Arepas — bolinhos de milho venezuelanos
Venezuela's daily bread: split-and-stuffed corn cakes made from precooked corn flour, griddled until crusty and slit open to fill with cheese, shredded beef, black beans, avocado, or the classic reina pepiada chicken-avocado salad. Naturally gluten-free, endlessly fillable.
Mix precooked white corn flour (masarepa, e.g. P.A.N.) with warm water and salt into a soft, smooth dough; rest briefly. Shape into discs, griddle until a crust forms on both sides, then finish in a hot oven so they puff and cook through. Split and stuff with whatever you like.
- You must use masarepa (precooked corn flour like Harina P.A.N.) — NOT cornmeal, polenta, or masa harina. Nothing else works.
- The dough should be soft and smooth like play-dough; if it cracks at the edges when you shape it, it's too dry — add water.
- Griddle for the crust, then oven-finish so the inside cooks through and they puff slightly.
Equipment
- Bowl
- Griddle or nonstick skillet
- Oven
Ingredientes
Arepa dough
- 250 g masarepa (precooked white corn flour, e.g. Harina P.A.N.)
- 375 ml warm water, approximately
- 5 g salt
- 10 ml oil, optional, for a softer dough
Fillings (choose)
- Reina pepiada: shredded chicken + avocado + mayo + lime
- Domino: black beans + crumbled white cheese
- Shredded beef (carne mechada)
- Just butter and a salty white cheese (queso de mano / mozzarella)
Modo de preparo
- ETAPA01
Stir the salt into the warm water. Gradually add the masarepa, mixing with your hand, until it forms a soft dough. Add the oil if using. Knead a minute until smooth, then rest 5 minutes — it hydrates and firms slightly.
- ETAPA02
Pinch off a ball and flatten it. If the edges crack a lot, the dough is too dry — wet your hands and knead in a little more water until it's smooth and pliable like play-dough.
- ETAPA03
Divide into 6. Roll each into a ball and pat into a disc about 1.5 cm thick and 8–9 cm wide, smoothing the edges so they don't crack.
- ETAPA04
Heat a lightly oiled griddle over medium. Cook the arepas 5–6 minutes per side until a golden, slightly crusty skin forms and they sound hollow when tapped.
- ETAPA05
Transfer to a 200°C / 400°F oven for 8–10 minutes — they puff slightly and cook through to the center. (For thin arepas you can skip this and just griddle longer.)
- ETAPA06
Slit each arepa open like a pocket (don't cut all the way through). Open the steamy interior and fill generously — reina pepiada, beans and cheese, shredded beef, or just butter and cheese. Eat hot.
Make ahead
Make the fillings ahead (reina pepiada and shredded beef both keep well). Mix and cook the arepas fresh — they take 20 minutes and are far better warm.
Storage
Best fresh and hot. Cooked plain arepas keep 2 days; re-crisp in a dry pan or oven. The dough is best used right away but holds a few hours covered.
Variations
Reina pepiada
The most beloved filling: shredded poached chicken folded with mashed avocado, mayo, lime, and cilantro.
Colombian-style
Colombian arepas are often thinner, unstuffed, and topped with cheese or butter — a different tradition from the stuffed Venezuelan kind.
Fried (arepa frita)
Shallow-fry the discs instead of griddling for a richer, crustier shell.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Perguntas frequentes
What flour do I need?
Masarepa — precooked corn flour, sold as Harina P.A.N., Goya Masarepa, or similar. It's specifically precooked corn flour for arepas. Do NOT use cornmeal, polenta, regular corn flour, or Mexican masa harina (which is nixtamalized for tortillas) — none of them will form the right dough.
Why is my dough cracking?
It's too dry. Arepa dough should be soft, smooth, and pliable like play-dough. Wet your hands and knead in more warm water a little at a time until the edges stop cracking when you shape a disc. Resting the dough briefly also helps it hydrate.
Griddle, oven, or both?
Both is best for thick, stuffable arepas: griddle to form a golden crust, then oven-finish so the center cooks through and they puff. For thinner arepas you can just griddle them longer. Frying is a richer option.
Are arepas gluten-free?
Yes — masarepa is pure precooked corn, so arepas are naturally gluten-free. They're a great gluten-free bread or sandwich base. Just check your fillings.
Venezuelan vs Colombian arepas?
Venezuelan arepas are typically thicker and split open to be stuffed like a pocket sandwich (reina pepiada, beans and cheese, etc.). Colombian arepas are often thinner, flatter, and eaten plain or topped rather than stuffed. Both start from masarepa; this is the stuffed Venezuelan style.
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