Honduras27

A Honduran tamale wrapped in corn husk served with a cup of coffee
Ticucos DinnerHonduras

Ticucos

Corn-masa tamales folded around loroco or chipilín, wrapped and steamed. The herb is what makes them, and this is how the region's cooks get it right.
Isela Post
July 10, 2026
Glass bowl of Honduran chismol with finely chopped tomato, onion, green bell pepper and cilantro
Chismol HondurasSauces

Chismol

The everyday Honduran table relish of chopped tomato, onion, green bell pepper, and cilantro in lime. Fresh, barely spicy, and spooned over everything from carne asada to fried fish.
Isela Post
July 10, 2026
Honduran montucas, fresh-corn tamales wrapped in corn husk
Montucas DinnerHonduras

Montucas

Honduran fresh-corn tamales from young elote, ground soft and a little sweet, filled with pork or chicken and steamed in the husk. Southern Honduras makes them when the corn is in.
Isela Post
July 10, 2026
West Bay beach, Roatan, Honduras
Roatán and the Bay Islands EditorialHonduras

Roatán and the Bay Islands

Short answer: Roatán and the Bay Islands sit on the same Mesoamerican reef as Belize, which makes them some of the cheapest world-class diving anywhere. Roatán is the developed one, with West Bay's beach and resorts; Utila is the budget, backpacker dive island; Guanaja is the quiet one. The islands are an English-and-Garifuna Caribbean world a little apart from the mainland, and they are Honduras's safe, easy-going coast. Fly into Roatán (RTB) or take the ferry from La Ceiba. For a Belizean this coast feels like home, because it is…
Isela Post
June 15, 2026
The Maya ruins of Copan, Honduras
Copán Ruinas: Visiting Honduras Maya City EditorialHonduras

Copán Ruinas: Visiting Honduras Maya City

Short answer: Copán is the great Maya city of western Honduras, famous for its carved stelae and the Hieroglyphic Stairway, the longest Maya inscription anywhere. You visit from the easygoing town of Copán Ruinas, a short ride from the archaeological park, and it pairs naturally with a trip through Guatemala since the border is close. Give the ruins a half to a full day, then the town's coffee, hot springs, and the Macaw Mountain bird park fill out a second. Check the current entrance fee at the gate; bring cash.…
Isela Post
June 15, 2026
Conch shells on the Caribbean coast, the shellfish behind Honduran sopa de caracol
Sopa de Caracol (Honduran Conch Soup) DinnerHonduras

Sopa de Caracol (Honduran Conch Soup)

Short answer: Sopa de caracol is the Honduran conch soup, a creamy coconut-milk broth with conch, yuca, green plantain, and carrot, rooted in the Garifuna kitchen of the Caribbean coast. It is close kin to the conch soup we make in Belize, which makes sense: it is the same coast, the same Garifuna people, the same conch. The one rule that decides whether it is tender or rubber: barely cook the conch. It goes in at the very end and cooks in the heat of the pot, not on the…
Isela Post
July 9, 2026
Crisp fried corn tortillas topped with refried beans and grated dry cheese, the same beans-and-cheese build as catrachas
Catrachas HondurasSnacks

Catrachas

Catrachas are crispy fried corn tortillas spread with refried red beans and topped with crumbled queso fresco, the everyday street snack and party appetizer of Honduras. The name comes from catracha, the feminine of catracho, the word Hondurans use for themselves — so the dish is named after the people who eat it. Every catracha starts here, a fresh corn tortilla on the comal. Honduras's tortilla snacks are easy to mix up. Here is how catracha, baleada, enchilada, and tustaca differ. When I lived in Amapala, on the Pacific side…
Isela Post
June 11, 2026
Pollo chuco, Honduran fried chicken over plantain tajadas with slaw and sauces
Pollo Chuco DinnerHonduras

Pollo Chuco

Short answer: Pollo chuco is Honduras's signature messy street plate: crispy fried chicken piled over a bed of fried green-banana tajadas, buried under tangy cabbage slaw, fresh chismol, pickled red onions, and a stripe of ketchup-and-pink-sauce. The name means dirty chicken in San Pedro Sula slang, and the mess is the whole point. It is a full composed plate, not a snack — no tortilla anywhere on it. Honduras's tortilla snacks are easy to mix up. Here is how catracha, baleada, enchilada, and tustaca differ. The plate is built in…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Fried plantain tajadas, a fixture of the Honduran plato típico
Plato Típico Hondureño DinnerHonduras

Plato Típico Hondureño

The plato típico hondureño is not one recipe: it is the whole table on a single plate. At the center sits carne asada: skirt steak marinated overnight in naranja agria (bitter sour orange), cumin, garlic, and oil, then grilled hard over open flame. Around it: refried red beans, white rice, fried green plantain tajadas, a spoonful of chimol (fresh tomato-onion relish), crumbled queso fresco, a drizzle of Honduran mantequilla cream, and slices of avocado. Warm corn tortillas come on the side to pull it all together, bite by bite. Independence…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Bowl of Honduran sopa de frijoles, a dark savory red bean soup
Sopa de Frijoles DinnerHonduras

Sopa de Frijoles

Sopa de frijoles is the everyday bean soup of Honduras: small red silk beans simmered whole with pork ribs, garlic, onion, and bell pepper until the broth turns deep and savory. Near the end, a ladleful of cooked beans goes into the blender, then back into the pot. That is the move that makes the broth creamy without cream. Each bowl is finished with ripe plantain, a soft-poached egg, and a spoon of crema, served with warm corn tortillas and queso fresco. Dried red beans and grains at a Copán…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Bowl of Honduran sopa de mondongo with tripe, yuca, plantain, and corn
Sopa de Mondongo DinnerHonduras

Sopa de Mondongo

Sopa de mondongo is a hearty Honduran tripe soup: beef stomach cleaned, simmered long, and brought together with yuca, green plantain, chayote, corn, and carrot in a herb-bright broth. Found across Latin America, the Honduran version stays clear and brothy rather than thick, leans on root vegetables for body, and finishes with cilantro and culantro. On the Caribbean coast, coconut milk goes in at the end. Ingredients This makes a full pot, enough for 6 people with rice and tortillas on the side. For cleaning the tripe: 2 lb honeycomb…
Isela Post
June 11, 2026
Honduran nacatamal wrapped in banana leaf and aluminum foil, ready to steam
Nacatamales DinnerHonduras

Nacatamales

A nacatamal is a large Honduran tamale of nixtamal corn masa enriched with broth, lard, and achiote, filled with marinated pork or chicken, rice, potato, mint, and vegetables, then wrapped in banana leaf and steamed. Honduran nacatamales are Sunday morning and holiday food, heartier than a Mexican tamal and closely shared with Nicaragua. Why Hondurans Make Nacatamales for Christmas, Not Tuesdays A nacatamal is not weeknight food. It is a whole day, sometimes two, and it is rarely one person’s job. In Honduras the big batches come out at Noche…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Garifuna pounded plantain with coconut seafood soup (machuca/hudut)
Machuca (Honduran Garifuna Pounded Plantain with Coconut Seafood Soup) DinnerGarifunaHonduras

Machuca (Honduran Garifuna Pounded Plantain with Coconut Seafood Soup)

Short answer: Machuca is the Garifuna dish of pounded plantain served with coconut seafood soup — two separate things, eaten together. You pull a piece of the dense plantain mash and dip it into the broth. What Garifuna communities in Belize call hudut, the Garifuna of Honduras call machuca. Same people, same coast, two names for the same inheritance. The Spanish word machuca comes from machucar, to pound or crush: the pounding is the whole point. A coastal kitchen in Tela, Garífuna heartland, where machuca is pounded by hand. The…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Pan de coco, Garifuna coconut bread rolls on a wooden board
Pan de Coco BreadGarifunaHonduras

Pan de Coco

Pan de coco is the Garifuna coconut bread of Central America's Caribbean coast — soft, slightly sweet wheat rolls built on fresh coconut milk, with no dairy, no eggs, and a crumb that is dense and tender enough to tear open beside a bowl of fish stew. Honduras holds the largest Garifuna population, and the north coast is this bread's heartland: La Ceiba, Trujillo, Tela. Belize carries the same tradition in Dangriga, Hopkins, and Seine Bight. Where Pan de Coco Comes From Coconut is the heart of the Garifuna kitchen.…
Isela Post
June 11, 2026
Whole fried fish with coconut rice and patacones, Caribbean-coast style
Pescado Frito Hondureño DinnerHonduras

Pescado Frito Hondureño

Pescado frito hondureño is a whole fish scored, rubbed with achiote, garlic, cumin, and sour orange, and fried until the skin shatters. It is served with tajadas of fried green plantain, curtido, and fresh chismol — the plate you find at beach stands and roadside comedores on both Honduran coasts and inland at Lake Yojoa. The Caribbean coast at Útila, where the day's catch comes fried whole. I grew up on Amapala, on Isla del Tigre out in the Gulf of Fonseca, where the beaches are black sand and the…
Isela Post
June 11, 2026
Crispy Honduran pastelitos de carne, fried corn-masa turnovers served with dipping salsa
Pastelitos de Carne HondurasSnacks

Pastelitos de Carne

Honduran pastelitos de carne are fried corn-masa turnovers stuffed with seasoned ground beef and diced potato, folded into a half-moon and fried crisp. This street-food staple gets topped with shredded cabbage, tangy chimol salsa, and grated dry cheese, sold hot from market stalls and home kitchens across Honduras. The first thing you hear is the crackle. A pastelito comes out of the oil deep gold, and when the cabbage and salsa hit the hot shell it goes soft at the edges and stays crisp in the center. That contrast is…
Isela Post
June 11, 2026
Corn-and-cheese rosquillas, some filled with rapadura, the Central American baked ring
Rosquillas Hondureñas DessertHonduras

Rosquillas Hondureñas

Rosquillas hondureñas are small baked rings of corn masa mixed with dry, salty cheese, shaped by hand, baked until crisp, and eaten with black coffee. They are the definitive snack of southern Honduras, made year-round but reaching their peak during Semana Santa, when families in Sabanagrande bake them by the hundred in clay ovens fired with ocote pine. What Makes Rosquillas Hondureñas Different from Nicaraguan and Spanish Rosquillas? The first time I bought rosquillas on the highway south of Tegucigalpa, a woman at a roadside stand near Sabanagrande had a…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Honduran semitas, jam-layered lattice-topped sweet bakery pastry
Semita Hondureña BreadHonduras

Semita Hondureña

The Honduran semita is a yeasted sweet bread, egg-yolk enriched, topped with a cookie-paste disk that bakes into a crisp sugar crust over a soft, pillowy interior. Sold in every Honduran panadería and pulpería, it is the bread Hondurans reach for with morning coffee and afternoon fresco — not a jam pastry, which is what the Salvadoran version is. Getting that distinction right is the whole story. The definitive Honduran semita is the semita de yema: a round, egg-yolk-enriched yeasted roll topped with a thin disk of cookie dough that…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Honduran carne asada thin marinated beef grilling over charcoal
Carne Asada Hondureña DinnerHonduras

Carne Asada Hondureña

Carne asada hondureña is thin beef marinated in sour orange, garlic, and cumin, then grilled over wood or charcoal. In Honduras it is served as a full plate alongside chismol, fried green plantain tajadas, refried beans, grilled spring onion, avocado, and tortillas. Threaded onto skewers, the same marinated beef becomes pinchos. You smell it before you see it. Drive any highway in Honduras on a Saturday afternoon and somewhere off the shoulder there is smoke, a steel drum split into a grill, and thin steaks turning over wood coals. The…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Tortillas topped with Honduran quesillo cheese and tomato sauce
Quesillo Hondureño HondurasSnacks

Quesillo Hondureño

Quesillo Hondureño is a soft, mildly salty, stretched-curd melting cheese made from whole cow's milk. It is the cheese that goes inside a baleada, that melts into an anafre, and that gets folded between two hot corn tortillas for the snack Hondurans simply call tortillas con quesillo. It is not the same as Nicaraguan quesillo, a corn-tortilla street snack wrapped around soft cheese and pickled onions, or Venezuelan quesillo, which is a caramel flan. Same word, three foods that have nothing to do with each other. Why Quesillo Hondureño Is…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Golden baked corn and cheese cookie like a Honduran tustaca, served as a sweet coffee-time treat
Tustacas DessertHonduras

Tustacas

Tustacas are a sweet Honduran corn cookie made from masa harina kneaded with fresh cuajada cheese, filled with grated dulce de rapadura, and baked until dry and crisp. They are not a tortilla dish, not a savory snack, and not a catracha. They are a cookie — baked in a clay oven fired with ocote wood in the workshops of Sabanagrande, eaten at merienda with a cup of hot coffee. If someone hands you a tustaca and it is savory, they gave you the wrong thing. Honduras's tortilla snacks are…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026
Plate of Honduran enchiladas: crispy fried corn tortillas topped with seasoned beef, shredded cabbage, and onion
Enchiladas Hondureñas HondurasSnacks

Enchiladas Hondureñas

Honduran enchiladas are an open-faced street food: a flat corn tortilla fried until crisp, then built up in layers — seasoned ground beef with cumin and potato, shredded cabbage, a thin tomato sauce, a slice of hard-boiled egg, and a heavy shower of grated queso seco. You eat them with your hands, and they share nothing with a rolled Mexican enchilada except the name. Honduras's tortilla snacks are easy to mix up. Here is how catracha, baleada, enchilada, and tustaca differ. Ingredients The list looks long, but most of it…
Joe Post
June 11, 2026