Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (2024)

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This restaurant-style sopapilla recipe is easy to make at home with pantry ingredients and always a crowd fave. Sprinkle your sopapillas in powdered sugar or dip in cinnamon-sugar — up to you!

Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (1)

Have you ever tried making a batch of homemade sopapillas?

If not, I say it’s time! ♡

These irresistibly soft and sweet fry breads (also known as sopaipillas) are surprisingly easy to make with just a handful of everyday pantry ingredients. No yeast needed! Simply mix together a quick dough, roll and cut it out into your desired shapes, fry until puffy and golden, and then serve immediately while the sopapillas are nice and hot. I always grew up eating sopapillas that were also sprinkled with powdered sugar or cinnamon-sugar, which I highly recommend. And while we’re already at it with the sugar-and-carbohydrate bomb, you should definitely go ahead and serve them up New-Mex/Tex-Mex-style with lots of honey for dipping or drizzling too.

Sopapillas are the perfect fun dessert to serve with New Mexican, Tex-Mex or Mexican food. (Variations are also served with Argentinian, Chilean and Uruguan food too!) And when served hot and fresh outta the fryer, look out, because they are downright irresistible.

Let’s make some sopapillas, friends!

Sopapillas Recipe | 1-Minute Video

Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (2)

Sopapilla Ingredients:

Different countries and cultures around the Americas all tend to make their sopapillas (pronounced:soh-pah-pee-yahs) a slightly different way. But this is the sweet donut-y version — inspired more by Tex-Mex and New Mexican cuisine — that I grew up loving and have made at home a few times over the years. To make these sweet sopapillas, you will need the following ingredients:

  • Flour:Just basic all-purpose flour. (I have not tested this recipe with other flours, but if you do, feel free to leave a note in the comment section below!)
  • Baking powder:To help them bubble up into little pillows in the fryer.
  • Fine sea salt:To bring out all of those delicious flavors.
  • Coconut oil: Traditional sopapillas are typically made with shortening, which you are welcome to use, but I prefer to use coconut oil or butter instead.
  • Warm water:To bring the dough together.
  • Oil:Any high-heat oil that you prefer for frying.
  • Sugar:Either powdered sugar or cinnamon-sugar (1/2 cup granulated sugar mixed with 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon) for sprinkling or dipping.
  • Honey:For drizzling or dipping once the sopapillas are served.

Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (3)

How To Make Sopapillas:

Here is a basic overview of the steps to make sopapillas! Full instructions included in the recipe below.

  1. Make the dough.Whisk together the dry ingredients, cut in the coconut oil, then mix in the warm water until a loose dough forms.
  2. Knead and rest the dough.Use your hands to knead the dough for 2 minutes or so, until smooth. (I usually just do this in the mixing bowl itself, but you could turn it out onto a floured surface to knead if you prefer.) Then form it into a ball, cover and let it rest for about 20 minutes.
  3. Roll out the dough.Roll the dough out evenly so that it is about 1/4-inch thick, then cut into 2.5-inch squares, triangles, or whatever shape you prefer.
  4. Heat the oil. Meanwhile, as you are rolling out the dough, heat your oil until reaches 375°F. (Then keep an eye on the temperature of the oil, lowering the heat if needed to maintain that temperature.)
  5. Fry the dough.Once the oil is hot, very carefully lay a dough square in the hot oil. It will sink for a moment then rise to the surface and will likely immediately bubble up. (If it doesn’t, just add a spoonful or two of hot oil on top of the dough, and it should bubble up within a few seconds.) Fry for 30-60 seconds, or until the bottom of the dough is lightly golden. Flip and cook on the other side until lightly golden. Then carefully transfer the sopapilla to a paper-towel-lined baking sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough squares. (I typically fry a batch of 3 at a time.)
  6. Sprinkle and serve. Sprinkle (or dip) the cooked sopapillas with powdered sugar or cinnamon sugar. Then serve while they’re still nice and warm and enjoy!

Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (4)

Possible Variations:

Want to customize your sopapilla recipe? Feel free to…

  • Omit the extra sweetener:No need to sprinkle/dip the sopapillas in extra sugar. You can just dip them in honey and call it good!
  • Use a natural sweetener: Alternately, feel free to use coconut sugar (or any other more natural sweetener) in place of powdered sugar or granulated sugar in the cinnamon-sugar.
  • Add extra spices:For a warmer spice twist, feel free to use pumpkin pie spice (in place of cinnamon) in the cinnamon-sugar mixture.
  • Add flaky sea salt:Omit the salt from the dough and instead sprinkle a tiny pinch of flaky sea salt on each sopapilla too.
  • Make them vegan: Omitthe honey and be sure to use coconut oil or vegan butter in the sopapillas.
  • Cut out larger, smaller, or different shapes: I cut out 2.5-inch squares for the batch of sopapillas photographed here. But you could make the squares larger or smaller, if you prefer. Or you could opt to cut out rectangles, triangles, or any other shape that you would like! As long as you roll the dough out to even thickness, different shapes should still bubble up well.

Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (5)

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Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (6)

Sopapilla Recipe

5 Stars4 Stars3 Stars2 Stars1 Star5 from 8 reviews

  • Author: Ali
  • Prep Time: 30 mins
  • Cook Time: 20 mins
  • Total Time: 15 mins
  • Yield: 25-30 sopapillas 1x
Print Recipe

Description

This restaurant-style sopapilla recipe is easy to make at home with pantry ingredients and always a crowd fave. Sprinkle your sopapillas in powdered sugar or dip in cinnamon-sugar — up to you!

Ingredients

Scale

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 2 tablespoons coconut oil(or butter), room temperature
  • 3/4 cup warm water
  • oil, for frying(see notes below)
  • powdered sugar or cinnamon sugar, for topping
  • honey, for serving

Instructions

  1. Make the dough.Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt in a large mixing bowl until combined. Use a pastry cutter or a fork to briefly cut the coconut oil into the dry ingredients mixture until combined. Gradually add in the warm water and stir the mixture with a spatula or wooden spoon until a rough dough begins to form.
  2. Knead and rest the dough.Using your hands, knead the dough in the mixing bowl for 2 minutes or until the dough is smooth, sprinkling on some extra flour if needed to prevent the dough from sticking. Form the dough into a ball. Then cover the mixing bowl with a damp towel or plastic wrap, and let the dough rest for 20 minutes.
  3. Roll out the dough.When the dough is ready, turn it out onto a floured surface. (At this point, go ahead and begin heating your oil, as directed in Step 4.) Use a rolling pin to roll the dough out evenly until it is about 1/4-inch thick. Then use a pizza slicer, pastry cutter or a knife to cut the the dough into 2 to 3-inch squares (or whatever shapes you prefer).
  4. Heat the oil. Meanwhile, just before you begin rolling out the dough, fill a large saucepan with 1.5 to 2 inches of oil. Heat over medium-high heat until the oil reaches 375°F, then reduce heat to medium (or whatever temperature is needed) to maintain that temperature, more or less.
  5. Fry the dough.Once the oil is hot, very carefully lay a dough square in the hot oil. It will sink for a moment then rise to the surface and will likely immediately bubble up. (If it doesn’t, just add a spoonful or two of hot oil on top of the dough, and it should bubble up within a few seconds.) Fry for 30-60 seconds, or until the bottom of the dough is lightly golden. Flip and cook on the other side until lightly golden. Then carefully transfer the sopapilla to a paper-towel-lined baking sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough squares. (I typically fry a batch of 3 at a time.)
  6. Sprinkle.Sprinkle the cooked sopapillas with powdered sugar or cinnamon sugar. (Or you can dip them in powdered sugar or cinnamon sugar.)
  7. Serve.Serve warm with honey and enjoy!

Notes

Oil for frying:Feel free to use any high-heat-tolerant oil for frying that you prefer, such as avocado oil, canola oil, coconut oil, or vegetable oil. I recommend measuring the temperature of the oil with a cooking thermometer. But if you do not have a thermometer, just dip the end of a wooden spoon into the oil. If lots of little bubbles begin to form around the wood and float up, the oil is ready to go. If there are no bubbles, it’s too cool. If it bubbles furiously, it’s too hot.

How to make cinnamon-sugar:Just whisk together 1/2 cup granulated sugar with 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon until combined.

Source:Recipe slightly adapted from Food.com.

posted on May 4, 2020 by Ali

Desserts, Mexican-Inspired, Vegan, Vegetarian

21 Comments »

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Leave a Reply

21 comments on “Sopapillas”

  1. Shalece May 4, 2020 @ 4:01 pm Reply

    Can these guys be cooked in an air fryer?

  2. Nancy May 4, 2020 @ 8:03 pm Reply

    Ahhh, real sopapillas! In another life I lived in a small town in northern New Mexico and I’d order these. Pipping hot in a paper bag with confectioners sugar and honey.

    I’m totally making these tomorrow! Thanks!

  3. Nicol Isola May 6, 2020 @ 3:33 pm Reply

    We’ve already been saving a few sections of your homemade tortilla recipe and have been making sopapillas from them!! So fun to have an actual recipe now. LOVE the tortillas and sopas!! Thanks for the great recipes – it’s been getting us through quarantine.

  4. Kristi May 6, 2020 @ 6:29 pm Reply

    Holy cow!! These are so, so, so amazing! My husband said they are the best he’s ever had. High compliment!! Thank you!

  5. Carolyn May 7, 2020 @ 4:06 pm Reply

    I just made these and they are so, so good! My Tween daughter told me, “once again, you’ve made something incredibly delicious!!!”

  6. Holly May 28, 2020 @ 4:32 pm Reply

    Delish! But not all of mine poofed up as much as much as I’m used to when I get them in restaurants in New Mexico – is there a solution to that? I tried spooning the oil over but it didn’t do much.

    • Kayla July 20, 2020 @ 3:44 pm

      Hey! I had the same issue! My problem was my baking powder was actually expired so it didnt allow the pastry to “poof” as much :( came out like cruncy chips with a ever so slight soft center. Thankfull coating it in cinnamon sugar and some chocoalte always made it 1000% better haha :) . But you could’ve also rolled out your dough to much though im not sure if that would cause any issue ?‍♀️

    • Spamela January 3, 2021 @ 5:51 pm

      To help puff them up, flip as soon as they rise up in the oil. Drop them in, wait till rise/3-5 seconds, and then flip. They should puff up and then when golden flip again to get the other side

  7. John Rupard July 4, 2020 @ 3:40 am Reply

    Don’t be too locked in on the confectioner’s sugar or sugar toppings. Sopapillas are traditionally used as bread. Another thing to do is to cut them a little larger before you fry…when the puff up nicely, drain, and crack open the thin side of the sopapilla to fill with your favorite taco fillings….you’ll find a hundred uses for sopapillas if you stop thinking of them as a dessert…lol

  8. Samantha Gafford July 16, 2020 @ 4:25 pm Reply

    Mine didn’t puff up at all. I ended up with chewy dough squares. ?

  9. Cale Lopp July 21, 2020 @ 6:55 pm Reply

    So I did this recipe with almond flour and used coconut flour for my rolling pin and just as a nonstick.

    Turned out great even my kids liked it and it’s gluten free.

  10. Linda November 28, 2020 @ 11:04 am Reply

    Can you get the dough all fixed and cut and then wait to fry them till you’re ready to serve them? I don’t know if I don’t know if this

  11. Tia April 1, 2021 @ 11:50 am Reply

    Can I make these ahead of time and keep the dough in the fridge?

  12. Tweca3@cox.net April 17, 2021 @ 5:19 pm Reply

    Can you make sopapillas with buttermilk instead of water???

  13. Ashley Varland May 5, 2021 @ 7:49 pm Reply

    Made these tonight! I didn’t roll them thin enough so they were slightly dense, but I know exactly what to do differently next time!

  14. Jessica Smith May 28, 2021 @ 9:35 am Reply

    Could you do these in the air fryer? Really wanting to try them out!

  15. JANET August 1, 2021 @ 3:06 am Reply

    I WILL MAKE THIS MY HUSBAND AND I WOULD LOVE THEM

  16. Sandie December 5, 2021 @ 2:28 pm Reply

    My hubby loves these

  17. Katie August 21, 2022 @ 6:04 pm Reply

    I asked my 5 year old if they taste like the ones at the restaurant. He said “there amazing! there’s only one thing wrong with them… they’re BETTER than the ones at the restaurant” :)

    Thanks for the recipe- simple and fun to make.

  18. Joe Irvine November 20, 2022 @ 4:49 pm Reply

    Grew up in the World Famous Southern New Mexico Green Chili country. We would make piles and piles of these with cinnamon sugar, powdered sugar, poke hole and fill with savory or sweet yummyness. And of course you cannot eat them without gallons of fresh delicious natural honey. I miss New Mexico, one day I will return to retire.

Easy Sopapillas Recipe - Gimme Some Oven (2024)

FAQs

What does sopapilla mean in Spanish? ›

It is thought to come from the Spanish word “sopaipa,” which is used to refer to sweetened fried dough, or from the word “xopaipa,” which means bread soaked in oil. South American Sopapillas. Sopapillas are popular in Chile, Argentina and Uruguay. They can be eaten salty or sweet.

What is the difference between sopapillas and fry bread? ›

What's the difference between fry bread and sopapillas? Mostly just the name. Fry bread doesn't have sugar in the dough and the name is used more in Arizona. In New Mexico they are called sopapillas and in the Pacific Northwest some people call them elephant ears.

What is the secret of soft buns? ›

Flour isn't going to make the difference. In fact, use a high-protein flour for both, i.e. a “bread” flour. The secret to soft, light rolls, if you're looking for something like a dinner roll, is an enriched dough that contains butter or other dairy, eggs, or both.

What to eat with sopapillas? ›

Sopapillas are a delicious fried dough from New Mexico. They are perfectly fried puffed dough and traditionally served with a drizzle of honey or a combination of cinnamon and sugar.

What is the difference between a buñelo and a sopapilla? ›

Sopapillas are softer, slightly chewy, and more pillowy (more like a donut) and served with a drizzle of honey, while bunuelos are thin, have a crispy exterior and light, airy interior, and are served with cinnamon sugar and piloncillo syrup. Buñuelos will keep well in an airtight container for up to 5 days.

What is another name for sopapillas? ›

Sopaipilla, sopapilla, sopaipa, or cachanga are all terms used to describe a fried pastry (similar to a donut or beignet) and are popular in Hispanic culture particularly in New Mexico and South America.

Are fry jacks the same as sopapillas? ›

Fry Jacks are essentially fried dough. They are kind of like French beignets, or Latin American sopapillas. A traditional Belizean breakfast will have, fry jacks, salsa or tomatoes, refried beans, eggs and an additional protein like chicken or fish.

Are sopapillas a Texas thing? ›

They're quite popular in the West (particularly in New Mexico), but they're also a big, fat deal here in Texas.

What does Batanga mean in Spanish slang? ›

The word Batanga is slang for “thick in the middle” in Spanish. The Batanga drink is reminiscent of the Cuba Libre, which is most commonly known as Rum & co*ke. The Batanga co*cktail recipe is a perfect blend of sweet soda, crisp tequila flavour and a fruity twist of lemon.

Are sopapillas and scones the same thing? ›

Sopapillas are fried scones or fried dough, a famous Mexican street food.

Is a sopapilla the same as a beignet? ›

They are all fairly similar, but some Beignets, and most doughnuts, use yeast, and Fry Bread and Sopapillas use baking powder, and they are all made just a little differently.

What is the difference between a sopapilla and a zeppole? ›

Zeppole - Italian fritters sometimes served with a filling. Funnel cakes - Deep fried dessert made from a batter dropped from a funnel usually dusted with powdered sugar. Sopaipillas / Sopapillas - Southwestern crispy puffs drizzled with honey and often flavored with cinnamon or honey.

Are sopapillas French? ›

It is said that the sopapilla originated in Albuquerque, New Mexico more than 200 years ago. However, they are most likely a descendent of sweet fried dough from Southern Spain which is known as sopaipa. It's commonly served with warm honey and syrup that has been flavored with anise or cinnamon.

Why is my fry bread not fluffy? ›

Leave dough in bowl and cover with a towel and set in warm place for atleast 20 minutes, but leaving longer makes the bread fluffier.

Are sopapillas Mexican or Native American? ›

Crispy, golden-brown pillows that are sweet or savory, sopapillas are a traditional New Mexican fried dough made with only five ingredients: flour, baking powder, sugar, salt and shortening. The dish is rooted in the American Southwest, where Hispanic, Spanish and Native American cultures converge.

What is the difference between a beignet and a sopapilla? ›

Sopaipillas look really similar to French beignets and taste similar to American donuts. All three pastries are made from deep fried dough but beignets are made from a more bread-like yeast dough where sopapillas are a little more light and flaky.

Can you reheat sopapillas? ›

Sopapillas are best eaten right after they're fried, but you can store leftover sopapillas in a large container with a lid without any garnish. To reheat them, place them on a baking sheet in an oven preheated to 250 F for 7 to 10 minutes.

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