My Grandmother's Tamale Recipe, Plus the Tools That Make Them Easy to Make (2024)

Gabriela Garcia

If you grew up in a Latino household, chances are it's not the night before Christmas that gets you excited, it's the night before Christmas Eve. The reason? Tamales! For many Latinos, Christmas Eve is known as Noche Buena'and is a big family day. I remember Christmas Eve at my grandmother’s house, tamales on the table, and Christmas presents at midnight. My parents can remember back-in-the-day (pre-kids)going to Midnight Mass, then attending the Christmas dance, and afterward heading back home early Christmas morning and eating a breakfast full of tamales.

Tamales are as regional as road maps.

Tamales may be sweet or savory, wrapped in corn husks or banana leaves. Sweet tamales are filled with fruit. Savory tamales are filled with pork, chicken, turkey, fish, cheese, or any combination of the above. At my grandmother’s house, we had savory somewhat spicy pork tamales wrapped in corn husks. For years I’ve tried to copy her recipe. My grandmother does not make her tamales from any written recipe. She, like most experienced cooks, goes by the touch, feel, and taste as she prepares her culinary masterpiece.

The following is a close version of my grandmother’s recipe for pork tamales. It is time-consuming but well worth it!

Ingredients:

Makes approximately 5 dozen tamales

Directions:

The day before

Prepare the Chili Ancho

Put the ancho pods in a bowl and cover with boiling water. Let sit for 30 minutes or more until soft, then remove the stems and seeds and coarsely chop. Reserve the soaking liquid.

Let cool and carefully transfer the mixture to a food processor and process adding reserved soaking liquid as needed until smooth. Pour blended mixture through a fine mesh sieve and transfer to a covered container and refrigerate until ready to use.

Prepare the Husks

Fill a stock pot with warm water and corn husks and soak overnight. Just before you’re ready to make your tamales, rinse husks and dry well and, if too wide, cut in half. Set aside.

Prepare the Pork

Cut pork shoulder into small (1-2 inch) pieces. Add garlic, pork pieces and spices to a large stock pot. Cover with water and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce to a simmer and cook over low heat for about 3 hours or until meat is tender. Remove meat and shred. Let meat cool and refrigerate overnight. Reserve pork broth.

The day of

Prepare the Masa

Beat 1 lb. lard with mixer or by hand until light. Add salt and fresh corn masa. Add in the chili mixture little by little until a dark pinkish color, and to taste. Beat with heavy duty mixer or knead like bread with a little pork broth, until dough is light. The dough is ready when a small amount floats when dropped in a glass of water.

Prepare the Pork Filling

Heat some lard in a heavy saucepan. Add a cup (or more, to your taste) of the blended ancho chili mixture to lard and simmer until sauce slightly thickens. Add some salt to taste. Now add shredded meat and both and cook for about 20 minutes. You may want to add more of the blended chili mixture to your liking.

Fill the Corn Husks

Put some of the masa in the center of the corn husk. With the back of spoon, spread the bottom 2/3 of corn husk evenly to edges. Line plenty of pork meat down center. Fold side of corn husks toward center, overlap. Now fold top (without masa) down and set aside on platter until ready to cook. Continue these steps until all masa and pork filling is used up.

Steam Tamales

Bring 3-4 cups of reserved pork broth to boil in a steamer. Place tamales with folded side down in steamer standing upright. Cover tamales with moist corn husks and a clean moist dish towel. Put lid on steamer and steam for 1 ½ hours or until husk can be easily peeled from the dough. Add more broth as needed to continue steaming being careful not to pour broth on tamales.

Tools for easier tamales:

Recipe courtesy of: Consuelo Najera

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My Grandmother's Tamale Recipe, Plus the Tools That Make Them Easy to Make (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to moist tamales? ›

The secret to getting a soft, plush filling that pulls away from the sides of the corn husk as it cooks is always using a fat. Traditionally, these tamales are made with pork lard or vegetable shortening, but some modern recipes have also substituted canola or vegetable oil.

What does baking soda do to tamale masa? ›

What Is Masa? Masa para tamales (dough for tamales) is a blend of nixtamalized corn—fresh or dried—with lots of fat for richness, baking powder to leaven and lighten the dough, salt for seasoning, and flavorful broth to bind it all together and hydrate the dough.

How many tamales does one bag of corn husks make? ›

About 50. It will depend on how large or small your tamales are, but the kit comes with 15.5 ounces of non-GMO corn husks (or about 50 individual husks). So this is party-size! The recipes in the book are also scaled to produce about 50 tamales.

How to make a steamer for tamales? ›

Steaming tamales without a steamer basket requires a setup that lifts the tamales above boiling water and also allows steam to penetrate them. You can use a metal colander or an overturned bowl in a pot of boiling water with chopsticks balanced on top.

What is a common mistake in tamales? ›

Arrange your tamales properly

Another common mistake when making tamales is arranging them in the wrong way since they must be placed horizontally so that more of them can fit into the pot and cook evenly. However, they must not be too tight, or else they will flatten.

What is the penny trick for tamales? ›

The Penny Trick

To check your water level and avoid a scorched pot, place a penny below the steamer basket and fill with water. It should rattle while the tamales are cooking.

What happens if you don't put baking powder in tamales? ›

Masa for tamales can be made with or without baking powder. It helps the dough rise and it gives tamales a lighter texture. This past year I had an opportunity to eat authentic tamales from two different tamaleras. Tamalera #1 made big beautifully shaped tamales that had a cake-like texture.

How much lard to add to masa for tamales? ›

Ingredients and ratio:

The big three ingredients are masa, lard and beef. The masa and lard will make the base of the tamale dough, in a ratio of 5 pounds masa to 1 pound lard. The beef will make the filling, and should weigh 5 pounds before it gets cooked to every 5 pounds masa.

How many tamales will 5 lbs of masa make per pound? ›

One pound of masa is enough for half dozen of tamales-30 lbs is 15 dozens of tamales.

How long should I soak corn husks for tamales? ›

Corn husks can't be used right out of the bag. They need to be soaked in hot water for at least 1 hour prior to tamale making so they don't crack when you fold them. Just fill a large container with hot water and submerge the corn husks by placing a heavy weight bowl on top to keep them under the water.

How many tamales do I need for one person? ›

Estimate how many guests will come to your party and for the main meal, calculate between 2 and 3 tamales per person if you're serving them by themselves except for a frothy hot chocolate, champurrado or an agua fresca. For dessert, consider 1 or 2 per person. Our tamales are 4oz.

Why do my corn husks smell like vinegar? ›

It's from the preservatives used to keep them from molding. Bring a LARGE pot of water to boil on the stove and place the rinsed corn husks inside. Boil for about 15-20 minutes, cover, and let them sit overnight until you need them for assembly.

How long do tamales take to cook? ›

Arrange tamales in a steamer basket. Place over simmering water and steam for 1 hour. Remove tamales from husks. Drizzle with remaining chile sauce and top with sour cream, or mix sour cream into chile sauce first for a creamy sauce.

What is a tamale steamer called? ›

For steaming tamales, a tamalera is the perfect pot.

How do you moisten tamales? ›

Simply fill a pot with a couple of inches of water and bring it to a simmer. Place the tamales in a steamer basket or a steamer insert and cover. Steam them for about 15-20 minutes, or until they're heated through. The steam keeps the masa moist and the filling flavorful.

How to make tamales that are not dry? ›

Whether you are steaming, baking, or roasting the tamales, you'll know they're done when the husk peels away from the masa easily. At this point the dough may seem loose, but it will firm up after resting. You don't want to overcook the tamales or they'll turn dry.

Why are my homemade tamales dry? ›

Cooking time for tamales

Even a light dough won't save a tamal from being undercooked or dry and crumbly, so cooking them long enough is important. You may see recipes that call for multiple hours of steaming, but those recipes are often for a LARGE steamer basket full of these gems.

How do you make tamales not soggy? ›

This is probably because you're either undercooking them or oversteaming them. If your tamales seem mushy right after cooking, giving them some resting time can make a big difference. Freshly steamed tamales often feel soft and mushy, but they typically firm up as they cool for about 10 minutes.

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