Sourdough Flour Tortillas (made with discard or not)
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This sourdough flour tortilla dough couldn’t be simpler to mix up — truly it takes 5 minutes to stir together — and after a brief rest, it’s ready to be rolled and cooked. Homemade tortillas are so, so delicious, and so nice to have on hand for enchiladas and tacos of all kinds 🌮🌮🌮🌮
A few weeks ago, I pulled out a bag of my favorite Caramelo flour tortillas to inspect the ingredient list. I had known the company used only high-quality ingredients and very few of them, but I had forgotten if they used some sort of leavening agent, such as baking powder or soda. If you are unfamiliar, Caramelo tortillas char and blister so beautifully due to the presence of myriad air pockets throughout the dough.
It turns out Caramelo uses neither baking powder or soda. Their ingredient list includes: flour, sea salt, fat, and water.
How. Interesting. The simple, flour tortilla recipe I have been making for years calls for baking powder. The recipe works so well I never questioned the necessity of any of its five ingredients, but shortly after this ingredient investigation, I decided to make the flour tortillas without baking powder, and guess what? The tortillas cooked up just as beautifully as ever.
So if it’s not baking powder or some other leavening agent — a sourdough starter, yeast — then what makes a tortilla balloon so dramatically in a skillet?
The more I make tortillas, the more I realize it’s simply a matter of two things:
- Rolling the dough as thinly as possible. Truly: you want to roll until you can nearly see your work surface through the dough.
- Using a hot skillet. I alway find my first 3 or 4 tortillas never turn out as well as the remainder, and this, no doubt, is because my skillet isn’t hot enough initially.
That’s it! There’s no fancy mixing or rolling technique, no leavening agent required. Which might have you wondering:
Why use a sourdough starter to make tortillas?
For a few reasons:
- If you do a lot of sourdough baking, chances are you may find you have a bit of discard on your hands, which as long as it is not many days old, you can use in this recipe.
- Or you may find yourself having mistimed the feeding of your starter. In other words, maybe you fed your starter, but never got around to using it at its peak, and in the meantime, it has collapsed — this happens to me all the time. Rather than feed it again, you could use that collapsed starter in this recipe.
- Or maybe you have extra bubbling, very active starter that you’d like to put to use before you stash your starter back in your fridge.
Regardless if I am using super bubbly active starter or discard, the sour flavor is subtle. This is likely because there really isn’t a fermentation period. After you mix the dough, it rests for 30 minutes, a short period of time that allows the gluten to relax and makes rolling out the dough a teensy bit easier, (though you can get away with skipping this step if you are pressed for time.)
This recipe is a snap to throw together (as is the non-sourdough version), and I hope you give it a go soon, and then treat yourself to a pan of homemade enchiladas. So, so good.
What is the best pan for tortillas? A crepe pan!
I love my Le Creuset Toughened Nonstick Crepe Pan, which costs about $120, because it’s the perfect size for cooking tortillas, large or small. The slightly smaller Cuisinart 10-inch Crepe Pan is a less expensive alternative, at about $25. Note: It doesn’t come with the wooden spreader, which you don’t need for tortillas, and which I never use when making crepes anyway.
PS: If you are unfamiliar with the sourdough process, I have a free email course that covers the basics. Sign up here: Sourdough Demystified.
PPS: A Few Favorite Sourdough Bread Recipes
- Sourdough Pizza
- Sourdough Focaccia
- Sourdough Boule
- Sourdough Boule (Whole Wheat-ish)
- Sourdough Toasting Bread
PPPS: Easy, No-Knead Flour Tortillas
How to Make Sourdough Flour Tortillas
Here’s the play-by-play: Gather your ingredients: flour, salt, softened butter, water, and a sourdough starter.
Combine the ingredients and mix to form a sticky dough ball.
Turn dough out onto a floured work surface and knead gently to combine
Divide into 12 portions and roll each into a ball.
Transfer to a small floured board, if you wish — I do this to give myself more space on my work surface to roll out the tortillas. Cover with a tea towel and let rest 30 minutes to 2 hours.
Roll each ball out as thinly as possible. Each ball will roughly be about 8 inches in diameter.
You can layer the tortillas between sheets of parchment paper to give yourself more space.
I recently purchased a box of 8-inch square sheets of parchment. I really like the convenience of having smaller sheets on hand. Just a warning: I have only been able to re-use them once before they start losing their non-stick property.
Once your tortillas are rolled out, cook them in a hot, dry skillet for roughly 30 seconds a side, or until browned to your liking. I love using my Le Creuset nonstick crepe pan for this.
Store the tortillas in an airtight bag or container at room temperature for up to 5 days or freeze for up to 3 months.
Sourdough Flour Tortillas (made with discard or not)
- Total Time: 45 minutes
- Yield: 6 to 12
Description
This recipe is adapted from this flour tortilla recipe, which is made with baking powder (as opposed to a sourdough starter). Regardless of which recipe you are using, there are two keys to success here:
- Roll the dough as thinly as possible.
- Get your skillet piping hot.
I love using my Le Creuset crepe pan for cooking tortillas.
Ingredients
- 210 g (1.5 heaping cups) unbleached all-purpose flour
- 7 g (1 1/4 teaspoons) kosher salt
- 56 g (1/4 cup) softened butter
- 100 g water (1/3 cup + 1 tablespoon)
- 100 g (1/2 cup) sourdough starter
Instructions
- Whisk flour and salt together in a medium bowl. Using the back of a fork, cut the butter into the flour, mixing and smushing it until it is well incorporated into the flour. You can use your hands if necessary to further incorporate the butter into the flour.
- Stir in the water and sourdough starter and mix with a spatula until a shaggy dough forms. Use your hands to gently knead the dough in the bowl, if necessary, to get the mixture to form a rough ball.
- Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and knead for another 1 to 2 minutes or until it is smooth and not sticking to the work surface.
- Cut the dough into 12 pieces for taco- or enchilada-sized tortillas or 6 pieces for burrito-sized tortillas. Shape each piece into a ball. (Video guidance here.)
- Cover with a very light kitchen towel or plastic wrap. Be careful that your room isn’t too hot. Let the dough rest 30 minutes and up to two hours (at room temperature or 24 hours in the fridge. If you need to store the in the fridge, transfer balls to an airtight container.)
- Roll out each ball to about 6 to 8 inches (taco size) or 10 to 12 inches (burrito size) in diameter, or till you can see the counter start to come through — in other words, roll them as thinly as possible.
- Heat a 12 inch non-stick or cast-iron pan (do not add any oil) on medium-high. Lay the tortilla in the pan and cook until it puffs and little brown spots on the underside appear. Turn with tongs or your fingers and cook again till lightly brown. Each tortilla takes about 60 seconds total to cook. If you like a bit of char, keep the tortilla in the skillet until it is charred on both sides. Note: Your first 3 to 4 tortillas may be on the pale side. This is just likely because your skillet isn’t up to temperature. Once you make a few, you’ll find your rhythm and adjust the heat as necessary depending on if you want more or less char.
- Once the tortillas cool, store them in an airtight bag or container at room temperature for up to 5 days or freeze for up to 3 months.
- Prep Time: 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 15 minutes
- Category: Tortilla, Bread
- Method: Stovetop
- Cuisine: Mexican, American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
470 Comments on “Sourdough Flour Tortillas (made with discard or not)”
Your website is my 1st go-to with anything sourdough related! I haven’t tried tortillas yet, but I really should as I when read the store labels, I return the package to the shelf due to all the preservatives :(. Any thoughts about a corn tortilla recipe? I love to make my own chips (again, storebought preservatives are on my no list!) Thanks for all you do!!
I have been meaning to make a corn tortilla recipe and add it on the blog for such a long time now. I even bought a bunch of beautiful flour from Masienda in all different colors/varieties. At the moment I don’t know how to advise, because I haven’t experimented enough, but stay tuned… it’s high on my list of recipes to add to the blog.
Thank you for your kind words 🙂
Oh I hope you do come out with a corn tortilla recipe! I’ve had great success with your methods and my family has loved all the recipes of yours I’ve made!
Thank you, Hadley!! Soon… it’s top priority 🙂
Thank you for this recipe and thank you for linking everything!
My pleasure! Thanks for writing 🙂
I’ve made a few wraps in the past but these are my first sourdough wraps and they were delicious. Easy to make though I did add a little more flour and a great use for my discard ☺️.
Great to hear! Thanks for writing 🙂
I have made this recipe about 20x now its great!
Great to hear Lindsey! Thanks for writing 🙂
Would it be possible to freeze the dough for later baking?
I don’t find sourdough doughs freeze very well, that said, that is with doughs used for pizza and boules, in which you want some spring/loft. These may freeze fine, but my suggestion is to freeze the baked tortillas instead.
Hi Katy, I made burritos out of these tortillas and froze them. They reheat beautifully, and the addition of sourdough to the tortillas really gives them an extra delicious flavor.
Great to hear, Lynette! Thanks for writing and sharing this 🙂
I made this recipe yesterday for the first time after hearing about it from someone, and it turned out great! Thanks to Ali for posting it with all the good info. As others have also noted, I appreciate eating foods that I know exactly what is in them, and frankly I worry from a health perspective that store purchased flour tortillas that have a very long shelf life and do not seem to easily go ‘bad’ due to ingredients I’d rather avoid.
I followed the recipe’s ingredients list exactly using weights, but made a few process modifications because I was feeling lazy. 1- Used a food processor to first mix the flour and salt, and then to fully incorporate the softened butter. 2- Mixed 100g SD discard with 100g water at ~85degF in separate bowl. 3- Added the liquid mix to the dry mix in while the food processor was running using the steel blade, and let it mix/knead this way for about 45 sec. Dough pretty much ‘cleaned’ the food processor blade & bowl. 4-Resulting dough was supple and soft, and divided it into 12 equal portions, covered them, and let sit for about 90min. 5- I lightly flowered the rested dough balls and then used a tortilla press to form the tortillas one-by-one between a sheet of plastic from a gallon zip-lock bag, and then immediately after forming each, cooked on a medium-hot cast iron pan.
Result tasted great with a good soft texture. My pan was hot enough to get some gentle charring which was what I was looking for. Will repeat recipe in future.
So nice to read all of this, Brad! Thanks so much for taking the time to write and share all of your notes — so helpful for those wanting to use a food processor (and I think the process would translate well to stand mixer, too). Once you start making tortillas, it’s hard to go back to store-bought ones not only because of the ingredients, as you noted, but also because of the texture and flavor. I can’t handle the gumminess of store-bought tortillas!
I made your tortillas tonight with sourdough discard. I followed everything to a t. They were delicious but never puffed up at all. What did I do wrong?
Hi! Did you use a scale to measure? What type of flour did you use? What sort of skillet were you using and do you think you got it hot enough?
Hi, yes, I use a scale for everything. I used King Arthur All Purpose Flour. I used a very hot cast iron skillet. Not sure where it went wrong.
Hmmm… how long did you let the rolled out tortillas rest before cooking them?
30 minutes. But my house is quite cold. I think I should’ve gone much longer.
I think a longer proof (ideally with the tortillas not stacked on top of one another) covered in a tea towel will help with the puff.
So delicious! I won’t buy them from the store ever again!
Great to hear, Laurie! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I made these over the weekend – they’re delicious and this is a really nice dough to work with! However, I was perhaps too ambitious with aiming to make burrito-sized tortillas on my first try. I have lots of experience rolling out thin dough (wontons, pizza, ravioli, lasagna, pita, flatbread, etc), and was able to get it to the full 12 inches on my counter…the trouble I ran into was transferring it to my pan. The circular shape made it very difficult to hold evenly, and then flip into the pan without the edges getting folded somewhere along the way. My 12 inch tortillas turned out to be closer to 8 inches, and unworkable for burritos! I know this wouldn’t be an issue for taco-sized tortillas, but I’m determined to make my own tortillas for well-stuffed wraps.
Do you have any suggestions for easing the transfer? I’m wondering if I could roll them out on parchment paper before cooking on a flat cast iron skillet, or even using a pizza stone in the oven.
The transfer is tricky for sure, especially if the pan isn’t quite large enough and or has high sides. I use a very shallow-rimmed crepe pan that’s larger than my largest cast iron skillet, but a stovetop griddle would actually be the ideal. I had the Baking Steel griddle for a while but lent it to a friend and never got it back 🙂 I also like your pizza stone idea. I think shimmying them onto a hot stone or Baking steel would be easier than transferring them to a skillet stovetop.