thumb|Papadzules thumb|Papadzules in Quintana Roo, Mexico Papadzules (; Mexican Spanish, from Mayan ) is a traditional dish from the Yucatán Peninsula resembling enchiladas. In its simplest form it consists of corn tortillas dipped in a sauce of pepita (pumpkin seeds) and filled with hard-boiled eggs, and garnished with a cooked tomato-pepper sauce.
thumb|Papadzules thumb|Papadzules in Quintana Roo, Mexico Papadzules (; Mexican Spanish, from Mayan ) is a traditional dish from the Yucatán Peninsula resembling enchiladas. In its simplest form it consists of corn tortillas dipped in a sauce of pepita (pumpkin seeds) and filled with hard-boiled eggs, and garnished with a cooked tomato-pepper sauce.
==Etymology== Two theories exist about the origin of the name. Diana Kennedy says it derives from a phrase meaning "food of the lords" because this dish was reportedly fed to the Spaniards. Variations of this etymology appear elsewhere. The second theory posits that it derives from Mayan papakʼ, to anoint or smear, and sul, to soak or drench, making the meaning something along the lines of "smeared and drenched".
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).