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Pan de yuca or cassava cheese bread

Pan de yuca or cheese breads

Ecuadorian pan de yuca are small cheesy breads made with yuca flour (cassava/tapioca starch) and cheese. There are variations of these delicious breads in many Latin countries. They are known as chipas in Paraguay/Argentina, pan de queso in Colombia, cuñape in Bolivia, and pao de queijo in Brazil. The variations and exact ingredients vary from one place to another, my recipe for pan de yuca is made with yuca starch, cheese, butter and eggs.

Yuca bread makes a delicious warm appetizer and the breads can be made in advance and baked minutes before serving. Leftover breads will get hard when they get cold, but can be reheated in the microwave (great for breakfast the day after). The flour is made from yuca root, and is also known as cassava or tapioca starch, the flour can be found in most supermarkets, in Latin grocery stores, or online. 

Video Recipe

Receta en español

Pan de yuca or cheese bread

Pan de yuca, also known as cheese bread or yuca bread, are yummy melt in your mouth warm breads made with cheese and yuca or cassava starch
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Course: Appetizer, Bread, Brunch, Snack
Cuisine: Ecuadorian, Latin, South American
Keyword: Cassava cheese bread, Pan de yuca, Yuca bread
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 25 minutes
Servings: 20 -25 small yuca breads

Ingredients

  • 2 ½ cups yuca or cassava starch - sometimes also called yuca flour or tapioca starch/flour
  • 4 cups grated mozzarella cheese can also use half mozzarella & half queso fresco or quesillo
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1 stick of butter 4 oz or 113 grams, room temperature, cut into 8 pieces
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2-4 tablespoons of water or milk, add more if the dough is dry

Instructions

  • Combine the yuca starch or flour, cheese, baking powder and salt in a food processor, blend to mix well.
  • Add the butter and eggs.
  • Mix until small dough balls begin to form, if it's too dry add 1-2 tablespoons of water or milk. Add more if needed.
  • Remove the dough from the food processor and roll into a ball, you can make the dough ahead and store in the refrigerator for up to a day.
  • To make the dough by hand, combine all the ingredients in large bowl, using melted (cooled down) butter, and mix until you have a smooth dough. It's actually very easy to prepare by hand.
  • Pre-heat the oven to 500 F.
  • Make small round shaped breads with the dough and place on a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
  • Bake immediately or store in the fridge until ready to bake. I find that they turn out best if you do let them chill in the fridge for about 30 minutes before baking.
  • Once the oven reaches 500F, turn on broiler, place the breads on the middle rack and bake until the breads are golden, about 5-7 minutes. Another option is to pre-heat the oven to 400F and bake at 400F for about 5 minutes and then turn on the broiler.
  • Serve immediately, can be served alone or with tree tomato aji.

Notes

See variations below for more helpful tips & ideas.

Pan de yuca or yuca bread recipe

In Ecuador, pan de yuca is usually served with yogurt smoothies and there are several restaurants whose specialty is yuca bread with yogurt. I usually serve yuca bread as an appetizer, with tree tomato aji, but they are also great for breakfast or with an afternoon coffee or tea. My kids love yuca bread and I always let them have some dough so they can make their own shapes: ovals, triangles, spirals, etc. They get very excited as they watch the oven and wait for their bread to be ready.

Yuca cheese breads

I used to make yuca bread by hand, and it is probably one of the easiest breads to make by hand, the ingredients are easy to mix, but it is a little bit sticky, so I tried using the food processor instead and it works great. If you don’t have a food processor or prefer to make it by hand, just melt the butter to make it easier to mix the ingredients.

Notes, tips, ideas & variations for making yuca cheese breads:

I’ve been making these delicious cheesy breads for so long, and in different places when we travel. I am constantly finding that the yuca bread dough is so flexible and can be used in many different ways. Here’s a quick compilation of some of the variations, tips, and ideas that I’ve tried over the years:

Ecuadorian yuca starch bread

– The texture of the yuca breads will vary based on the type of the cheese you use, this recipe uses mozzarella (not fresh, but the grated harder type) and I sometimes mix it with queso fresco. This results in very soft and smooth tasting breads which my family loves. For a cheese bread with a crunchier texture and stronger cheese flavor, you can use a harder more aged cheese: parmesan, gruyere, emmental, etc. When we visit my in-laws in France I usually take the tapioca flour from the US and use local cheese (usually the grated emmental they sell at most grocery stores there). When making these with dryer aged cheese you will need to add more liquid (water or milk) to the dough to get it to the right consistency.

Cassava yuca breads made with emmental cheese in France

– If you want the yuca breads to have a perfect uniform shape or if they tend to fall flat after baking (this tends to happen more if they didn’t have time in the fridge before or if the oven isn’t pre-heated/very hot when baking them) – you can use a small muffin tin to keep them in place.

Bake the yuca bread in a muffin tin for rounder breads

– To freeze the unbaked yuca bread rolls, place them on a baking sheet with wax paper, place in the freezer. As soon as the breads are frozen, transfer them to a Ziploc bag and save in the freezer until needed. To bake them from frozen, pre-heat the oven to 400-425F, place the frozen yuca breads on a baking sheet lined with parchment, and bake until golden on top.

Frozen yuca breads

Grilled yuca cheese breads: You can also grill the yuca breads, this works best on a pizza stone. Make sure your grill is very hot and the pizza stone is pre-heated, then place the breads on the stone and let them cook until golden. They tend to have a crunchier outer texture when grilled.

Grilled yuca or cassava cheese bread

Yuca cheese griddle tortillas: You can also flatten them into thick tortilla shapes and cook them in a grill or in a stovetop pan.

Yuca cheese griddle tortillas

Yuca bread waffles: Another idea is to cook them in a waffle maker. Simply form the dough into a thicker patty (slightly smaller than your waffle maker), and place it in the waffle maker, cook until crispy on both sides.

Yuca bread waffles

Yuca bread pizzas: You can flatten the dough as thin as you would like, add a light layer of sauce (tomato, pesto, etc), your favorite toppings, and bake at 450F until crispy.

Yuca cheese bread pizza

Stuffed yuca cheese breads: Make the breads as usual, but put a piece of guava paste in the middle of each one, seal, and bake for a sweet & savory variation. Other filling ideas include cooked chorizo, cooked bacon, a piece of a different type of cheese, etc.

Yuca breads stuffed with guava paste

Yuca bread empanadas: Use the yuca bread dough to make gluten free empanada discs, just be warned that the dough is very fragile, fill it with you favorite savory or sweet filling, and bake or fry.

Yuca bread empanada dough

Fun holiday shaped yuca bread treats: For holidays you can use cookie cutters to cut the dough into different shapes and decorate them with olives, pimento peppers, etc. For Halloween, I used a ghost cookie cutter to make these cute little yuca cheese ghosts with pimento pepper eyes.

Yuca cheese bread ghosts for Halloween

Photos of yuca bread or pan de yuca preparation:

Yuca flour or tapioca starch

Ingredients for yuca cheese breads

Yuca bread preparation

Pan de yuca Pan de yuca

Pan de yuca recipe Pan de yuca or cheese bread

Pan de yuca or pan de queso

You can freeze the yuca bread rolls and bake as needed

Pan de yuca or cheese bread recipe

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119 Comments

  1. Hi Laylita,

    I’m so happy to have found this recipe. I was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ecuador and would always get pan de yuca on the buses when I passed through Santo Domingo. Hopefully this brings back some great memories! Thanks for the recipe.

    Chris

  2. I had these in Astoria Queens yesterday and I fell in love with them. They were perfectly round and very dark and crisp on the outside and perfect on the inside. So glad these are baked!

  3. So excited to find the recipe for these. A dear friend of ours is Brazilian and described these to us as we’re a gluten-free family. So happy to find this site with recipe ideas, I’ve been buying tapioca starch from our local Asian Market for a few years now and it’s very available and affordable. I’m wondering if anyone has tried using this dough in different ways? Empanadas, for instance? It just looks so tasty and versatile. I’m always trying to find new ways to use gluten free recipes, anyway, look forward to playing with this one!

  4. Thank you very much for this article, I am from Ecuador and I miss so much panes de yuca!! I am not very good cooking but i will do my best. I will go to that shop in London and try to get the yuca flour!! I hope to find the queso fresco as well.

    Cheers!!

  5. I have very fond memories of eating these years ago in Bogota. I have made them in the US using tapioca starch, and can’t tell the difference. How about these ideas: use Greek yoghurt instead of the cheese? It is non fat, and tastes great. How about forming the ball around a small piece of queso fresco so you have a melted cheese ball in the center? It looks like Goya is no longer making harina de yuca, so I’m having difficulty finding it myself. But the search goes on. Got to have my pan de yucca! I would probably hug anyone who could make me arepas like I use to get in Bogota!

  6. Laylita,
    Greetings from a fellow Ecuadorian. I stumbled across your blog by accident, it is truly a culinary gem. I cooked these regularly now. Thanks for the recipe. I mixed the dough on a KitchenAid and it worked perfectly. I substituted queso fresco for the criollo cheese used in Ecuador and I could not tell the difference! I’m off to experiment with this now, maybe I’ll try some other cheeses…

  7. I love these. However the best ones I ever had were a little bit different. I had them in Ecuador, on the way to Montecristi from the coast, from a roadside vendor fresh out of the oven. They made pan de yuca as well as pan de maiz and they were both made with the fresh farm cheese in the center rather than mixed in. Unfortunately I haven’t been able to recreate those ones, they were truly amazing. Thanks for your blog!

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