I should qualify: equatorial in a geographic (not mathematical) sense.
Hot Pockets were never in my parent’s freezer as a kid yet I can still hear the TV jingle in my head so they must have sold a few dozen boxes. Frozen pastry stuffed with molten filling. Mmm. Warmed inside of chemical dough, the barbecued magma waiting for a row of teeth to crack open the pie’s crust, bursting forth, spraying steam and sauce, raining upon the lips of it’s hungry consumer. Haht Pah-ckets!
Pudgie pies, the campfire version of Hot Pockets, are just as dangerous by the way. If you’re cozy-camping with a bunch of people from Michigan or Wisconsin, don’t let them convince you otherwise. They will tempt you with cherry compote filled tarts — or maybe marshmallows and milk chocolate between two butter-and-fire-fused slices of Wonder. Ho no! Sweet viscous hell will flow over your tongue, leaving you with no taste buds remaining to enjoy the weekend supply of Milwaukee’s Best Light and Seagram’s Kiwi Wine Coolers. To quell your flaming lips, you might be better off licking one of the cans or bottles floating in an ice water slurry along with food particles and mustard plugs inside the plastic cooler upon which your acquaintance’s cheese curd enhanced buttocks rest.
But I’m not taking your time to write about Hot Pockets or Pudgie Pies or make inflammatory statements about fat Midwesterners (I just did, actually). Number one, I’m a fat Midwesterner myself. Number two, I’m interested in the Equadorian equivalent of these scalding, stuffed pastries. Pupusas.
If your friends and family can’t eat gluten, real corn masa is a good friend. When made into a dough, it gives a satisfying texture that stands up to your teeth and leaves a carbolicious weight in your belly. My recipe for pupusas called for a whole pound of masa. It was totally wrong and I barely rescued any semblance of a real pupusa, but that’s the Food Network’s problem for posting an imprecise recipe.
Learn about making pupusas from people who know what they’re doing, not a TV channel. Or start here. Or here. I filled mine with black beans and queso blanco. They were mediocre at best. Without condiments or the standard coleslaw accompaniment, curtido, he little corn cakes are dry and chewy. Once I find something useful to report regarding successful pupusa making, I’ll report back.