succulent mandocas

i know you are wondering what mandocas are. mando what?!? weird name, succulent snack.

mandocas are originally and typical of maracaibo, venezuela. they are consumed at anytime as a snack, breakfast, dinner and even lunch. like pancakes, i can eat mandocas all day long. give me some butter and cheese, and oh sweet mother of food, i can just eat 20 in a row.

one of the main ingredients to make the mandocas is harina pan, venezuelan cornmeal. easy to find in local hispanic supermarkets or order from amazon. either works. i know there are other cornmeal brands out there but to be honest, i’m loyal to my country’s :) besides, i grew up on harina pan and don’t know any other way to make mandocas with!

so. what are mandocas, you wonder? they are fried cornmeal drop-shaped pure deliciousness part of maracaibo’s culinary scene. the ingredients are simple and somewhat easy to find: ripe plantain, queso blanco {queso fresco or queso cotija} and panela or as known in mexico, piloncillo. in plain english: unrefined whole cane sugar in block form. trust me if i can make them, you can, too. and i live in the midwest. {you can buy panela online at amazon, if you want}.

if you like flavor combinations that explode in your mouth, then mandocas are for you. they have the perfect balance of sweet and salty for sure.

boil and mash ripe plantain.

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add harina pan to panela/water mixture and plantain.

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shredded cheese going in.

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combine all ingredients with your hands.

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grab the quantity desired and form a cylinder with your hands.

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make a drop shape by pressing both ends together gently.

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fry until golden brown.

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serve hot with butter and cheese.

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succulent mandocas

ingredients:
1 cup harina pan
1 1/4 cups hot water
1 tsp sea salt
1/2 papelon block
1 ripe plantain
1 cup shredded queso blanco (semiduro) 
or queso cotija or queso fresco (mexican cheeses)
canola, vegetable or peanut oil for frying
cheese and margarine for serving

yields 10 to 12 large mandocas

directions:

  1. in a pot with boiling water over medium high heat, cook plantain until soft. about 12-15 minutes.
  2. in a large glass bowl, add hot water and papelon. dissolve papelon in water with a fork. if it’s not completely dissolved, pop in the microwave for a few seconds to help melt the papelon.
  3. once dissolved, season with sea salt and mix well.
  4. mash plantain with a fork once soft and add to papelon mixture and mix until incorporated.
  5. add harina pan to bowl followed by cheese. mix well with hands until incorporated. don’t over mix.
  6. if dough it’s too hard and not manageable add a little bit of water to loosing it up.
  7. grab a handful of dough and form a ball. then with your hands shape ball into a cylinder. put cylinder on counter top and roll back and forth with your hands until it has a medium size – not too thick – not too thin. bend one side of the cylinder followed by the other one. press both ends against each other gently. the ends are supposed to meet and hold together.
  8. fry over medium high heat until golden brown.
  9. serve hot with butter/margarine and more cheese! eat immediately since they are not the type of food you can refrigerate and heat the next day.

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in search of the “one”

back in college, i would show my boyfriend the different flavors where i come from. he would love it because it was not your typical tuna-out-of-the-can meal with pop-tarts for dessert. hey. i think tuna and pop-tarts are delicious. not together of course.

i had cable tv then. i was hooked on the food network and would fantasize about doing an internship in new york city. or maybe with martha stewart? i thought, what an experience that would be? i went back and forth between the food network and the crafty/cook/baker mogul. to this day, i still want to be part of either :)

when i first made fried plantains, the bf fell in love with the flavor. and when i introduced grilled flank stake with chimichurri, it was the icing on the cake. (linked recipe has basil and oregano which i disapprove of. i also use lime instead of lemon and red wine vinegar instead of sherry).

“a woman who eats stake is the greatest thing the world can have,” he would chant between bites.

then i made one of my favorites: crêpes. let’s just say he was grateful for my cooking abilities. he absolutely loved those as well.

one day, he tells me that he wants a truly american dessert.

“what are you thinking?” i asked.

“it’s a no-brainer.”

“apple pie?”

“no,” he said.

“umm…what is it?!?”

“chocolate chip cookies… how don’t you know that?”

“they are just too ordinary,” i said looking at him in the eyes.

he was about to defend the lovely cookies when i bursted out laughing and said “i’m kidding, hahahahaha, i love chocolate chip cookies, they are the best!”

his heart rate went back to normal.

i refused to make that recipe from the back of the chocolate-chips bag. you know which one i’m talking about, right?  hint. hint. it is a yellow bag.

so we went to the library and out of all cooking books existent in the giant building, we found the “one.”

we proceeded to go to the copier and duplicate that pretty page – immediately!

i made the recipe that same day. wow! they were d.e.l.i.c.i.o.u.s. !!! so much, that the bf was the human version of the cookie monster from sesame street.

after graduating college, i moved away and lost the precious recipe. or so i thought. a year went by, and after the vast search, i managed to find it. score!

well, i have moved once again. and, yes. i have lost it. i can’t find it anywhere. i seriously don’t know what’s up with that. it seems like the recipe is running away from me, as if it wants to go back to its original home. really recipe? i’ve loved you with all my heart.  don’t worry, i’ll keep you posted if i ever find it.

one minor huge detail i didn’t mention to you is that i am that kind of girl who likes her cookies chewy. and the “one” delivered chewy cookies. just to think about it makes me sad.

i consulted with my friend google to look for the “one” yet again. i came across alton brown’s chewy cookies recipe and they are great! oh, and the bf says that they are the best ones, yet!

i’m still trying to figure out the cooking time because the cookies aren’t that chewy if i leave them in the oven for the time the recipe says.

i have adapted the recipe with 1 1/2 cups of brown sugar instead of 1 1/4 cups, and reduced the oven temperature to 350 degrees f., as i use a dark baking cookie sheet.

chocolate chip cookies by the baking cup

chocolate chip cookies by the baking cup

chocolate chip cookies by the baking cup

chocolate chip cookies by the baking cup

chocolate chip cookies by the baking cup