Substitute nixtamalized corn flour for corn meal + corn starch
I want to make mexican tacos, which are usually made with masa harina (nixtamalized corn flour + water).
However I don't have nixtamalized corn flour, I have precooked corn flour. I read in the Internet that precooked corn flour is not a valid substitute since tacos tortillas should be thin and this kind of flour is thicker.
So I thought I might be able to compensate it by adding cornstarch.
Do it make sense?
Best Answer
I don't think that substitution will work out as you wanted.
Nixmatalization changes the composition of the corn hull, the treatment weakens the tough outer shell and generally makes it very different from untreated corn. And the precooked flour is, well, already cooked - boiled before grinding to flour. Their texture, cooking time and taste will be different - especially if you're looking for specific or authentic textures or flavors from your recipe. They will also have different nutritional values, since making the nutrients in the corn more accessible is one of the effects of the nixmatalization. Corn starch is something else altogether, it is just the inner starchy parts of corn (no hull and no grain) - it can't replace the textural or flavor elements that come from breaking down the hull with lime or lye which makes nixmatalized corn distinct. Additionally, I sort of think it would make the dough thicker rather than thinner, as corn starch is a binder or thickener - so I wouldn't think it would work to make a flour that's too thick work like a thinner one anyway.
One article mentions that the precooked flour (henceforth called masarepa) cannot be made into a glutinous dough. Gluten makes dough stretchy, so I'm sort of assuming that the dough won't stretch to make the tortillas thin, it may crumble or smear instead. The fact that it is traditionally used to make smaller, thicker flat-breads and corn-breads instead of tortillas (and many sites say they cannot make tortillas with masarepa) suggests to me that there is a textural problem. Another article mentions that the taste will be different - masarepa is milder, and it also cooks up denser and grainier.
So, here are some suggestions. You might be able to make up something closer to a tortilla by mixing a little wheat flour into your masarepa - you need something like gluten formation to make it stretchy - but between the masarepa's milder flavor and the dilution with wheat flour, it will not taste quite like a corn tortilla. You could just go get some masa harina, and save your masarepa for other dishes.
You could just go ahead and make actual arepas - mix up a dough (possibly find a recipe to your liking), and it should shape into thick disks. It won't be like your corn tortillas, but it is an authentic dish and can probably serve a similar role in the meal - as a starch, as a taste contrast and buffer to other foods, as a vehicle to carry your main dish (arepas are sometimes stuffed - it would just be more like a sandwich). If you mix in the corn starch... I think you'd still get arepas, with a thick pasty dough and not a stretchy one, possibly a bit less corn taste (since corn starch is not strongly corn flavored).
If you really wanted to try making a thin crisp flat structure from the mesarepa, you might have decent luck making a very thin batter and treating it like a dhosa (pour a ladleful, spiral the batter out thin, and cook crisp). If the problem is that a dough made with masarepa won't stretch, using water as the medium to let it spread thin should work. It still won't be quite like corn tortillas, but it is as similar-ish as I think you can get.
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Can corn flour be substituted for cornmeal?
Corn flour and cornmeal can be used interchangeably in recipes, but know that using one for the other will yield a slightly different result. For example, if you're making pancakes or muffins, using cornmeal in place of corn flour will give them a grittier texture.Can you substitute corn flour for cornstarch?
You can substitute the same amount of cornflour to cornstarch in your recipe. It is a good idea to always have cornflour on hand as you can easily add a tsp or two to a dish that has thickened like you'd like it to. It is also used in baking to give sponge cake a light fluffy texture.What is Nixtamalized corn flour?
Nixtamalization is a traditional process in Mexico and Central America whereby corn is treated with lime, cooked, and dried and ground to produce the flour used to make tortilla.How do I convert corn flour to corn starch?
Because cornstarch is pure starch, it has twice the thickening power of flour, which is only part starch. Thus, twice as much flour is needed to achieve the same thickening as cornstarch. To thicken sauces, cornstarch is combined with cold water first, which is called a slurry.The 10 Best Substitutes for Cornstarch
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