TOTOPO
Totopos, in Mexican cuisine are a flat, round corn product similar to a tortilla best known as originating from Zapotec peoples of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec region of the Mexican state of Oaxaca. There, the Zapotec women bake totopos in a clay oven known as a ''comixcal''. Totopos resemble a round, baked tortilla chip or certain types of Scandinavian flatbread, however, unlike tortillas, salt is added to the masa and holes are made in the disk prior to baking.
An important feature of the baking and salting process is preservation, to prevent the decomposition of the corn and growth of mold, regular tortillas generally need to be eaten the same day as they are made (or stored cold) due to the moisture content, where as totopos may be stored for future consumption, in the same manner as dry crackers.
In some cases fried tortilla chips commercially made in the US are labelled as or referred to as ''totopos'' although they are not made in the manner of the Oaxacan totopo.
★ Photos of totopos and explanation in Spanish
An important feature of the baking and salting process is preservation, to prevent the decomposition of the corn and growth of mold, regular tortillas generally need to be eaten the same day as they are made (or stored cold) due to the moisture content, where as totopos may be stored for future consumption, in the same manner as dry crackers.
In some cases fried tortilla chips commercially made in the US are labelled as or referred to as ''totopos'' although they are not made in the manner of the Oaxacan totopo.
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★ Photos of totopos and explanation in Spanish
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