Empanadas
Enticing Empanadas

When I was in Spain a few years back with my family celebrating my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary, we had a lot of excellent restaurant meals in addition to the meals we fixed ourselves at the villa we stayed in. One thing we didn’t eat in Spain was tapas.
I’d been looking forward to trying tapas in Spain since my first visit to a tapas place in DC a couple of years earlier. But every time I’d bring the subject up — and I brought it up several times — my mother immediately squashed the idea. I’ve no idea why.
So I was surprised a couple of weeks ago when she called and said she was having a tapas party and would I make empanadas for it. I’ve still no idea why she was so opposed to tapas in Spain — and I’m 90 percent sure she wouldn’t remember it as I do so I haven’t asked. But I’ve been meaning to make empanadas for some time and this, obviously, was the perfect excuse.
It turns out that empanadas are primarily a Latin American dish. I only found one Spanish recipe in my searching. But who cares? They certainly make nice two-bite morsels suitable for munching with a glass of sherry or wine and it would be easy enough to create a recipe that tasted more of Spain than Honduras or Cuba so that’s what I did.
They turned out fine if not excellent, the main problem with them was the Spanish Chorizo. Although I cut it into little dice — a tad over 1/8 inch — the pieces were still too chewy. So in the recipe below I recommend coarsely processing the sausage to make the overall texture of the empanadas more palatable.
Chorizo EmpanadasPastry for two crust pie
4 oz Spanish chorizo
1/2 ea medium Spanish onion — 1/4″ dice (about 1/2 c)
1/4 ea red bell pepper — 1/4″ dice (about 1/2 c)
1 ea yellow potato (about 3″ in diameter)
1/2 tsp dried Herbes de Province
1/2 tsp coarse salt
1/4 tsp black pepper
1/4 c chicken stock
2 tbsp white wine
1 ea egg
Smoked Spanish paprikaMake pastry, divide in half, form into flattened balls, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate.
Peel and cut potato into 3/4″ dice. Place in a covered, microwave-safe container and cook on high for about 5 minutes or until fork tender. Drain, rinse, and cool. Mash coarsely with fork.
Cut chorizo into 1/4″ dice and process until coarsely chopped in a food processor. In a large bowl, thoroughly mix potato, chorizo, onion, bell pepper, herbs, salt, pepper, chicken stock, and wine. Mixture should be slightly moist but not wet — you may need to add a bit more wine.
Heat oven to 400F.
Roll out pastry as for pie crust and cut into 3″ diameter circles (I used a glass and knife to cut the rounds). Moisten half the edge of a round (I find my finger, dipped in a small bowl of water works best), place a rounded tablespoon of filling toward the moistened edge, fold other side over, and crimp edges with fingers to seal. Place filled empanadas on a parchment-lined baking sheet.
Beat egg with a tablespoon of water and brush tops of the empanadas with the mixture. Cut a slit in the top of each pastry and then sprinkle lightly with paprika. Bake about 30 minutes or until lightly browned. Makes about 30 empanadas.
These are good hot, but also at room temperature. They should freeze well, unbaked, and I would put them unthawed in a 400F oven for 40 – 45 minutes to bake.
And whatever my mother’s problem was in Spain, she did like these little beggars.







Hi Kevin,I love empanadas, and your filling sounds especially delicious!I’m happy to see that you’re making it around your new kitchen okay, despite the space issues :)
Mmm. I love empanadas…we buy premade wrappers and throw them together all the time! My favorite is leek-sausage-cheese (breakfasty-tasting), and J makes a fabulous shrimp-and-cilantro empanada. We also sometimes make little ones out of won ton wrappers stuffed with apples, brown sugar and mascapone (but those you have to fry)! Great post. =)
Jennifer,The taste was excellent and chopping the sausage will take care of the texture problem.The kitchen is usable, but dinner parties are gonna be a bear.Kate,Thanks for dropping by. What kind of premade wrapper do you buy? (And the sweet empanadas sound terrific.)
Empanadas are found all over the Philippines too, Kevin. It must be our Spanish heritage at play. We fill them with chicken and vegetables, or pork and raisins and onions. Rarely use beef though. But we also have a smoked fish version that I’ve tried.
Mila,Thanks for the note. I’m going to have to investigate their origins further.
Those look great! I’ve been tempted to try my hand at empanadas for a while. I love choriza so your recipes looks doubly tempting.
I arrived to this discussion four years later!! I was trying to find where to buy premade empanada wrappers and I run into this blog.
I am thinking that the reason why you did not find empanadas in Spain is because they are not normally given as tapas, they are more like a weekday light supper thing. They are usually homemade but you can purchase them frozen at the grocery store in Spain: you only have to fry them or bake them. In other words: you find them on the table of Spanish families. The most popular ones are tuna empanadillas. Also, in Spain they are not called empanadas, but empanadillas. Empanada is a different thing, that uses a different kind of dough and they are frequently sold in bakeries or made at home (they are delicious). In Latin America they use the word empanada for the Spanish empanadillas. Their origin is from Spain, empanadas were taken to Latin America, and I guess to the Philippines, with the first immigrants.
Thanks for your recipe. I’ll use pie crust. Best,
Busy mom from Spain living in CA can’t make empanadilla’s dough from scratch for ther daughter’s birthday party.
Anon,
Thanks for your comments and the language lesson. Happy birthday to your daughter!