We have a lot of sweet potatoes from this year's harvest in the garden. We've been baking a lot of them and making Thai curry sweet potato lentil soup and a Sweet Potato, kale and coconut milk soup. During the holidays, we like to do something else with them I'll show you today. My wife is Mexican-American and grew up in Corpus Christi, Texas.
A tradition she brought to us was making sweet potato empanadas. She uses a recipe from her mother that's been passed down. For this dish, we wanted to use up some of our largest sweet potatoes. I peeled and cut them up.
Tricia cooked them and then mashed them with a potato masher until it had a smooth consistency. She added allspice and molasses to the sweet potatoes.
She made her normal dough for making flour tortillas, but then added some cinnamon to the dough, rolled them out and then we started loading the sweet potato filling onto the dough.
Then you fold the dough over and crimp the edges. We also come back with a fork to "seal" the edges a little later.
Benjamin, well rested and exuberant was now ready for his job. He brushed an egg wash onto the empanadas.
It is hard to estimate to get the amount of dough needed for the amount of sweet potato filling, but that's okay. Leftover tortilla dough is not wasted! We sprinkle cinnamon and sugar and bake just the dough.
We couldn't wait for the buzzer on the oven to go off, announcing the empanadas were done! We pulled the golden brown pastries out of the oven and placed on a cooling rack.
And this is where my job comes into play. I'm the official "taster" of the warm batch of empanadas. I broke one in half and enjoyed the nice fragrance. Then I took a bite!
Yeah, this one is delicious. The entire batch of empanadas didn't last but a couple of days. That's too bad. However, empanadas aren't really just limited to a Christmas baking thing. We have a bunch more sweet potatoes. We'll have to make another batch of these again soon.
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