Recipe: Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts (2024)

Recipe: Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts (1)

19 Oct Recipe: Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts

Posted at 09:38hin Book review, Recipes, SweetbyCharmian Christie96 Comments

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May I drop another name this week? How about Jess Thomson? She’s an award-winning food writer, a photographer and a recipe developer who once completed a marathon recipe-writing stint by producing a recipe a day — for a whole year. I wouldn’t be surprised if she flewhelicoptersor designed subway systems in her spare time. Her talents seem endless.

Among her many accomplishments, she also helped write Top Pot Hand-Forged Doughnuts. So, when she asked me to participate in National Doughnut month, I had to say yes. After all, I couldn’t look like a wimp in front of Super Jess.

When the book arrived, I was a bit surprised to see the word “doughnuts” spelled out in full. American spelling slashes letters from British English with alarming frequency. “Colour,” “flavour,” “neighbour,” and “savoury” all lose a vowel the second they cross the border. Having made a batch from scratch, I now know why they stuck to the traditional spelling. “Donuts” describe fast food. “Doughnuts” are not merely homemade, they’re hand-forged.

Reading over the instructions, I realized this easily-distracted Gemini needed reinforcements. So I asked my level-headed Libra of a best friend to help me. She generously agreed. Good thing, too. She solved the issue of the doughnut holes. Without a proper doughnut cutter (and yes, thereissuch a thing) we had to improvise. A juice glass cut the outer edge, but finding something to cut the hole wasn’t so easy. The apple corer was too small, the shot glasses too wide. In the end, Joanne’s eagle-eye settled on an object that was just right — the cap from an over-sized bottle of mouthwash.

These two common household items did the trick, but as you can see, my centring abilities leave a bit to be desired. I like to think they make the results look truly hand-forged. Or in this case, hand-fudged.

In Which Charmian and Joanne Follow the Doughnut Recipe

While the dough and glaze are easy to make, the frying required undivided attention. So Joanne was in charge of that.

If you attempt doughnuts, let me warn you, there must be no wandering off to check email. Let your voicemail system answer the phone. And if the cat knocks a china vase off the mantel, leave it lay where the feline flang it. Unless the house is burning down, do not leave the stove. Or else your house could burn down.

Working in tandem, Joanne and I made Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts with Simplest Vanilla Glaze. I rolled, cut, glazed and ran the timer. Joanne fried, turning the floating dough with great expertise. She didn’t break a single doughnut. The timing is fairly precise, so we found assigning one person to do the frying and the other person to do the less precise/timed tasks worked best.

The results? Tim Hortons, eat your heart out!

Even the holes turned out just fine. For some fun I put them on a stick. Bet they won’t serve them to you that way at the drive-thru!

I’m proud to report our friendship survived the baking. In fact, we had so much fun we’ve decided to tackle an otherwise challenging recipe again soon.

The only complaint? The doughnuts didn’t last long at all. They were that good. And I gotta say, Top Pot was right in their spelling choice.These doughnuts deserve every extra letter.

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Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts with Vanilla Glaze

Recipe: Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts (7)

Don’t call these beauties “donuts”. These hand-forged, old-fashioned doughnuts are so good they earn every hyphen and extra letter.

  • Prep Time: 1 hour
  • Cook Time: 1 hour
  • Total Time: 2 hours
  • Yield: 1 dozen doughnuts and holes 1x
  • Category: Baked Goods
  • Cuisine: American

Ingredients

Scale

Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts

  • 2 1/4 cups cake / soft-wheat flour, plus more for rolling and cutting
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon iodized salt
  • 3/4 teaspoons ground nutmeg
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 2 tablespoons shortening / vegetable lard, trans-fat-free preferred
  • 2 large egg yolks
  • 2/3 cups sour cream
  • canola oil for frying

Simplest Vanilla Glaze

  • 3 1/2 cups confectioner’s / icing sugar
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon light corn syrup / golden syrup
  • 1/4 teaspoon iodized salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon hot water, (plus more if needed)

Instructions

Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts

  1. Sift flour, baking powder, salt and nutmeg together in a medium bowl, and set aside.
  2. In a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, mix the sugar and shortening/vegetable lard for 1 minute on low speed, until sandy. Add the egg yolks, then mix for 1 more minute on medium speed, scraping the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula, until the mixture is light coloured and thick.
  3. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients in three separate additions, alternating with sour cream, mixing until just combined on low speed and scraping the sides of the bowl each time. The dough will be sticky, like cookie/biscuit dough.
  4. Transfer the dough to a clean bowl and refrigerate, covered with plastic wrap/cling film, for 45 minutes (or up to 24 hours).
  5. Using a candy thermometer to measure the temperature, heat oil (at least 2 in/5 mm deep) in a deep fryer, large pot or high-sided frying pan to 325°F/165°C. Roll out the chilled dough on a generously floured counter or cutting board to 1/2 in/12 mm thick, or about 8 in/20 cm in diameter, flouring the top of the dough and the rolling pin as necessary to prevent sticking. Cut into as many doughnuts and holes as possible, dipping the cutter into flour before each cut. Fold and gently reroll the dough to make extra holes (working with floured hands makes the dough less sticky), and cut again.
  6. Shake any excess flour off the doughnuts before carefully adding them to the hot oil a few at a time, taking care not to crowd them. Once the doughnuts float, fry for 15 seconds, then gently flip them. Fry for 75 to 90 seconds, until golden brown and cracked, then flip and fry the first side again for 60 to 75 seconds, until golden brown. Transfer to a rack set over paper towels/absorbent paper.

Simplest Vanilla Glaze

  1. Place the confectioner’s/icing sugar, corn /golden syrup, salt, vanilla and hot water in a large mixing bowl or in the work bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Using a whisk, or with the machine on low, blend until the mixture is smooth and all of the sugar has been incorporated, scraping the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula if necessary. If the glaze seems too thick, add more water, a teaspoon at a time.
  2. To glaze, dip one side of each hot doughnut into the warm glaze, and let dry for 10 to 15 seconds before serving.

Notes

Equipment: Doughnut cutter (or 2 3/4-inch | 7 cm and 1 1/4 inch | 3 cm round cutters).

This recipe is published with permission from Top Pot Hand-Forged Doughnuts: Secrets and Recipes for the Home Baker by Mark and Michael Klebeck with Jess Thomson.

Review in Brief

Will appeal to: Doughnut lovers and home bakers who want to branch into something new. Sure there are no-fry recipes in the book, but a baked doughnut is a little like kissing your cousin. My advice, read over the Doughnut History and Primer section a few times. It’s got tons of very practical information you’ll be glad to know when you’re timing by the quarter minute and working with hot oil. Did I mention the results are worth it?

Must try doughnut recipes:

  • French Toast Old-Fashioned Doughnuts: It’s French Toast. In doughnut form. Can you think of a more decadent breakfast? Except for maybe…
  • Dulce de Leche Cake Doughnuts: A chocolate-based version topped with chocolate caramel.
  • Doughnut Bread Pudding: In the unlikely event of leftovers, this uses up raised doughnuts

Biggest delight: How delicious fresh-from-the-stove-top homemade doughuts can be. And I’d forgotten the joys of cooking elbow to elbow with a friend.

Recipe: Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts (9)

Tags:

donuts, Doughnuts, Jess Thomson, old-fashioned, sour cream, Top Pot Hand-Forged Doughnuts Recipe

Recipe: Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts (2024)

FAQs

Is an old fashioned donut the same as sour cream? ›

Sour cream doughnuts – also known as old-fashioned doughnuts- are known for being the least dainty of the doughnut family. They're bulky doughnuts that are firm on the outside but oh-so-moist on the inside.

What makes an old fashioned donut? ›

'Old-fashioned' donuts are cake donuts, leavened with baking powder. Contemporary donuts (actually, they've been around quite a while, but are just a variant) are called raised or yeast donuts because they use yeast as the leaven. Raised donuts are lighter in texture, but not necessarily any healthier or less caloric.

What are sour cream donuts made of? ›

How to make sour cream donuts: The ingredients for homemade donuts are flour, baking powder , salt, nutmeg, sugar, butter, egg yolks, sour cream, and oil. Making old fashioned donuts at home is fairly simple!

What makes old fashioned donuts crack? ›

It is typically deep-fried, and may be deep fried at a lower temperature compared to other doughnut styles, having a crunchier texture compared to other cake doughnut styles. Frying at a lower temperature contributes to its rough, cracked texture.

What is the best flour for donuts? ›

Use real cake flour – not DIY cake flour!

DIY substitutions don't really cut it, and AP flour will not create doughnuts with that same soft texture. Also, bleached cake flour will work best. Unbleached (like King Arthur Baking) won't absorb as much moisture, and you may end up with doughnuts that crumble while frying.

What's the best substitute for sour cream? ›

  • Yogurt. Yogurt is your best substitute for sour cream. ...
  • Mayonnaise. Mayo is a great sour cream substitute. ...
  • Buttermilk. Buttermilk can work great as a substitute, but it's a little trickier since it's so much thinner than sour cream. ...
  • Crème Fraîche. ...
  • Cream Cheese. ...
  • DIY Sour Cream. ...
  • Kefir. ...
  • Mexican Crema.
Feb 21, 2023

What's the difference between an old-fashioned donut and a regular donut? ›

Old-Fashioned Doughnuts are basically cake doughnuts that have been fried. This gives them a slightly crunchy outer shell, that's usually lacquered with glaze or dusted with sugar. The inside tends to be less dense than the cake of your typical powdered doughnut and less airy than a Krispy Kreme-style glazed.

What is the best oil for donuts? ›

What kind of oil is best for cooking donuts? The best oil is the one with the least flavour. Vegetable oil and canola oil are both very good in this respect. The most important thing is to use the same oil for the same kinds of foods, since oil readily absorbs flavours and aromas.

What is the oldest type of donut? ›

Dutch settlers brought olykoek ("oil(y) cake") to New York (or New Amsterdam) in the early 18th century. These doughnuts closely resembled later ones but did not yet have their current ring shape.

What is the most unhealthy donut in the world? ›

Unhealthiest Doughnut: Blueberry Butternut Donut, Bismark, or Glazed Jelly Stick. Why it's bad: Imagine eating eight teaspoons of sugar.

Why do sour cream donuts not taste like sour cream? ›

The sour cream reacts with the baking powder to make the donut rise slightly, so it doesn't taste like sour cream. It's less sweet than it's yeast counterparts, but also rich, dense, and cakey like a pound cake with icing.

What is the cream filling in donuts made of? ›

Bavarian cream doughnuts are rolled in (powdered) sugar and made with pastry cream that has been mixed with whipped cream. Boston cream doughnuts are filled with vanilla pastry cream and dipped in chocolate.

What is the secret for soft doughnuts? ›

There's only one way to make doughnuts even softer and fluffier and that is by scalding some of the flour. Scalding is a technique used to not only make bread softer, but also to make it stay soft for longer. You can use it for pretty much any recipe you like.

How do you make old donuts soft? ›

Some sources recommend heating doughnuts on top of a damp paper towel for anywhere from 10 to 20 seconds, while others suggest heating on half power for 15.

What is the difference between cruller donuts and old fashioned donuts? ›

For example, the Old Fashioned Cake Donut has a mild vanilla flavor with a slight nutmeg finish. These donuts take about 12-15 minutes to create from start to finish. A French Cruller* has a soft, airy texture with a pleasant light “egg-like” flavor. The center of the French Cruller is wet with a crunchy exterior.

What is the difference between old fashioned donuts and regular donuts? ›

Old-Fashioned Doughnuts are basically cake doughnuts that have been fried. This gives them a slightly crunchy outer shell, that's usually lacquered with glaze or dusted with sugar. The inside tends to be less dense than the cake of your typical powdered doughnut and less airy than a Krispy Kreme-style glazed.

What is sweet old fashioned vs sour? ›

'Sweet' is with 7-Up, 'sour' is with Squirt soda or pre-packaged sour mix, and 'press' is half 7-Up, half club soda,” says Brian Bartels, author of The United States of co*cktails, and owner of Settle Down Tavern in Madison. “Most people opt for 'sweet' or 'press.

What can I use instead of sour cream for donuts? ›

Best Sour Cream Substitute for Baked Goods

Substitute equal parts yogurt to sour cream in baked goods like scones, quick breads, cakes and doughnuts, for very similar results.

What is the fancy version of sour cream? ›

Creme fraiche is a French-style cultured cream with a rich and velvety texture and a slightly tangy and nutty flavor profile. It's made by combining heavy cream with a culture of bacteria. Its fat content is typically around 30-40%, giving it a luxurious mouthfeel and creamy consistency.

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