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Italian burrito

The other week I posted the classic Italian recipe Pollo e Patate. Today I crisped up the chicken in the air fryer and reheated the potatoes on the stove. Did you see the tortillas I was all happy about the other day? They make California sized burritos. The Pollo e Patate went inside the tortillas along with cheese, sour cream and avocado to make a tasty burrito.

Because the tortilla wasn't crispy my wife got to experience it in all its soft starchy glory. "This tortilla is amazing! It reminds me of everything I love about eating raw pie crust." Five ingredient tortillas are the best.

Anyway Italian to Mexican with the same starter recipe. A good day.

Comments

14
  • In terms of size, restaurant-grade tortillas are hard to find around here, yet are fairly necessary in order to put together a nicely-sealed burrito. Then there's the other problem of traditionally-made tortillas running quite high in kcals, easily going over 200.

    As someone trying to manage my weight, I usually just wimp out, buy the low-carb medium-sized tortillas (60 kcals), making a complete mess of myself whenever I have burritos.

    Side note: if anybody knows what I'm talking about, Qdoba* offers these enormous, thin, gooey tortillas that can produce a delicious houseboat-sized burrito. I guess they're using high-gluten flour or something, which greatly helps make those suckers elastic and flexible. Unusually good taste for an American-style tortilla, too.

    I think that's the chain.

    • the mexican restaurants where i live steam the tortillas and it makes them extra pliable for wrapping. Works with the store bought tortillas if you put a wire baking rack on a big saucepan on the stove and boil a little water with a bit of foil or large lid on top of the tortilla

    • Those tortillas are made from regular AP flour. It is the default style tortilla throughout California. When they are filled with dough conditioners for stabilization they lose that stretch.

      Mission flour tortillas:

      • I guess I've probably had theirs somewhere along the way, but I've never had tortillas anywhere that were as elastic and unique as Qdoba's.

        However, Google AI just now suggested some things which might tell the tale:

        • probably is in fact special high-gluten flour
        • added fat
        • "Steaming the tortillas before use is a key step in achieving maximum stretchiness. The moisture and heat from the steam help to relax the gluten in the dough, allowing it to stretch even further without breaking."

        Probably best that I don't eat there very often, but good to know.

  • Seeing the title, I thought it would be rolled up cold pizza. Then the picture finished loading, and yup, that's a burrito.

    • I haven't done a rolled pizza in a long time. Tasty

      • I feel like I've stumbled on a secret Italian leftovers menu.
        Which other recipes do you have that Italians are hiding from us?
        Yesterday's pasta, fried until crisp?
        Minestrone enhanced with pancetta and parmigiano?
        Tiramisu dunked into coffee?

14 Comments