El Quetzal Bakery and Restaurant

Small selection of Guatemalan snacks and goods

Guatemalan cuisine isn’t well-known. It’s vaguely Mexican and doesn’t have many distinctive dishes compared to its neighbouring countries. It doesn’t help that there aren’t many Guatemalan restaurants outside of Guatemala. In Toronto, there’s just one: El Quetzal Panaderia y Restaurante.

Exterior of El Quetzal Bakery
El Quetzal Bakery

Also known as El Quetzal Bakery in English, this tiny establishment sells snacks and imported goods from Guatemala and the region.

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Sazón Latino

Double play of Dominican and Salvadoran cuisine

There are less than five Dominican (the republic, not Dominica) restaurants I know of in Toronto. Sazón Latino has the best atmosphere for a sit-down meal. It even has Salvadoran food for variety too.

Exterior of Sazon Latino
Sazon Latino

Mofongo to go

Don’t tell Puerto Rico, but the Dominican Republic (DR) also has good mofongos. It’s a simple but labourious dish to make. Plantains are deep-fried, then mashed into a paste with lard. It’s served with an assertive and tangy garlic sauce. A good mofongo should be smooth like mashed potatoes and the sauce should cut through the fattiness.

Mofongo at Adrian Tropical, Santo Domingo
Mofongo from Adrian Tropical, Santo Domingo

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Where to the get the best pupusas in Toronto

Updated on 2021-10-19 to include Las San Sivar and Pupuseria Delicias Costa del Sol. Rankings have changed.

I tried (almost) all the pupuserias in Toronto so you don’t have to

Ever since Emporium Latino burned down in October 2020, it left a pupusa-shaped hole in my heart. It was where I had pupusas for the first time and I still have fond memories of their comforting masa and spicy curtido. I’ve struggled to find a comparable replacement. When it seemed like Emporium Latino was not destined to re-open, it was time to journey across Toronto for a worthy successor.

Ode to pupusas

Pupusas are emblematic of El Salvador cuisine. In fact, I visited the country solely to eat pupusas. Pupusas are corn flour pancakes stuffed with various ingredients and then toasted on a griddle. The corn flour used is invariably Maseca.

Traditional fillings don’t have a lot of range. It’s any combination of:

  • Frijoles refritos: mashed and fried beans
  • Queso: cheese; either mozzarella or queso fresco
  • Chicharrón: finely-ground pork, fried with tomatoes, onions, and other aromatics
  • Zucchini
  • Loroco: flower bud with a grassy taste, unique to El Salvador and some parts of Guatemala

The popular combination of frijoles, queso, and chicharrón has its own name: pupusa revuelta. Also known as pupusa con todo (with everything).

Pupusas are usually accompanied by curtido and salsa de tomate. Curtido is a lightly fermented cabbage and carrot slaw, seasoned with oregano and doused with vinegar. Salsa de tomate translates to tomato sauce, but really, it’s a tomato soup.

Places that sell pupusas are called pupuserias.

What makes a perfect pupusa

For the pupusa itself, it’s form, ingredients, and flavour.

The best pupusas are perfectly round and of uniform thickness. Surfaces are flat with minimal finger indentations. It should be toasted golden with some brown splotches. The dough shouldn’t be too thick like a gordita. But if chefs make it too thin, they run the risk of the filling bursting out of the shell when heated. While some may like the caramelization and burnt bits from leaked fillings, I prefer an intact pupusa. It demonstrates the skill of the chef. Almost all pupusas in this test failed on this front.

The choice of ingredients also reflect a premium pupusa. Queso fresco is more expensive than mozzarella and has a more crumbly texture and stronger taste. Loroco is not a common ingredient in Toronto and some chefs may be stingy with it. For chicharrón, chefs have latitude in the pork cuts and aromatics used. Ingredients should be well-mixed and distributed evenly within the pupusa.

Finally, flavour matters the most. The masa (corn dough) should have a warm corn fragrance. The pupusa should not be shining in oil. For pupusas de queso y loroco (cheese and loroco), the herb should meld with the cheese and add pleasant crunch. For pupusas revueltas, the ratio of meat, beans, and cheese is key. All three should be discernible but also harmonize.

I don’t put much weight to the curtido and salsa de tomate. They play second fiddle and are not something people would buy on their own. Personally, I like a mildly fermented and acidic curtido. The knife skills of the chef will be evident from the consistency and thinness of the chopped vegetables. For salsa de tomate, the best ones are fresh, filled with pulp, and have moderately complex flavours from herbs like onions and bell peppers. Bad ones are one-dimensional and taste like canned tomato soup.

Taste test method

  • Two pupusas were used for comparison: pupusa revuelta and pupusa de queso y loroco. They are the two most iconic pupusas and require the most skill to balance flavours.
  • All pupusas were takeout orders and tasted 2 to 6 hours after preparation. Texture suffers when they are not eaten fresh, so I don’t score them on this aspect.
  • Consistency in shape of the two pupusas were noted.
  • Pupusas were tasted again the next day after re-heating.

100% Salvadoreño

Cien por ciento Salvadoreño is a modest restaurant nestled in a quiet residential area. You can tell it’s family-run with children playing behind the counter.

Exterior of 100% Salvadoreno
100% Salvadoreño

The pupusas had a moderate aroma. They were crisp and mottled black.

Pupusas, curtido, and salsa de tomate from 100% Salvadoreno
Pupusas, curtido, and salsa de tomate from 100% Salvadoreño

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La Bella Managua

Where Nicaraguan staples are better than most in Nicaragua

If there were more places like La Bella Managua in Nicaragua, that country would be a foodie destination. My food experiences in Nicaragua aren’t memorable. Everyday food tends to be fast food quality. My triangle rule for restaurants is price, quality, quantity—pick two. Few restaurants excel in all three aspects. Unfortunately, for many developing countries, the market is skewed towards cheap, filling meals.

The first time I tried La Bella Managua, I wasn’t expecting much. The menu reads like a standard Central American list of staples like gallo pinto (rice and beans), fried plantains, grilled steak, and fried fish. I was pleasantly surprised that they managed to make these pedestrian dishes taste so good. It’s not fancy ingredients nor photogenic presentation. Just good old chef techniques.

Exterior of La Bella Managua
La Bella Managua

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