Mexican Dessert

Pan de Muerto

Pan de Muerto upgraded with metric serves-2 ingredients, a clearer flavour profile and a stronger traditional food story.

1 hr 5 minsPrep time
1 hr 30 minsCook time
Serves 4Servings
EasyDifficulty
Pan de Muerto
About this dish

Pan de Muerto: the story on the plate

Pan de Muerto reflects Mexico’s regional cooking, where maize, chillies, beans, squash, herbs, citrus and slow-cooked meats carry deep agricultural and cultural meaning. It is famous because Mexican dishes are built from strong regional foundations: nixtamalised corn, dried chilli sauces, salsas, moles, beans and celebration cooking.

Historical background

Pan de Muerto reflects Mexico’s regional cooking, where maize, chillies, beans, squash, herbs, citrus and slow-cooked meats carry deep agricultural and cultural meaning.

Why it is famous

It is famous because Mexican dishes are built from strong regional foundations: nixtamalised corn, dried chilli sauces, salsas, moles, beans and celebration cooking.

Cultural significance

Pan de Muerto is useful on the site because it explains not just how to cook the dish, but why the ingredients and technique matter in Mexican food culture.

Nutrition

Estimated nutrition per serving

Useful for meal planning and calorie-aware recipe browsing.

520Calories
8gProtein
68gCarbs
24gFat

Estimated from the upgraded serves-2 metric ingredient list; verify with a calculator before making health claims.

Ingredients

What you need

  • 1 orange blossom water, Dough, optional
  • 60 caster sugar, Finish, for coating
  • 500 strong white bread flour
  • 110 caster sugar
  • 3 egg
  • 180 whole milk, warm
  • 120 butter, softened
  • 7 fast action yeast
  • 2 orange zest
Method

Step-by-step method

Follow the recipe in order, tasting and adjusting seasoning where needed.

  1. 1. Warm the milk to about 38°C, then mix with yeast, flour, sugar, eggs, orange zest and softened butter until a soft dough forms.
  2. 2. Knead until elastic, then cover and prove until doubled.
  3. 3. Shape into rounds and add the traditional bone-shaped strips across the top.
  4. 4. Bake at 180°C / 356°F until deep golden and the base sounds hollow.
  5. 5. Brush with melted butter and coat with sugar while still warm.
Cook smarter

Tips, storage and serving advice

Shopping tips

Buy the ingredient that carries the dish first: fresh seafood, properly marbled meat, good maize products, fresh herbs, aromatic spices or ripe fruit depending on the recipe.

Ingredient quality

Choose whole spices, fresh citrus, clean seafood, good dairy and authentic staple ingredients where possible; stale spices and weak sauces make traditional recipes taste flat.

Common mistakes

Avoid vague seasoning, overcrowding pans, overcooking lean protein, using stale spices or replacing traditional staples without adjusting texture.

Chef’s tips

Measure first, cook the sauce or base patiently, taste for salt and acidity, and finish with the traditional garnish or side.

How to know it is cooked

Proteins should be cooked through but not dry; sauces should taste balanced; pastries, fried foods or baked desserts should be properly set and golden where appropriate.

Plating advice

Serve simply and traditionally: sauce under or over the main item, garnish last, and keep sides distinct so the recipe reads clearly.

Make ahead

Sauces, fillings, marinades and braises can usually be made ahead; fried, grilled and crisp elements are best finished just before serving.

Storage and reheating

Store covered in the fridge. Eat seafood within 2 days and meat, vegetable dishes or desserts within 3 days unless recipe testing says otherwise. Reheat gently until piping hot. Use an oven or air fryer for crisp foods; use low heat for sauces, stews and braises.

Wine pairing

What to drink with Pan de Muerto

Pairings are chosen around the dish’s flavour, texture, richness, acidity and cooking style — not just the country it comes from.

Bottle suggestions

Specific wines to try

These are individual wines already linked to this recipe.