats.com/breads/pupusas-recipe > > No salt in this but as you can see, the ingredients are the same. But this > one calls for you to cook it *with* the filling in it. I don't think this > is always the case because the taqueria where I saw them sells them with no > filling in them. They are cooked in a greased skillet which is how I did my > Gorditas but it does say that they are often deep fried. > I've never heard of pupusas being sold without a filling. They wouldn't be a pupusa if they were, they'd be called something else and I've never come across any around here (or anywhere else for that matter) that have been deep fried. BTW: I really liked both the links you posted, thanks. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 08:05:12 -0600, Janet Bostwick
> wrote: > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 20:16:14 -0700, sf > wrote: > > > > >I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near a > >chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the differences > >between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco > >Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about > >that one. > > Not a Taco Bell creation, several variations out there depending upon > region of origination http://tinyurl.com/2448jt > In my area, I am most familiar with the one made with a flour tortilla > that is deep fried. Others are made with masa. Fillings vary. > Janet US Thanks. Now I *know* I've never seen gordita on a menu or seen anyone served one. Apparently they are not a popular item in the places where I eat... which are often run by Salvadorans. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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![]() "sf" > wrote in message ... > On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 01:41:19 -0700, "Julie Bove" > > wrote: > >> >> "sf" > wrote in message >> news ![]() >> > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 21:47:51 -0700, "Julie Bove" >> > > wrote: >> > >> >> >> >> "sf" > wrote in message >> >> ... >> >> > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 10:09:39 -0700, "Julie Bove" >> >> > > wrote: >> >> > >> >> >> Tostadas can come in all sizes. I've had tiny ones. But they use >> >> >> a >> >> >> thin corn tortilla. The Chalupa seems to have a thicker one make >> >> >> like >> >> >> a >> >> >> Sope or Sopita or even a Gordita that hasn't been filled. There is >> >> >> also >> >> >> something called a Papusa. Or maybe it's a Pupusa. I was going to >> >> >> try >> >> >> that >> >> >> last Sat. But we couldn't get into the restaurant. They were >> >> >> packed. >> >> >> Had >> >> >> my taste buds all set to try that and some Posole. But it was not >> >> >> to >> >> >> be. >> >> >> Maybe this Saturday. >> >> >> >> >> > >> >> > I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near >> >> > a >> >> > chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the >> >> > differences >> >> > between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco >> >> > Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about >> >> > that one. >> >> >> >> I think that Taco Bell did use that name but that's not what a real >> >> one >> >> is. >> >> They take Masa Harina. I did make them. I think the only other >> >> ingredient >> >> was water. You form them into balls, then flatten them a bit and fry >> >> them >> >> in a little oil. I pan fried them. They don't get crisp like a crisp >> >> taco >> >> shell but they are also not as soft as a corn tortilla. They will >> >> puff >> >> up >> >> as you fry them. Then you split them open and fill them. They're >> >> very >> >> good >> >> but very filling! >> >> >> > I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about now. Sorry, but I >> > know that whatever it is you're trying to describe isn't a pupusa. It >> > sounds like a sopapilla made with masa, but I can't imagine something >> > like that working. >> >> Lemme see if I can find the recipe that I used. >> >> This is the first one I pulled up. Had I seen this, I would have known >> how >> big to make them. I don't remember putting salt in mine but maybe I did. >> >> http://www.lacocinadeleslie.com/2010/03/gorditas.html > > So a Gordita is a thick tortilla? We have a local tortilla brand (La > Palma) that makes the thick ones, but they are just called "hand made" > tortillas" (vs the thinner machine made). They're not just thick but have a pocket in them like a pita. >> >> This recipe is for pupusas. >> >> http://www.whats4eats.com/breads/pupusas-recipe >> >> No salt in this but as you can see, the ingredients are the same. But >> this >> one calls for you to cook it *with* the filling in it. I don't think >> this >> is always the case because the taqueria where I saw them sells them with >> no >> filling in them. They are cooked in a greased skillet which is how I did >> my >> Gorditas but it does say that they are often deep fried. >> > I've never heard of pupusas being sold without a filling. They > wouldn't be a pupusa if they were, they'd be called something else and > I've never come across any around here (or anywhere else for that > matter) that have been deep fried. > > BTW: I really liked both the links you posted, thanks. Great! |
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![]() "sf" > wrote in message ... > On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 08:05:12 -0600, Janet Bostwick > > wrote: > >> On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 20:16:14 -0700, sf > wrote: >> >> > >> >I am very familiar with what a pupusa is and it's not anywhere near a >> >chalupa/tostada/sope; but I am having trouble defining the differences >> >between the others. Googling "gordita" - it looks like another Taco >> >Bell creation, so I have no interest in knowing anything more about >> >that one. >> >> Not a Taco Bell creation, several variations out there depending upon >> region of origination http://tinyurl.com/2448jt >> In my area, I am most familiar with the one made with a flour tortilla >> that is deep fried. Others are made with masa. Fillings vary. >> Janet US > > Thanks. Now I *know* I've never seen gordita on a menu or seen anyone > served one. Apparently they are not a popular item in the places > where I eat... which are often run by Salvadorans. I only know of the one place here that sells them. |
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On 2013-04-11 20:59:15 +0000, Ema Nymton said:
> On 4/11/2013 2:32 PM, gtr wrote: > >> I think where you are in the world defines what "chalupa" means. I >> don't think they are the same as tostadas because a tostada is more or >> less a toasted tortilla. A chalupa is a thin shmeer of masa that has >> been toasted into a a slightly cupped shape. They seem to call them >> huarache too, if the shape is more oblong than round. > > Huraches are thick and shaped like a shoe, a tostada is crunchy. Doesn't conflict with anything I said. |
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On 2013-04-12 14:08:35 +0000, Janet Bostwick said:
> On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 12:35:28 -0700, gtr > wrote: > >> On 4/11/2013 8:51 AM, barbie gee wrote: >>> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sope> >>> >>> In addition, I think we need to keep in mind that there are regional >>> differences in what foods are named, both here in the US and in the >>> countries they came from originally. >>> >>> For sure, a Taco Bell "chalupa" would have ZERO resemblance to a chalupa >>> made in Mexico. >> >> Reminds me that TB use to have an "enchirito" in the 70's. I remember >> it have three clices of black olive on it. I wonder what the hell THAT >> was, and also what it was INTENDED to be. > > See here > http://tinyurl.com/buzydkk That explains it all. |
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![]() "Sqwertz" > wrote in message ... > On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 15:52:36 -0700, Julie Bove wrote: > >> Sqwertz wrote: >>> On Wed, 10 Apr 2013 09:42:19 -0700, Julie Bove wrote: >>> >>>> "Sqwertz" > wrote in message >>>> ... >>>> >>>>>> What is a Chalupa to you? >>>>> >>>>> An annoying little chihuahua dog. >>>> >>>> They're not annoying! They're cute! >>> >>> And they stink, too. >> >> I've never actually smelled a stinky one and we had a lot of neighbors >> who >> had them on Staten Island. > > Chihuahuas are notoriously stinky. A web search on "stinky chihuahua" > will provide you hours of reading enjoyment. I will look. |
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