9 incredible spots for Bay Area empanadas, hand pies and more

When the weather gets chilly, sure, you could just turn up the thermostat. But there’s something even better about tracking down a handheld, piping-hot packet of yum that’s even better at chasing those winter blues away.

It’s a global tradition – wrapping savory stews inside flaky, buttery carbs – so why not taste your way through the spices of the world via handheld snacks, whether they’re empanadas, pupusas or New Zealand-inspired mini-pies?

Here are our favorites in cities around the Bay, bakeshops and restaurants that make their own empanadas from scratch. (Did we miss your fave? Tell us about it via the submission form at the end of this article!)

Javi’s Cooking, Oakland

A customer orders Argentinian empanadas at Javi’s Cooking in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. Javi’s Cooking offers sweet empanadas and empanadas stuffed with chicken, meat, ham, pork, vegetarian and other fillings. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

If ever there was a Bay Area Mint for empanadas, Javi’s Cooking is it: They crank out hundreds of fresh-baked empanadas daily, shiny with egg wash and stamped with the ingredient initials like big, gold coins.

Javier Sandes hails from Buenos Aires and does his city proud with expertly crafted empanadas that pair wonderfully with a zesty, grass-green chimichurri (available to purchase by the jar).

“Most places source the pastry dough,” he says. “We make our own dough, and it makes the empanadas stand out from the rest. We use butter in our pastry dough, whereas most other doughs are made with vegetable oil or shortening.”

Javi’s Cooking started with five varieties 14 years ago and now has more than two dozen, including halibut, sweet corn-bechamel, Impossible Foods substitutes and “La Bestia” – a real-meat mix of buffalo, elk, boar and Wagyu. The shop relies on local sources for its butcher-and-vegetable needs and uses organic, when possible, working with places like Ledesma Family Farm and C & L Produce.

Empanadas are the tip of the Argentinian iceberg on offer. There are Milanesa steak and sausage-pepper sandwiches, alfajores with housemade dulce de leche, Brazilian coffee, traditional mate, local beer and South American wine. Order at the counter and then step into the sun to consume it all in a cute street-side parklet.

The dish: The carne is an excellent rendition of the classic ($5.85), blending ground beef, red peppers, green olives and hard-boiled egg into a juicy, sweet-savory filling. The acelga ($5.85) is earthy and luscious with chard and ricotta, and the halibut ($6.85) is fresh and piquant with Kalamata olives ($6.85).

There is almost endless variety to pick from – dates/bacon/blue cheese, for example, Caprese salad, and ham and Fontina – plus dessert empanadas in flavors like strawberries and cream or dulce de leche with bananas and walnuts. Can’t decide? Try ordering a six-pack of randoms in a “surprise frozen pack” ($19).

Details: Open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily at 3446 Market St., Oakland; javiscooking.com.

Comalito, Rewood City

Cheese paired with loroco -- a Central American vine with edible flowers -- and zucchini in these two pupusas from Comalito, a new Salvadoran restaurant specializing in pupusas in North Fair Oaks. (Kate Bradshaw/Bay Area News Group)
Cheese is paired with loroco — a Central American vine with edible flowers — and zucchini in these pupusas from Comalito, a new Salvadoran restaurant specializing in pupusas in North Fair Oaks. (Kate Bradshaw/Bay Area News Group) 

Tucked into a cozy spot along North Fair Oaks, the new Comalito Salvadoran restaurant serves up nine kinds of pupusas — masa dough cakes with assorted fillings — alongside pastelitos made with achiote masa and filled with ground beef, carrots, potato and green beans.

North Fair Oaks, which has been dubbed Little Michoacan, because it’s home to so many immigrants from that Mexican state, has a few other newcomers to its culinary scene including Cheverepa Venezuelan Kitchen and its arepas, served from the Redwood City Eats ghost kitchen, and Mexican brunch-centric Eskina.

 The dish: Molten cheese oozes out of Comalito’s pupusas like joyous lava as you tear into each bite. Six of the nine pupusa varieties ($4.50 each) are veggie-centric, including the bright and herby loroco pupusa, stuffed with cheese and the edible Central American flower bud known as loroco. The calabaza option, stuffed with cheese and zucchini, is also excellent.

Pair those with a glass of housemade horchata made with morro seeds, which give each sweet sip a warm, nutty flavor boost. You can’t go wrong with an order of crispy yucca fries, served with chipotle aioli.

Details: Open 4-8 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday-Sunday at 3143 Middlefield Road, Redwood City; comalitoco.wayline.co.

Best Artisan Empanadas, Campbell, and Big E Cafe, San Jose

The E in the Big E Cafe’s name stands for empanadas, espresso and Ernesto May, the proprietor. He’s been making empanadas for the last 20 years at this shop in San Jose’s Cambrian district and for the last four at the family’s Campbell eatery, Best Artisan Empanadas, with daughter Stephanie Solorio as his business partner.

But his expertise goes back to his teen years in Peru. “The recipe for the dough was passed on from my mother to me. And her mother had passed it on to her,” he says. He also learned a classic beef with olives and raisins recipe from her. “That’s the most authentic Peruvian one we have.”

May found inspiration for many of the other varieties from restaurant kitchens he cooked in years ago. The rich Chicken and Mushroom empanada, for example, is his riff on a recipe from the long-closed Fresco, a popular Palo Alto restaurant.

Savory empanadas are available a la carte ($7.65-$7.95) or as lunch with a large side salad or potatoes (about $13.75). Sweet empanadas ($4.10) include Peach-Blueberry, Apple-Cranberry and Raspberry Cream Cheese.

The restaurants also do a brisk business in espresso drinks, frappes and smoothies, with coffee beans sourced from the locally owned Tico Coffee Roasters.

The dish: Try the perfectly toasty Traditional Beef empanada, its filling dotted with piquant Kalamata olives and sweet raisins, with a side of chimichurri. A perfect pairing. Another hit is the Mediterranean, which features Italian squash, Greek olives, spinach, onions and three cheeses (Monterey jack, feta and ricotta).

About a week before the Super Bowl, the family’s clever pumpkin empanadas, decorated to look like footballs, will return to the menu.

Sumber