The Origin Story Behind Central America’s Most Beloved Stuffed Tortilla
Pupusas are golden, cheesy, and bursting with flavor. They’ve taken over food trucks in L.A., kitchens in D.C., and Latin markets from Miami to Toronto. But one fiery question still sizzles on the comal of the internet:
Are pupusas Salvadoran or Honduran?
The answer may surprise you, settle a few debates, and earn you some curtido-powered respect at your next pupusa party.
🧠 Quick Answer: Pupusas are Salvadoran in origin.
While both El Salvador and Honduras enjoy pupusas today, the dish was created in El Salvador and is recognized worldwide as the national dish of El Salvador.
Honduras has adopted pupusas into its cuisine, but culturally and historically, they’re Salvadoran first and foremost.
Let’s explore the roots of this beloved dish and why it means so much to Salvadorans.
📜 A Quick History: Where Pupusas Truly Come From
Pupusas were created by the Pipil people, an Indigenous group that lived in what is now El Salvador.
Archaeologists discovered ancient griddles and grinding stones at Joya de Cerén, a UNESCO World Heritage site dubbed the “Pompeii of the Americas.” These tools show pupusas were made over 2,000 years ago—long before borders were drawn.
In 2005, the Salvadoran government made it official:
- Pupusas were declared the national dish of El Salvador
- A National Pupusa Day was established (second Sunday of November)
- The word “pupusa” was defined and protected in official documents
🌎 So Why Are Pupusas Also Found in Honduras?
Great question.
Honduras is El Salvador’s neighbor, and over the years, due to:
- Cultural exchange
- Migration (especially during El Salvador’s civil war in the 1980s)
- Shared regional ingredients
…the pupusa found its way into Honduran homes, street food stalls, and restaurants.
Today, many Hondurans love pupusas, but most still recognize them as “pupusas salvadoreñas.”
🧁 Pupusa Differences: Salvadoran vs. Honduran
While very similar, there are a few subtle regional distinctions:
Feature | Salvadoran Pupusas | Honduran Pupusas |
---|---|---|
Dough Type | Mostly corn, sometimes rice | Corn and occasionally wheat flour |
Fillings | Cheese, beans, chicharrón, loroco | Similar, but less loroco |
Curtido Style | Lightly fermented, crunchy | Often more vinegary or pickled |
Cooking Method | Dry comal, no oil | Sometimes pan-fried with oil |
Naming | Just “pupusas” | Often called “pupusas salvadoreñas” |
Some Honduran cooks even fold pupusas instead of fully sealing them—making them more like filled tortillas.
🗺️ Cultural Significance: More Than Just Food
For Salvadorans, pupusas aren’t just tasty—they’re part of national identity.
They’re tied to:
- Heritage
- Family traditions
- Street food culture
- Pride in being Salvadoran abroad
Ask any Salvadoran expat what they miss most, and chances are “pupusas” are on the list—right after mamá’s hugs and Kolashampan.
🧏♀️ What Do People Get Wrong?
- Thinking pupusas are Mexican: Nope. They share similarities with gorditas and tlacoyos, but pupusas are uniquely Salvadoran.
- Assuming Honduras invented them: No shade to Honduran cuisine (we love baleadas!), but pupusas are not originally Honduran.
- Confusing popularity with origin: Just because a dish is eaten in many countries doesn’t mean it came from all of them.
🤝 Sharing, Not Stealing
Pupusas are like music: created in one place, loved in many.
And Salvadorans are happy to share their culinary treasure—as long as its roots are respected.
So if you’re enjoying pupusas in Honduras, in a fusion food truck, or at your cousin’s quinceañera in Texas—just remember:
👉 They’re from El Salvador.
👉 They’re made with heart.
👉 And they taste like home.
Final Thoughts: Pupusas Are Salvadoran—Period
So… are pupusas Salvadoran or Honduran?
✅ They’re Salvadoran.
✅ Hondurans love them too.
✅ But credit belongs to El Salvador.
Because every time a pupusa sizzles on the comal, it tells a story. And that story begins in the land of volcanos, loroco, and national pride.
🫓🇸🇻 ¡Pupusas: nacidas en El Salvador, queridas en el mundo entero, vos!