Homemade Flour Tortillas

A homemade flour tortilla is a true love to me. Soft, warm, tender, as comforting as a billowy down quilt on a cold winters day. Flour tortillas are a staple of the Mexican table as are biscuits and cornbread are to the Southern table. Turning up at breakfast, lunch, or dinner. A perfect snack reheated over the gas flame of the stove. Slightly scorched and then slathered with butter. The taste and texture of a manufactured flour tortilla can’t touch the made from scratch homemade flour tortillas.

Growing up I knew nothing of “store bought” flour tortillas. My grandma and mom always made flour tortilla from scratch. This was the norm when making Mexican food for your family. Even though my mom had a family of 11 to prepare food for, it never was hard or a bother to make fresh flour tortillas. I found this to be true also of Mexican cafes and restaurants I’d frequent in the 15 years I live in San Antonio, Texas. I could walk a few blocks from my home on Mission Street in the King William District to one of my favorite mom and pop Mexican cafes, Taco Haven owned and operated by the Torres family. As I entered into the doors of Taco Haven, I would be greeted with the perfumed air of “grandma’s cooking” along with the sounds of Tejano music playing from the jukebox. I was a little kid again going to grandma’s house. Every flour tortilla was made to order. Fresh, warm, soft, and delicious and the flour tortilla complemented each filling it was wrapped around. My filling choices were always the same. Bean and Cheese, Potato and Egg, Bacon and egg, and Carne Guisada. My order would come to the table where I add a squeeze of pureed canned jalapenos to the inside before taking that first satisfying bite.

The ingredients are simple: All-Purpose Flour, Fat, Baking Powder, Salt, and Water. It is the proportion of these ingredients, water temperature, and the technique for mixing that give you the best results for soft and tender flour tortillas.

I use Leaf lard as the fat of choice for my tortillas. I purchase the rendered lard from my local Mexican market. Lard provides a richer flavor in the tortilla and was my grandmothers choice when doing any cooking or baking. Keep the lard cold before you measure it as it melts at room temperature. Any fat though can be used in the recipe, such as butter, vegetable oil, light olive oil, or coconut oil. The texture and taste will change slightly in the tortillas based on the fat you choose. Click here to purchase Leaf Lard online.

As you follow the recipe please watch for the bolded notes. I also give you the choice of measuring or weighing the ingredients. Weighing is preferred when baking. This will help ensure the best results.

The complete instructional video for making the Homemade Flour Tortillas is located at the bottom of this post. Please visit my YouTube Channel “Just One Bite, Please?” for this and more videos.

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Equipment (Shop my Amazon Page for Ingredients & Equipment)

  • Measuring Cups and Spoons or Electronic Scale
  • Mixing Bowl
  • Fork
  • Plastic Bowl Scraper
  • Stainless Steel Dough Scraper
  • Wooden Rolling Pin
  • Cast Iron 14″ Griddle or Pan
  • Kitchen Towels (for wrapping the fresh griddled tortillas)

Flour Tortillas                 (Yields 8 Tortillas)

  • Measured             Grams                  Ingredients
  • 3 cups                       422 g.                  All Purpose Flour (King Arthur)
  • 1 Tbsp.                        10 g.                  Baking Powder
  • 1 tsp                              8 g.                   Sea Salt (finely ground)
  • 1/3 cup                       65 g.                   Fat (Lard or Vegetable Shortening)
  • 1-1/4 cup                  284 g.                   Hot Water 130°F  (54°C)

Mixing the Tortillas:

  1. In the mixing bowl combine the all-purpose flour, baking powder, and sea salt. Mix with a fork to combine the dry ingredients.
  2. Add the fat to the dry ingredients and cut the fat with the fork into the flour mixture until it forms pea-size pieces of fat.
  3. Using your hands’ rub and squeeze to enrobe the flour with fat. Do this until there are no signs of fat and the mixture will hold when squeezed in your hand. Make a well in the center of the mixture.
  4. Add the hot water (130°F or 54°C) to the well in the center of the dry ingredients and stir until well combined with a fork. The dough will be sticky.
  5. Scrape the dough out of the bowl onto your work surface. Knead with one hand for 6 to 8 minutes to develop the gluten. Using the plastic bowl scrape in the other hand to clean your kneading hand and gather the dough from the work surface. (NOTE: Do not put any flour down while you are kneading. The dough will be sticky)
  6. When the dough becomes strong enough you can stretch it from the work surface without it tearing.
  7. Gather the dough into a ball using the plastic dough scrape and cover with the mixing bowl and let rest for 20 minutes.

Pre-shaping, Rolling, and Cooking the Flour Tortillas

  1. After 20 minutes of resting the dough, divided the dough into 8 pieces and pre-shape into tight round balls. No extra flour should be used for this process.
  2. Place the rounded pieces of dough onto the work surface and cover them with plastic wrap.
  3. Rest the dough, covered for 15 minutes.

Final Shaping and Rolling:

  1. Preheat the cast iron griddle or pan on medium to medium-high heat while dough is resting from step 8 of mixing. Drops of water should dance across the surface and evaporate quickly.
  2. Working with one piece of dough at a time, keeping the other pieces covered with the plastic wrap as to not let a skin to form.
  3. Flour the work surface, dip the rounded piece of dough into flour, place the dough onto the rolling surface and sprinkle flour on top the of dough.
  4. With your fingers start flattening out the dough until it is a disk about 3 inches across.
  5. Roll the disk of dough out, turning it a 1/8th of a turn with each roll. This will keep the disk round as possible. (NOTE: The tortilla will taste just as delicious if it isn’t perfectly round)
  6. Roll until the disk is about 8 inches and 1/8th-inch thick. Pay attention to keeping the thickness the same across the tortilla.
  7. Place the rolled tortillas on a work surface while rolling the remaining tortillas.

    Fresh Flour Tortilla stuff with Scrambled Eggs, Black Beans, and Pico de Gallo

    Fresh Flour Tortilla stuff with Scrambled Eggs, Black Beans, and Pico de Gallo

  8. Once all the tortillas have been rolled you’ll be ready to cook them on the preheated cast iron griddle or pan.
  9. Place a tortilla on to the preheated cast iron griddle or pan on the first side until you see bubbles forming on the surface. This should take about 1 minute or so. Adjust the heat if the tortilla cooks to fast (too hot) or are taking to long to cook (too cool). The surface should become whiter in color with small blisters and the bottom should be lightly caramelized and brown.
  10. Flip the tortilla over and cook the second side for about 1 minute. Cook until the bubbles on the underside of the tortilla are golden brown.
  11. Remove the tortilla from the griddle and wrap and stack the freshly griddle tortillas in a clean kitchen towel. Keep warm to serve.
  12. Enjoy!
  13. Store uneaten tortillas in an airtight plastic bag. Store at room temperature for up to 3 days.

Reheating the Flour Tortillas

  1. The tortillas are best reheated over a medium gas flame on your stove top.
  2. Heating and flipping each side until the tortilla becomes soft and hot. A few areas might get dark brown blisters this is desired when reheating.

17 thoughts on “Homemade Flour Tortillas

  1. Chris

    This is a perfectly executed recipe. I’ve been a professional cook as well as a sous and exec chef for well over a decade at world class restaurants, and seeing a concisely written recipe is refreshing. Thank you for doing what you do.

  2. Katanahamon

    I’m enjoying your site..today is Detroit pizza day! I grew up in Houston, played in the San Antonio Symphony from 91 for a few years. I used to go to a little fly fishing shop to learn to tie flies, then go in the same shopping area to Twin Sisters cafe to have breakfast tacos. I live out west now, but love to bake breads, pizzas and focaccias. I haven’t fully explored your site yet..I’d love to trade tortilla soup recipes! I grew lovely tomatillos this year, I’m convinced they’re a key ingredient, along with the fact that you can’t get away from the fact that this soup needs to have tortillas as a base, not a garnish. It originated as a poor dish, to use up tortillas and extend them. Anyway, happy cooking!

  3. Candy Banda

    Due to limited use of my hands I use an 8” corn tortilla press with parchment paper. I tried this with your recipe & failed. What do you recommend I try in order to be able to utilize the press? I love your healthier tortillas. Thanks

    1. Alejandro Ramon

      Hello Candy, I would recommend using a 1-gallon Freezer Bag (Ziploc) and trimming the outside edge and Ziploc off. This will give you 2 pieces. Lightly spray one side of each plastic sheet and place one piece into the bottom of the tortilla press, place the well floured rested shaped dough ball onto the plastic and cover with the second plastic sheet with the sprayed side on the dough. Then press away. If you find it still sticking a lot after you try to remove the tortilla from the plastic. I would recommend to lightly dust each side of the sprayed plastic each time you press. I hope this helps you. Please let me know if you have any other questions. Happy Baking!

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