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Often served during the Christmas and New Years holidays, this Mexican buñuelos recipe makes the perfect fried dough covered in cinnamon sugar!
Buñuelos are one of my favorite treats that my family makes during the Christmas and New Years holiday. What’s not to love about fried dough covered in cinnamon sugar, am I right?
For the holidays, we always have a big stack of buñuelos, tamales, empanadas, and pozole, as well as a pot full of Mexican Christmas ponche, atole, champurrado, or Mexican hot chocolate. We go all out for Christmas and New Years and it’s so so good!
As a little kid, I remember my mom standing at the stove top frying buñuelos and placing them on a large plate covered in paper towels to help catch any excess frying oil. She’d cover them with cinnamon sugar, move them to a serving platter and continue frying more. I would always sneak up behind her and grab a freshly fried buñuelo to snack on while she finished making them.
Okay, okay. Who am I kidding. I still do that! I’ve never been good at waiting until they’re all fried to have a taste. I can’t help it!
What are buñuelos?
Buñuelos are a dessert made from fried dough covered in cinnamon sugar. They’re usually flattened into disks and served around Christmas and New Years in many Mexican households.
My family always made them exactly as shown in this recipe, but there are tons of variations throughout Mexico and Latin America.
Ingredients you’ll need
- all-purpose flour, baking powder, salt
- warm water
- oil for frying
- granulated sugar, ground cinnamon
How to make buñuelos
- Make the dough by adding all-purpose flour, baking powder and salt into a large bowl. Mix together until combined. Add warm water and 4 tablespoons oil. Mix together with a fork until the dough comes together.
- Transfer the dough onto a clean working surface and knead the dough for 8 to 10 minutes, until the dough is smooth and elastic. Roll the dough into a ball, place it in a bowl, cover with a kitchen towel and let it rest for 30 minutes.
- Roll out the dough by dividing it into 8 separate pieces and rolling each piece into a ball. On a lightly floured surface, use a floured rolling pin to roll out each ball into an 8 to 10-inch circle.
- Fry the dough by heating frying oil to 350°F. Fry each dough circle for about 60 seconds, turning once with metal tongs, until golden brown on both sides. Transfer to prepared plate to drain any excess oil.
- Garnish the buñuelos with cinnamon sugar and eat!
Tips and tricks
- Buñuelos can fluff up a lot when frying, creating huge air pockets that look cool but aren’t very conducive to eating. I recommend using metal tongs to keep the dough fully submerged in the oil for the first 10-15 seconds of frying to minimize the very large air pockets, This will fry both of the sides at the same time, reducing the amount.
- Sprinkle the cinnamon sugar on the buñuelos as soon as possible to ensure that it “sticks” to the fried dough.
For more Mexican Christmas recipes, take a look at the best Mexican Christmas recipes to make this year!
More Mexican Desserts
Mexican Bunuelos
Ingredients
For the bunuelos
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cup warm water
- 4 tablespoons oil, plus 2 or more cups for frying
For the cinnamon sugar topping
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
Instructions
For the bunuelos
- Add all-purpose flour, baking powder and salt in a large bowl. Mix together until combined.
- Add warm water and 4 tablespoons oil. Mix together with a spoon or your hands until the dough comes together.
- Transfer the dough onto a clean working surface and knead the dough for 8 to 10 minutes, until the dough is smooth and elastic.
- Roll the dough into a ball, place it in a bowl, cover with a kitchen towel and let it rest for 30 minutes.
- While the dough is resting, cover a large plate with paper towels, fill a large saute pan with 1 to 2 inches of frying oil and make the cinnamon sugar topping. Set aside.
- Divide the dough into 8 separate pieces and roll each piece into a ball. On a lightly floured surface, use a floured rolling pin to roll out each ball into an 8 to 10-inch circle. (I recommend laying the rolled out dough onto a large kitchen towel in one single layer. Don’t stack the rolled out dough on top of each other or it may stick.)
- Heat the frying oil to 350°F. Fry each dough circle for about 60 seconds, turning once, until golden brown on both sides. Transfer to prepared plate to drain any excess oil. Sprinkle heavily with cinnamon sugar topping.
For the cinnamon sugar topping
- Combine granulated sugar and ground cinnamon in a small bowl.
Notes
- To store, I recommend stacking them on a plate and covering them with a simple paper towel or napkin on the counter for up to 3 days. If you cover them completely with a air tight cloche or place them in the fridge, they can lose some of their crunchy and crispy texture. They’ll still taste good though!
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Have you tried making the syrup instead of the cinnamon sugar…. and can you post how to make the syrup please.
Sadly, I haven’t. My family only made them with the cinnamon sugar when I was growing up so that’s the only topping I’ve tried. Sorry!
I love this recipe! The only thing I changed was frying them in lard instead of oil, just like my grandma used to. They tasted just like hers!! Every New Years we would spend the day getting them super thin, drying them out, then frying them. We only ever made the cinnamon sugar coating and we would give them out to our family and friends. Thank you for the recipe and reminding me of those times.
When making the dough for bunuelos do you have to use it all that day or can you use it the next day.? Can you refrigerate the dough?
Hi Betty! We have not tried that but in general refrigerating the dough should be okay!
Can I omit the baking powder?
Hi Dani! I wouldn’t recommend omitting the baking powder completely. A great substitution is mixing 1/3 tsp of baking soda and 2/3 tsp cream of tartar if you have it. If not, there are other great substitutes for it that you can find. I hope this helps!
Easy recipe to follow. They came out GREAT and tasted so GOOD!
Sabrossisimos, Isabel! If a 72-yr-old also 1st generation Americano-Tejano can half your recipe in a trial for a Feliz Año Nuevo celebration coming up & recall fondly los Buñuelos de mí mama, it should delight a multitude of others. Mil gracias!
Oh I love buñuelos! My abuelita used to make these…my mom called them “bunny loo-loos” 🤣 So we still call them that. Thanks for sharing, I can’t wait to make them!
How much flour and baking powder do you mix together?
Estos es muy delicioso. 10/10 suelo hago otra vez.
Gracias, Delaney! 🙂
Muchas gracias estaban muy buenos los buñuelos!
Hi, Isabel the buñuelos look so good. My name is Omar and I’m new on blogging I’d like to know your opinion on my recipes and blog I hope you find some recipes and techniques that I could share with you.
Thank you
Thank you but my mom use to put a Egg to the bunelos have you tried that and yes thank you for your recepies