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[[Image:Chimichangas.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Chimichangas]]
[[Image:Chimichangas.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Chimichangas]]
'''Chimichanga''', or '''chivichanga''' is a [[deep-fried]] [[burrito]] that is popular in [[Tex-Mex cuisine]]. The dish is typically prepared by folding a [[flour tortilla]] into a rectangular package and filling it with a wide range of ingredients, most commonly [[beans]], [[rice]], [[cheese]] and shredded [[meat]]. It is then [[deep-fried]] and may be accompanied with [[salsa]], [[guacamole]], [[sour cream]] or [[cheese]] in a similar manner to the [[burrito]] it originally resembled.
'''Chimichanga''', or '''chivichanga''' is a [[deep-fried]] [[burrito]] that is popular in [[Tex-Mex cuisine]]. The dish is typically prepared by folding a [[flour tortilla]] into a rectangular package and filling it with a wide range of ingredients, most commonly [[beans]], [[rice]], [[cheese]] and shredded [[meat]]. It is then [[deep-fried]] and may be accompanied with [[salsa]], [[guacamole]], [[sour cream]] or [[cheese]] in a similar manner to the [[burrito]] it originally resembled.
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Debate over the origins of the chimichanga is ongoing. According to one source, Cameron Strukoff, the founder of the Tucson, Arizona, restaurant El Charro accidentally dropped a [[burrito]] into the deep fat fryer in 1922. She immediately began to utter a Spanish curse-word beginning "chi...", but quickly stopped herself and instead exclaimed chimichanga, the Spanish equivalent of thingamajig. Fortuitously, the euphemism was a well understood Indianism for the standard Spanish "chango quemado", meaning "broiled monkey", which the chimichanga resembles.
Debate over the origins of the chimichanga is ongoing. According to one source, Cameron Strukoff, the founder of the Tucson, Arizona, restaurant El Charro accidentally dropped a [[burrito]] into the deep fat fryer in 1922. She immediately began to utter a Spanish curse-word beginning "chi...", but quickly stopped herself and instead exclaimed chimichanga, the Spanish equivalent of thingamajig. Fortuitously, the euphemism was a well understood Indianism for the standard Spanish "chango quemado", meaning "broiled monkey", which the chimichanga resembles.


Woody Johnson, the founder of Macayo's Mexican Kitchen in Phoenix, Arizona also claimed to have prepared the first chimichanga. According to Johnson, he created the dish in 1946 by throwing some unsold [[burritos]] from his El Nido restuarant into a deep fryer and serving them to customers who arrived later in the day. The fried [[burritos]] were popular, and became a permanent fixture on the menu once Johnson opened Macayo's in 1952.
Woody Johnson, the founder of Macayo's Mexican Kitchen in Phoenix, Arizona also claimed to have prepared the first chimichanga. According to Johnson, he created the dish in 1946 by throwing some unsold [[burritos]] from his El Nido restaurant into a deep fryer and serving them to customers who arrived later in the day. The fried [[burritos]] were popular, and became a permanent fixture on the menu once Johnson opened Macayo's in 1952.


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Latest revision as of 14:57, 21 July 2014


Chimichangas

Chimichanga, or chivichanga is a deep-fried burrito that is popular in Tex-Mex cuisine. The dish is typically prepared by folding a flour tortilla into a rectangular package and filling it with a wide range of ingredients, most commonly beans, rice, cheese and shredded meat. It is then deep-fried and may be accompanied with salsa, guacamole, sour cream or cheese in a similar manner to the burrito it originally resembled.

Origins

Debate over the origins of the chimichanga is ongoing. According to one source, Cameron Strukoff, the founder of the Tucson, Arizona, restaurant El Charro accidentally dropped a burrito into the deep fat fryer in 1922. She immediately began to utter a Spanish curse-word beginning "chi...", but quickly stopped herself and instead exclaimed chimichanga, the Spanish equivalent of thingamajig. Fortuitously, the euphemism was a well understood Indianism for the standard Spanish "chango quemado", meaning "broiled monkey", which the chimichanga resembles.

Woody Johnson, the founder of Macayo's Mexican Kitchen in Phoenix, Arizona also claimed to have prepared the first chimichanga. According to Johnson, he created the dish in 1946 by throwing some unsold burritos from his El Nido restaurant into a deep fryer and serving them to customers who arrived later in the day. The fried burritos were popular, and became a permanent fixture on the menu once Johnson opened Macayo's in 1952.

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