Time To Make The Doughnuts

Time to make the doughnuts.

The right way and the real deal.
Fresh doughnuts
Yeast and chocolate ring doughnuts read to eat, er, sell.

A still warm, glazed yeast ring doughnut is maybe the best thing to eat while it is still hot.

I find them difficult to resist but care much less for them when they’re cooled to room temperature.

Doughnuts have gone and gotten themselves and fancied up with some places putting gold foil leafs on top.  Can you imaging anything more idiotic than to eat gold?  On a doughnut?

The only thing I want golden on a doughnut is the outside from being well and properly fried.

And, yes, I am not so much a fan of cake doughnuts.  It sounds schizophrenic.  It doesn’t know what it wants to be.

A perfect glazed yeast ring needs to be tall.  That means the dough needs to be rolled less than other bakers would.  There is a thickness which becomes too much and the middle of the doughnut will not cook.  That’s yuck.  As in so many things in life, a balance.  Just the right amount of rolling the dough.

A glaze, not a glazed eye

The glaze has to be sweet and crack a bit when you bite it.  The key to that is hot water.

Chocolate glaze can be made many ways, including an eclair icing which is really very good.  For decadence, and we are talking doughnuts, ganache is the way to go.  It’ll hold whatever garnish you add and keeps its shine.Various doughnut shapes

Cinnamon sugar and powdered sugar are very acceptable on doughnuts, but each is used the exact opposite moment.  Doughnuts for sugaring need to be placed in the cinnamon sugar mix (add a wee bit of cardamom to this: trust me) so the heat and oil of the doughnut “grab” the sugar mix.

Pour some sugar on me

Powdered sugar doughnuts must be dusted when the doughnut is completely cool.  This is entirely an aesthetic issue.  If the doughnut is warm, the oil will absorb the sugar.  Yeah, that’s horrible, oily yummy doughnuts with thick powdered sugar. They look a fright but are SO good.  To keep them white, coat them while they are cool.  Here’s why, regardless how well you work, they just aren’t the same as the bakery.  Bakeries use a powdered sugar designed just for doughnuts.  It has a bit of oil and more corn starch added so it stays white longer.

At home, use the stuff from the store.  If anyone complains after you make home made doughnuts, get creative in your punishment.

Yeast ring doughnuts

When it's time to make the doughnuts, make this one.  For best results, I suggest starting yesterday.  Make the dough a day ahead so it has time to develop flavor.  The yeast will be happier for it and then so will you for the better doughnut.

Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Keyword doughnuts, Glazed doughnuts, Vanilla doughnuts, yeast doughnuts, Yeast rings
Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Doughnut dough

  • 600 g All purpose flour
  • 57 g Fresh yeast 21 g instant yeast
  • 10 g Salt
  • 1 g Freshly grated nutmeg
  • 75 g Large eggs 1 egg and 1 yolk
  • 115 g Shortening 143 g butter
  • 39 g Sugar
  • 350 g Water
  • 39 g Non-fat dry milk
  • 10 g Baking powder

Glaze

  • 1 C Powdered sugar
  • 1 t Corn syrup
  • As needed Boiling water

Instructions

Mix the doughnut dough

  1. Add water, eggs, yeast and all dry ingredients to the bowl. Mix 2 minutes on low speed.

  2. Add shortening and all old dough.*  Mix 8 minutes on speed 2

  3. Mix 3 minutes on speed 3. Finished dough will be sticky but clean the bowl.

  4. Place finished dough in prepared bin. Refrigerate at least 4 hours, but preferably over night.

  5. Roll to approximately 1/2 thick. Cut shapes, proof 10-20 minutes.#

  6. Fry at 350° - 375° till done. Remove to draining rack or cinnamon sugar.

  7.  If you are making Bismarks, Allow to cool before filling.

Make the glaze

  1. Add the powdered sugar and corn syrup to a metal bowl.

    Whisk in a teaspoon of hot water at a time.  It is a small amount, but just a few drops makes the difference between a nice stiff glaze, which will run a bit on hot doughnuts, and soup which will hardly cover at all.

  2. You can adjust the ratios as you prefer and double the recipe easily.  

    If you prefer lemon flavored glaze, fresh squeezed lemon juice before the water is a good way to get flavor as is fresh zest.

Recipe Notes

  • *In bakeries, often the bits which remain after the doughnuts are cut is saved and added to the new mix of dough.
  • #Proof times are entirely dependent on the heat of the place and the doughnuts.  The dough will tell you more about when it is ready than a clock.  Look for well risen dough.  It takes some practice to know when it is too much, but a jiggly is getting close. As with most things yeast raised, it is better to catch it early than late.
  • I don't find a doughnut cutter useful.  It has but one use.  I prefer ring cutters which are sold in various sized kits and have a multitude of uses.
  • Bismarks are the whole dough round fried as is with no hole cut out.  They will require a bit more time in the fryer to fully cook.
  • Of course, any holes you cut out are excellent baker treats.  Share if you wish
A note about frying and  fat

I prefer peanut oil.

I do not prefer canola oil for anything.

If you can swing it, lard is maybe the best choice of all, but that’s impractical to keep in a fryer.

It is possible to fry on the stove top, but that can be so risky for a variety of reasons, the most notable is the risk of the fat catching fire or spilling and burning.  I use a deep fryer and make sure the fat has been changed, saved if not dirty, so the doughnuts don’t taste like chicken fingers.

Some Gear

Here are some tools I use just to make the process easiest.

[amazon_link asins=’B00CXMNZTQ,B01N693H66,B000PKQ3YW,B00004S1CI’ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’us-1′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’6c0969d1-f27d-11e8-bba3-a90dd80f3fa0′]

More Doughnuts….mmmmmm
Apple cider doughnut
Freshly glazed chocolate doughnuts
Chocolate doughnuts
A pile of Paczki
Paczki

Author: Dann Reid

Hello. I'm a dad and husband and baker and chef and student of history, of economics and liberty.

14 thoughts on “Time To Make The Doughnuts”

    1. Hi Tammy. I’m sorry, the way it reads is confusing. That’s my error.
      It is either/or. Not both.

      Thanks for asking and again, I’m sorry for the confusion.

      Send a picture of your finished results.

      Dann

    1. You can do it. I have confidence in you.

      A scale is an expense, for sure. For consistent results, it is such an aid.

      I look forward to seeing your excellent doughnuts.

      Dann

  1. Hi! Dann. Thank you very much for the recipe. I can’t wait to make this donut!
    Do you have any delicious Chocolate glaze for donuts?
    Or any delicious glaze ?

    1. Hi Kelly
      You are most welcome for the recipe.
      We used to use chocolate ganache for the chocolate glaze. At a bakery, that’s just something they have. The good news is it is easy to make and you don’t need to make a lot. There is a basic glaze recipe on the post for a white glaze. To get it “glazier” add less water.

      If I’m not too forward, the easiest ganache to make is 4 ounces of heavy cream and 4 ounces of good, dark chocolate. Bust the chocolate bar into pieces (or use good chips) and place that into a bowl large enough to mix in. Heat the heavy cream till you see steam, then pour the cream on the chocolate, whisk them together and that’s it.

      I would love to see your creations.

      Oh, and for that white glaze, you can add food coloring to it and it’ll take it very nicely. Or a drop or two of flavoring: mint, almond, orange, or your favorite flavor.

      Happy baking,
      Dann

      1. Hi! Dann. Thank you for reply.
        I wanted to to type chocolate icing but typed it wrongly, but the ganache is the icing for the donut right?
        How about the icing that will not melt and sweat in the hot weather?
        I lived in a hot and humid tropical country, Malaysia.

        1. Yes, the ganache is the icing for the doughnut.

          The powdered sugar glaze should be fine in high temperature/high humidity. I worked in Florida and that kind of glaze stood up.

          I have not invented one, but a glaze similar to the powdered sugar with cocoa powder might give the chocolate flavor with some ability to stand the temperatures. The unknown is how much cocoa will make it taste good and how much will be too much?

          I hope that helps.

          Dann

    1. Good question. I think I probably did not explain that well.

      Bakers will necessarily have trim from cutting the doughnuts. That excess is the old dough I mentioned. For a first batch, you would not have old dough to add to the new.

      Sorry for any confusion that may have caused.

      Dann

  2. Hi! Dann.
    About the Old dough in the notes,
    Which means the old dough in on and on added in the new dough?
    How about the eggs contains in the dough old dough? will it be contaminated if keep on adding in the new dough?

    1. The eggs should not be a problem, especially if you are making new doughnuts with some fequency.

      There are two suggestions that you may consider. Freeze the portion of left-over dough and thaw it at least a day before you plan to mix doughnuts.

      Or, fry those scraps and toss them in cinnamon sugar for tasty treats.

      Dann

  3. Hi! Dann.
    Thank you very much for reply.
    I did tried the sugar glaze recipe and by added some agar – agar powder to act as a stabiliser and it works really well. But have to heat the glazed under a hot water , because the agar agar sets really fast.

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