Skip to main content

Migas

4.5

(2)

Migas plated on a oval shaped plate with a green background
Photograph by Isa Zapata, Food Styling by Thu Buser, Prop Styling by Christina Allen

When you have a stack of waning corn tortillas, your first thought should be this easy migas recipe. Like crusty baguettes and morning newspapers, fresh tortillas seemingly have a 24-hour lifespan, quickly turning brittle and leathery. No amount of careful reheating seems to revive them. But, cut up and crisped in a pan with a splash of oil? Transformative. Suddenly, a stack of stale, crumbly tortillas is full of promise.

Sometimes confused for chilaquiles (a dish of crispy tortilla strips coated with salsa and often topped with a fried egg), migas is a Mexican breakfast and brunch staple that translates to “crumbs” (its Spanish ancestor is made with breadcrumbs). Mexican and Tex-Mex migas comprise fried corn tortillas laced with fluffy scrambled eggs and topped with any number of flavorful garnishes: spicy chorizo, pico de gallo, guacamole, refried beans, Cotija cheese, the list goes on. 

This version requires just a few ingredients, all of them economical, and most of them likely in your kitchen already. Can you use store-bought tortilla chips? Because they’re often thin and brittle, we don’t recommend it. Milk and cornstarch stretch the eggs a bit further and render them impossibly silky. Bulked up with a scoop of refried beans and a simple tomato salad on the side, these migas are an affordable breakfast, lunch, or dinner—and salvation for those leftover tortillas.

Editor’s note: Click through for our guide to eating well in Mexico City, or head over here for more of our best breakfast recipes →

What you’ll need

Read More
This riff on çılbır marries garlicky yogurt, fried eggs, and spiced butter with summer tomatoes.
Silky Japanese eggplant and fiery serrano chile unite in this no-fuss frittata that’s brunch-ready, dinner-worthy, and wildly good.
Juicy peak-season tomatoes make the perfect plant-based swap for aguachile.
Spiced chicken, charred peppers, and gooey cheese—these never-soggy quesadillas are a favorite for a reason.
With colorful radishes and jammy eggs, this is just as great for a holiday as it is for a casual spring lunch.
You’ll want to put this creamy (but dairy-free) green sauce on everything and it’s particularly sublime under crispy-skinned salmon.
Dive into this shareable skillet with warm flatbread.
Mayocobas, or canary beans, are the quick-cooking pantry ingredient you should know about.