I found a recipe from "Semi-Homemade" Sandra Lee. It really seemed very easy and I had all the ingredients but the pie crust.
I went one step further than Sandra Lee and I bought premade pie crusts from Pillsbury. My folks use them at Thanksgiving for their pies and they always tastes just fine. I didn't have time to mix and roll out pie crusts
This recipe was surprisingly SO delicious we are definitely going to make them again. It was a great mother/daughter cooking project seeing as my daughter doesn't like to cook.
We had an assembly line. She worked on making the filling. While she was doing that I cut out the pie dough. After the filling cooled I would fill the pie dough. It was a messy affair that took finding a technique to keep the filling in as I pressed it closed. After wetting the edge of dough using my teaspoon cookie scoop I would plop the filling on the dough. Then I would fold the piece in mid air with the fold facing the ground. That way I used gravity to keep the filling in the empanada as I pinch it closed. I would first pinch the dough closest to the fold on each side. This made a cup like structure that made all the difference in the world in keeping the filling in. I then gently pressed up to the top of the half circle evenly on both sides. I handed the empanada off to my daughter who then pressed the edge with a fork and forked the top of the little pastry. She lined them on on a cookie sheets and baked them. Using 2 packages of Pillsbury pie crust and my 2 1/2 inch cutter I got about 64 empanadas.
They were a big hit at school. She got 25 points for her Spanish sentences about making empanadas and the class got to eat them.
Chicken Mini Empanadas (with my tweaks)
Ingredients
- 2 Pillsbury Pie Crusts
- 1 11-ounce can white chicken meat, drained
- 1 cup chunky salsa
- 1 3-ounce can sliced ripe olives
- 1 cup shredded Mexican cheese blend
- All-purpose flour, for dusting
Directions
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. In a medium saucepan, combine the chicken, salsa and olives. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and stir in the cheese. Cool slightly.On a lightly flour-dusted surface, unroll the dough that has been brought up to about room temperature. Using a 3-inch-round cutter (my cutter was about 2 1/2 inches), cut out 36 circles, rerolling the scraps as needed. Place about 1 teaspoon of chicken mixture in the center of each circle. Moisten the edges with water. Fold the circles in half and pinch to seal. Pierce the tops with a fork.
Place the empanadas on a baking sheet and bake 10-12 minutes, or until golden. Serve hot.Lynne's note: A couple of the empanadas didn't seal despite wetting the edge, pinching close and pressing edge with a fork. It worked out OK as none of the filling came out. We used these "ugly ones" to taste test.
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