Last year instead of a birthday cake, Dave asked me to make doughnuts for his birthday dessert. Thankfully, he found a recipe that sounded like what doughnut should taste like and perfectly enough it’s a recipe from Top Pot Hand-Forged Doughnuts (buy*). Top Pot is a really great doughnut place we’ve seen on food and travel shows. We figured if it’s from a doughnut place, the recipe just HAS to be good, right?

Slightly crunchy with a sweet glaze.

Sour Cream Old Fashioned Doughnut

The recipes in the book are pretty straightforward. The most complicated parts are getting the thickness of the dough right, and keeping a steady oil temperature. I have since made this recipe a few times, the general process gets easier, and the doughnuts get better looking each time. You definitely find a groove, and it’s a very zen process to me. Roll – cut – fry – glaze. Roll – cut – fry – glaze. For one person, you need to focus on each step, don’t try to multi-task too much.

Sour Cream Old Fashioned Doughnut

Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Doughnuts

Prep Time20 minutes
Cook Time30 minutes
Total Time50 minutes
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Servings: 12 +
Author: Top Pot Doughnuts

Ingredients

Doughnuts

  • cups cake / soft-wheat flour plus more for rolling and cutting
  • teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon iodized salt
  • ¾ teaspoons ground nutmeg
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 2 tablespoons shortening / vegetable lard trans-fat-free preferred
  • 2 large egg yolks
  • cup sour cream
  • canola oil for frying

Simplest Vanilla Glaze

  • cups confectioner's / icing sugar
  • teaspoon light corn syrup / golden syrup
  • ¼ teaspoon iodized salt
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • cup plus 1 tablespoon hot water (plus more if needed)

Instructions

Dough

  • Sift dry ingredients together into a medium sized bowl and set aside. (flour, baking powder, salt, and nutmeg.)
  • In a stand mixer, use paddle attachment to mix sugar and shortening for 1 minute on LOW speed, until the texture of sand.
  • Add egg yolks and mix for 1 minute more on medium. Scrape down the sides of the bowl as needed with a rubber spatula. Mixture should be light colored and thick.
  • In three additions, add the DRY ingredients to the WET alternating with sour cream. Mix until just combined on LOW speed. Scrape down sides of the bowl as needed. The final dough should be sticky, and look like a cookie or biscuit dough.
  • Place dough in a clean bowl covered with plastic wrap, and chill for 45 minutes or up to 24 hours.

Fry

  • Place paper towels on a cooling rack, and place aside.
  • Use a deep fryer, large pot, or high-sided pan filled with at least 2"/ 5cm of canola oil. Use a candy thermometer to bring the oil to 325 degrees F/165 degrees Celsius. (May take at least 15+ minutes.)
  • Generously spread flour on a cutting board or countertop, and begin rolling. Flour the dough on top and rolling pin as needed. The dough should measure 1/2" thick for best results.
  • Dip the doughnut cutter into flour before each cut, and proceed to make as many doughnuts and holes as possible. Gently fold the dough scraps together to make additional doughnuts and holes. Floured hands make the work less sticky.
  • Shake extra flour off dough before placing in the oil, and cook a few at a time to avoid crowding.
  • Once doughnuts FLOAT, fry 15 seconds.
  • Gently flip, fry for another 75-90 seconds, until golden and cracked.
  • Gently flip again, fry the first side for another 60-75 seconds until golden.
  • Place doughnuts on cooling rack lined with paper towels. Cool slightly, and proceed with glazing while doughnut is still warm.

Glaze

  • As first batch of doughnuts is done frying, begin making the glaze.
  • In a stand mixer with paddle attachment, mix ingredients together on LOW speed until smooth and all the sugar is incorporated.
  • Scrape the sides of the bowl as needed. If glaze seems too thick, slowly add more hot water 1 teaspoon at a time.
  • Dip one side of each hot doughnut into warm glaze.
  • Place on another cooling rack. Let dry for 10-15 minutes before serving.

There’s so many delicious looking recipes in the Top Pot Hand-Forged Doughnuts cookbook, that we just had to buy the book after giving it a trial run from the library. The cookbook has lots of different tips for rolling and frying, as well as a big variety of icings and glazes.

For Valentine’s Day we’re going to try the Basic Devil’s Food chocolate cake doughnut and put a little extra spin on it by glazing and icing it. (Which may be another one of our favorite doughnuts Dunkin Donuts (!) sometimes has.)

Future Chocolate Cake Doughnuts

Future Chocolate Cake Doughnuts

 

https://i0.wp.com/www.thesugarpixie.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/SourCream_OldFashioned2-e1423685370680.jpg?fit=700%2C466&ssl=1https://i0.wp.com/www.thesugarpixie.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/SourCream_OldFashioned2-e1423685370680.jpg?resize=150%2C150&ssl=1thesugarpixieRecipesbreakfast,doughnuts,national doughnut dayLast year instead of a birthday cake, Dave asked me to make doughnuts for his birthday dessert. Thankfully, he found a recipe that sounded like what doughnut should taste like and perfectly enough it's a recipe from Top Pot Hand-Forged Doughnuts (buy*). Top Pot is a really great doughnut...Misadventures and fun in the kitchen and beyond