Somerville

Somerville pupusa crawl: How a chef is putting El Salvador’s national dish on the map

Dos Manos chef Edwin Orellana wants more people to know about the delicious — and affordable — pupusa. Luckily, they’re easy to find in Somerville.

Pupusas
Pupusas at the former Ball Square restaurant, Cristian Latin. Somerville has several restaurants that serve the delicious and affordable pupusa, El Salvador's national dish. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff

There’s a mile-long stretch of Broadway in Somerville that offers some of the most affordable food one can find in this pricey suburb of Boston. Among the tacos and burritos that dominate menus, one unassuming dish stands out: the pupusa — a perfectly round, crispy corn cake stuffed with cheese, beans, and other edible fillings. 

It’s El Salvador’s national dish, but pupusas are lesser known to American palettes. While the dish is more accessible in East Somerville, pupusas appear on menus alongside classic Mexican dishes at restaurants like Taco Loco and Don Julio. They may not be the star of the menu, but they’re delicious, dependable, and cheap, as low as $3.50 apiece. 

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But for chef and Dos Manos Kitchen business owner Edwin Orellana, that’s not good enough. 

“Everybody knows about tacos,” Orellana said. He hopes the pupusa can become as much of a household name as Americans’ favorite Tuesday meal. 

Stop 1: Taco Loco — a longtime favorite

On a windy Wednesday in Greater Boston, Orellana and his wife, Alexis Orellana, are taking Boston.com on a pupusa crawl. Together they run Dos Manos, a pupusa-only pop-up, that’s part restaurant, part educational service. 

Chef Edwin Orellana. Photo credit: Julia Hoffman.

We started at Taco Loco Mexican Grill, a Somerville staple since 1994. Orellana remembers coming here decades ago with family. 

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“I didn’t go to this area [except] for coming to eat, specifically to eat pupusas,” he said. 

For $3.50, he ordered the loroco pupusa, filled with a green, savory edible flower bud often used for dishes in Central America, and cheese. The pupusa, in general, is all-consuming in El Salvador — at festivals, family dinners — and many Salvadorans grow up learning to make them by hand. 

Stop 2: Montecristo — learning the traditions

Orellana said his earliest memory of pupusas was when he was around age 8, helping his family harvest corn. 

The corn would be ground into masa through a molino, or corn mill. He’d then watch his mother cook pupusas on a clay comal, a traditional griddle used in Central America. 

Edwin Orellana at Montecristo. Katelyn Umholtz/Boston.com

At Montecristo, a painting on the wall shows a woman doing exactly that — cooking pupusas atop a smooth, black comal similar to how he learned to make them.

He orders a chicharrón pupusa ($3.50), filled with crispy pork, which he pulls apart with his hands, dips in thin salsa, and tops it with curtido, a Salvadoran fermented coleslaw. 

“If I go to El Salvador, and I eat a pupusa with a fork,” he joked, “definitely everybody’s going to see me and be like, ‘What the hell?’” 

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A chef by trade, Orellana worked in Boston kitchens like Yvonne’s and Posto before the pandemic led him to rediscover his passion for pupusas. That same year, Dos Manos was born.

It took about six months to convince customers at his Bow Market pop-up inside Nibble Kitchen that a corn cake stuffed with melted cheese and beans was a delicious idea for a meal, he said. Then one day, there was a line. 

“Sometimes I had to open late because I was not ready with the [ingredients] to make enough,” he said. 

Orellana went beyond the traditional fillings, experimenting with a corned beef and potato pupusa around St. Patrick’s Day, or slow-cooking and marinating meats before stuffing it into the masa cake. 

Stop 3: Maya Sol — crispy pupusa perfection

At Maya Sol Mexican Grill, where pupusas are sold for $3.94, Orellana orders a bean and cheese version that is noticeably crispier — just how he prefers to cook them. 

The salsa and curtido come in a cup, mixed together, unlike the usual way one is handed pupusa toppings, in plastic bags secured in a tight knot. 

Orellana points out the small details in each pupusa order. His pupusa expertise makes him a dedicated teacher when it comes to the other part of his business. Through Dos Manos, he’s led cooking classes for companies and parties and visited area schools to introduce youth to Salvadoran food. 

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“Every kid in school knows about pizza and pasta,” Edwin said. “My goal is that pupusas should be a dish they [grow up] with, too.” 

Pupusa at Maya Sol. Katelyn Umholtz/Boston.com

Stop 4: La Posada — the big finish

At the last stop in Magoun Square’s La Posada, Orellana recommends the birria pupusa — three corncakes for $18. It’s the sort of approachable yet atypical filling that Edwin hopes to serve in his own brick-and-mortar restaurant someday. 

An employee at the restaurant overhears our conversation and shows us a video of a record-breaking 18-foot-wide pupusa from El Salvador’s Olocuilta Festival, held on National Pupusa Day in November. It’s a reminder for Orellana of why he started this journey.

“It reminds me of my mom and father,” he said, “the way my mom served them and the way my father grew the corn. It’s the reason I want to do more for pupusas.”

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Katelyn Umholtz

Food and Restaurant Reporter

Katelyn Umholtz covers food and restaurants for Boston.com. Katelyn is also the author of The Dish, a weekly food newsletter.

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