Tuesday night was one of those evenings when I opened the fridge and wondered what to make for dinner. Oliver spotted the leftover rotisserie chicken and corn tortillas, and suddenly remembered these chicken flautas I'd made months ago. After years of cooking Mexican food and plenty of trial and error in our kitchen, I've figured out how to make these crispy, golden rolls that actually stay crunchy instead of turning soggy like so many homemade versions do.
Why You'll Love This Chicken Flautas Recipe
These chicken flautas have saved dinner more times than I can count. Oliver went from being the kid who only ate plain chicken strips to asking for "those crunchy roll things" at least twice a week. They're cheap to make - I usually use leftover rotisserie chicken or whatever's in the fridge - and they actually turn out crispy instead of soggy like most homemade attempts. The filling can sit in the fridge all day, and I can roll them up while the oil heats, so dinner happens fast even on crazy weeknights.
What really gets me is how people react when they bite into these. The outside cracks when you bite it, then you hit that warm, seasoned chicken inside. Oliver always makes this little "mmm" sound on the first bite. They freeze great too, so I make extra and throw them in the freezer for those nights when I completely forgot about dinner until 5:30.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love This Chicken Flautas Recipe
- Ingredients for Chicken Flautas Recipe
- How To Make Chicken Flautas Step By Step
- Tasty Twists on Chicken Flautas
- Substitutions for Chicken Flautas Recipe
- Equipment for Chicken Flautas Recipe
- Storing Your Chicken Flautas
- Why This Chicken Flautas Recipe Works
- Top Tip
- The Recipe That Got Passed Down From My Aunt's Kitchen
- FAQ
- Crispy Success Every Time!
- Related
- Pairing
- Chicken Flautas
Ingredients for Chicken Flautas Recipe
The Filling:
- Cooked chicken
- Cumin
- Chili powder
- Garlic powder
- Salt and pepper
- Diced onion
- A splash of chicken broth
For Rolling:
- Corn tortillas
- Vegetable oil for frying
- Toothpicks
The Good Stuff on Top:
- Sour cream
- Guacamole
- Salsa
- Shredded lettuce
- Diced tomatoes
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Chicken Flautas Step By Step
Get the Filling Ready:
- Shred your chicken into bite-sized pieces
- Mix it with cumin, chili powder, garlic powder, salt, and pepper
- Add diced onion and a splash of chicken broth
- Let it sit while you prep everything else
Roll Them Up:
- Warm tortillas so they don't crack when you roll them
- Put about 2 tablespoons of filling in the center of each tortilla
- Roll tightly and secure with a toothpick
- Keep the seam side down so they don't unroll
Fry Time:
- Heat oil to 350°F (or until a tortilla piece sizzles immediately)
- Fry 2-3 flautas at a time - don't crowd the pan
- Turn them once when the bottom gets golden brown
- Drain on paper towels and pull out the toothpicks
Tasty Twists on Chicken Flautas
Cheese Lovers:
- Add Mexican cheese blend inside with the chicken
- Sprinkle queso fresco on top before serving
- Serve with warm cheese sauce for dipping
Spicy Version:
- Mix diced jalapeños into the chicken filling
- Add a dash of hot sauce to the seasoning
- Serve with spicy salsa verde
Party Style:
- Make them smaller for finger food
- Cut regular ones in half diagonally
- Set up a toppings bar so people can build their own
Breakfast Flautas:
- Add scrambled eggs to the chicken filling
- Serve with salsa and hash browns
- Oliver's weekend favorite
Substitutions for Chicken Flautas Recipe
Healthier Options:
- Baked instead of fried → Brush with oil, bake at 425°F for 15 minutes
- Ground turkey → Shredded chicken
- Flour tortillas → Corn tortillas (corn are more traditional anyway)
- Air fryer → 400°F for 8-10 minutes, flipping once
Different Proteins:
- Leftover pork → Chicken
- Beef roast → Chicken
- Black beans and cheese → Chicken (for vegetarian)
Dietary Needs:
- Gluten-free corn tortillas → Regular corn tortillas
- Dairy-free toppings → Sour cream and cheese
Equipment for Chicken Flautas Recipe
- Large skillet or deep pot
- Tongs for flipping
- Paper towels for draining
- Sharp knife
- Cutting board
Storing Your Chicken Flautas
Fridge Storage (2-3 days):
- Wait until they're completely cool before putting them away
- Use a container with paper towels on the bottom
- Don't pile them up or the bottom ones get mushy
- Heat them back up in the oven, not the microwave, if you want them crispy
Freezer Storage (3 months):
- Better to freeze them before you fry them
- Wrap each one in plastic, then toss in a freezer bag
- Cook them straight from frozen - just takes a couple extra minutes
- Already-cooked ones can be frozen too, just reheat in a 375°F oven
Getting Ahead:
- Roll them in the morning, stick them in the fridge
- Cover with a damp paper towel so the tortillas don't get hard
- Fry them when you're ready to eat
Why This Chicken Flautas Recipe Works
This chicken flautas recipe works because it fixes the two things that usually go wrong when people make them at home. First problem - soggy tortillas. The oil needs to be hot enough that the tortilla starts bubbling right away when it hits the pan. If it's not hot enough, the tortillas just soak up oil instead of getting crispy. Second problem - boring chicken. I season the filling while the chicken is still warm so the spices actually stick instead of just sitting on top.
The other thing is not stuffing them too full. I used to pack as much chicken as I could fit, then wonder why they split open in the oil or stayed cold in the middle. Oliver figured out the right amount before I did - about two tablespoons per tortilla. His never fell apart because he wasn't trying to cram half a chicken into each one like I was.
Top Tip
- The biggest mistake people make with chicken flautas is rolling them when the tortillas are cold and stiff. Cold tortillas crack when you try to roll them, then they leak filling all over the oil and make a mess. I learned this the hard way after wasting about half a dozen batches. Here's what works: warm your tortillas first. You can do this in the microwave wrapped in a damp paper towel for about 20 seconds, or heat them one at a time in a dry pan for just a few seconds on each side. They should feel soft and bendable, not stiff.
- The other thing is don't roll them too tight. I used to squeeze them like I was making a burrito, but that just pushes all the filling out the ends. Roll them snug but not tight, and the filling stays put while they fry. If your tortillas keep cracking even when warm, they might be too old - fresh tortillas make all the difference, so check the date on the package.
The Recipe That Got Passed Down From My Aunt's Kitchen
My aunt taught me to make chicken flautas when I was twelve, standing on a step stool in her kitchen that always smelled like cumin and onions. She never measured anything - just grabbed pinches of spices and tasted the chicken until it was right. What I remember most is how she'd save the grease from frying bacon in the morning and add it to the vegetable oil. "Pork fat makes everything taste better," she'd say, stirring it in with a wooden spoon that was older than me.
Her other trick was letting the filled tortillas sit for about ten minutes before frying them. She said it gave the tortillas time to get soft around the filling, and somehow they never fell apart in the oil like mine used to. Oliver loves hearing this story because my aunt would always make extra and freeze them in old butter containers. When we'd visit, she'd pull out a container and fry them up - they tasted just as good as the ones made that day. Now I do the same thing, and that little waiting time plus the tiny bit of bacon grease really works.
FAQ
What is the difference between flautas and taquitos?
Flautas are usually made with flour tortillas and are bigger, while taquitos use corn tortillas and are smaller. But honestly, a lot of places use the terms however they want. This chicken flautas recipe uses corn tortillas because that's what my family always used, and they get crispier than flour ones.
What is a chicken flauta?
A chicken flauta is just a corn tortilla rolled tight around seasoned shredded chicken, then fried until it's crispy and golden. The name means "flute" in Spanish because of the long, skinny shape. You eat them with your hands and dip them in whatever you like - salsa, guacamole, sour cream.
What is the difference between flautas and taquitos?
Flautas are usually made with flour tortillas and are bigger, while taquitos use corn tortillas and are smaller. But honestly, a lot of places use the terms however they want. This chicken flautas recipe uses corn tortillas because that's what my family always used, and they get crispier than flour ones.
How are you supposed to eat flautas?
Pick them up with your hands and bite into them like a big crunchy taco. They're messy - the filling falls out and the toppings go everywhere. That's normal. Don't try to eat them with a fork unless you want to look fancy at a dinner party.
Crispy Success Every Time!
Now you have all the secrets to making perfect chicken flautas - from warming the tortillas so they don't crack to my aunt's bacon grease trick that adds that extra layer of flavor. These crunchy, golden rolls prove that the best Mexican food doesn't come from fancy restaurants - it happens right in your own kitchen with a little practice, patience, and the willingness to get your hands messy.
Craving more family favorites? Try our Easy Seafood Bisque Recipe that tastes like it came from a fancy restaurant but uses simple ingredients you probably have at home. For dessert, our Best Boston Cream Cupcakes Recipe always gets devoured before I can even finish frosting them. Planning a summer lunch? Our Best Lobster Salad Recipe is ready in 15 minutes and perfect for when you want something special without spending all day in the kitchen!
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Related
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Chicken Flautas
Chicken Flautas
Equipment
- 1 Large skillet or deep pot (for frying)
- 1 Tongs (for flipping flautas safely)
- Paper Towels (for draining oil)
- 1 Sharp knife (for prepping filling)
- 1 Cutting board
Ingredients
- 2 cups cooked chicken - shredded
- 1 teaspoon cumin
- 1 teaspoon chili powder
- ½ teaspoon garlic powder
- ½ teaspoon salt - adjust to taste
- ¼ teaspoon black pepper
- ½ cup onion - diced
- 2 tablespoon chicken broth - splash, just enough to moisten
- 12 corn tortillas - warmed so they don't crack
- vegetable oil - for frying (about 2 cups, enough to fry)
- 12 toothpicks - to secure rolls
Optional Toppings
- sour cream - for topping
- guacamole
- salsa - your favorite
- shredded lettuce
- diced tomatoes
- queso fresco/cheese - or Mexican cheese blend
Instructions
- Shred cooked chicken. Mix with cumin, chili powder, garlic powder, salt, pepper, diced onion, and chicken broth. Let rest while prepping tortillas.
- Heat tortillas in microwave wrapped in a damp paper towel (20 seconds) or in a dry pan until soft and pliable.
- Place 2 tablespoons of filling in center of each tortilla. Roll snugly (not too tight) and secure with a toothpick, seam side down.
- Heat oil to 350°F. Fry 2-3 flautas at a time until golden brown, turning once. Drain on paper towels and remove toothpicks.
- Top with sour cream, guacamole, salsa, lettuce, and tomatoes. Serve hot and crunchy.
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