The origin of the chimichanga is uncertain. According to Mexican linguist and philologist Francisco J. Santamaría's Diccionario de Mejicanismos (1959), Chivichanga is a regionalism from the State of Tabasco:[1]
In Tabasco, it's any trinket or trifle; something unimportant and whose true role or origin, is not known legitimately. — Variants: chibachanga, chimichanga.
Chimichanga and its variants Chivichanga and Chibachanga are synonymous with the term Timbirimba, which means:[2]
Term used in some parts of the interior of the country, to refer to a thing whose name is unknown, or a thing that is properly ignored. What timbirimba is that? Synonym of chivichanga.
Folk history
From the Mexican term chivichanga, one account adduces that Sonoranimmigrants brought the dish with them to Arizona.[3][failed verification][original research?] Instead, most researchers agree that the chimichanga was created by accident at a Mexican restaurant in Arizona, United States, although they disagree over precisely where.[4][5][6][7] The words chimi and changa come from two Mexican Spanish terms: chamuscado (past participle of the verb chamuscar),[8] which means seared or singed, and changa, related to chinga (third-person present tense form of the vulgar verb chingar[9]), a rude expression for the unexpected or a small insult.[10]
According to one source,[11] Monica Flin, the founder of the Tucson, Arizona, restaurant El Charro Café (est. 1922), accidentally dropped a burrito into the deep-fat fryer in the early 1950s.[7] She immediately began to utter a Spanishprofanity beginning "chi..." (chingada),[original research?] but quickly stopped herself and instead exclaimed chimichanga, a Spanish equivalent of "thingamajig".[12] Knowledge and appreciation of the dish spread slowly outward from the Tucson area, with popularity elsewhere accelerating in recent decades. Though the chimichanga is now found as part of the Tex-Mex cuisine, its roots within the U.S. are mainly in Tucson, Arizona.[7][3][13]
Woody Johnson, founder of Mexican restaurant chain Macayo's Mexican Kitchen, claimed he had invented the chimichanga in 1946 when he put some burritos into a deep fryer as an experiment at his original restaurant Woody's El Nido, in Phoenix, Arizona.[14] These "fried burritos" became so popular that by 1952, when Woody's El Nido became Macayo's, the chimichanga was one of the restaurant's main menu items. Johnson opened Macayo's in 1952.[5] Although no official records indicate when the dish first appeared, retired University of Arizona folklorist Jim Griffith recalls seeing chimichangas at the Yaqui Old Pascua Village in Tucson in the mid-1950s.[15]
Nutritional value
According to data presented by the United States Department of Agriculture, a typical 183-gram (6.5-ounce) serving of a beef and cheese chimichanga contains 443 calories, 20 grams protein, 39 grams carbohydrates, 23 grams total fat, 11 grams saturated fat, 51 milligrams cholesterol, and 957 milligrams of sodium.[16][17][18]
^Santamaría, Francisco J. (1959). Diccionario de Mejicanismo [Dictionary of Mexicanisms] (in Spanish). Mexico: Editorial Porrúa. p. 410. Retrieved November 14, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
^Santamaría, Francisco J. (1959). Diccionario de Mejicanismos [Dictionary of Mexicanisms] (in Spanish). Mexico: Editorial Porrúa. p. 1048. Retrieved November 14, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
^Stradley, Linda (April 27, 2017) [May 18, 2015]. "Chimichanga History and Recipe". What's Cooking America (blog). Archived from the original on January 28, 2021. Retrieved February 23, 2007.