Doughnuts!!

On the weekend we went home for a friends wedding and this meant we got to see some of our lovely Auckland friends, but it also meant we got to have Dunkin donuts! Wellington doesn't have any Donut stores which is a bit of an outrage really. Which has led me to hunt the internet looking for a home-made doughnut recipe, and viola! This is what I found. These are home-made baked (not fried) donuts.

Now in keeping with my December Christmas recipes I thought I'd make them into Christmas shapes and with Christmas icing. Something a little like these:



Okay, those are Krispy Kreme ones, so that might be a little bit to challenging! Still, so pretty aren't they?

Christmas Treat #2: Baked Donuts

Source
1 1/3 cups warm milk, 95 to 105 degrees (divided)
1 packet active dry yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons)
2 tablespoons butter
2/3 cup sugar
2 eggs
5 cups all-purpose flour (alternately, white whole wheat might work - haven't tried it yet)
A pinch or two of nutmeg, freshly grated
1 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
1/2 cup unsalted butter, melted
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 tablespoon cinnamon
Place 1/3 cup of the warm milk in the bowl of an electric mixer. Stir in the yeast and set aside for five minutes or so. Be sure your milk isn't too hot or it will kill the yeast. Stir the butter and sugar into the remaining cup of warm milk and add it to the yeast mixture. With a fork, stir in the eggs, flour, nutmeg, and salt - just until the flour is incorporated. With the dough hook attachment of your mixer beat the dough for a few minutes at medium speed. This is where you are going to need to make adjustments - if your dough is overly sticky, add flour a few tablespoons at a time. Too dry? Add more milk a bit at a time.

You want the dough to pull away from the sides of the mixing bowl and eventually become supple and smooth. Turn it out onto a floured counter-top, knead a few times (the dough should be barely sticky), and shape into a ball.

Transfer the dough to a buttered (or oiled) bowl, cover, put in a warm place (I turn on the oven at this point and set the bowl on top), and let rise for an hour or until the dough has roughly doubled in size.
Punch down the dough and roll it out 1/2-inch thick on your floured countertop. Most people (like myself) don't have a doughnut cutter, instead I use a 2-3 inch cookie cutter to stamp out circles. Transfer the circles to a parchment-lined baking sheet and stamp out the smaller inner circles using a smaller cutter. If you cut the inner holes out any earlier, they become distorted when you attempt to move them. Cover with a clean cloth and let rise for another 45 minutes.

Bake in a 375 degree oven until the bottoms are just golden, 8 to 10 minutes - start checking around 8. While the doughnuts are baking, place the butter in a medium bowl. Place the sugar and cinnamon in a separate bowl.
Remove the doughnuts from the oven and let cool for just a minute or two. Dip each one in the melted butter and a quick toss in the sugar bowl. Eat immediately if not sooner.

Makes 1 1/2 - 2 dozen medium doughnuts.




Comments

Anonymous said…
oh its a shame you couldnt send me some of those donuts!!!!
xox
Unknown said…
Oh my god..

I read your blog in my reader all the time and if lusting after photos could make you fat I would be the size of a house! I've been very restrained this past couple of weeks because I always always put on more than a few lbs at Xmas - the food is so decadent and all my faces are full of fat and I have a big family so we eat 3 Xmas dinners over 3 days... My point is lol (sorry) these look so delicious and after eating nothing but soup and veg for the past 3 days I am gaggin for a jam doughnut and a cup of tea!!

Do you ever make bram brack? Maybe it's just an Irish bread? It's delicious with butter and a cupa!
Eat,Bake,Love said…
Hey, thanks for reading x I love,love,love both of your blogs!! Bram brak? I've never heard of that before, but after googling I can see myself eating it all in one go!! YUM!