So we are currently on a doughnut bender. Sylvia and E can't get enough of eating doughnuts. While they have never been a favourite of mine, I am quite interested in trying different recipes. Now that I have mastered baked overnight sourdough doughnuts, I wanted to try a recipe that relied on baking powder rather than yeast. I was really impressed with how these turned out when rolled in butter and cinnamon sugar.
After a fruitless search for a doughnut cake tin in the shops, we finally bought one online. So I was looking for a recipe that was soft enough to sit in the mould rather being rolled out. We used a ziplock bag to pipe them into the moulds. Sylvia turned out to be a whizz at piping.
The doughnut tins seemed to work quite well. The recipe I found was vegan and used aquafaba. instead of egg I have found that even with aquafaba that vegan recipes can be more fragile than those made with egg. When these came out of the oven and we tossed them in melted butter and cinnamon sugar (made by Sylvia so I could not put quantities in the recipe notes below but I think she was quite generous with the cinnamon), we had a few casualties. Not really a problem. It was good to be able to taste them. And they were really good warm. I was surprised at how light and fluffy they were. But I think they were more doughnut than cake.
I halved the recipe I was following because it said it made 20 mini doughnuts. Our half batch made 14 of our doughnuts. Which meant a few batches in the oven and kicking myself at not buying two of the doughnut tins. I baked the last two in muffin tins with foil in the middle (see the pictures of Lucy's doughnuts). It worked but the moulds were much easier.
I was very pleased with the first batch of baking powder doughnuts. But I had more than I had planned. One thing I am not so keen about with doughnuts is that they are best eaten on the day of making. Sylvia helped out by offering doughnuts to some of our neighbours. Some were kept for the next day and made rather good lunchbox treats.
One of the reasons we decided to make doughnuts was to satisfy Sylvia's desire to make sundaes. She had decided to do this a few months back but I was too sick to entertain the idea. And we had a little jar of salted caramel sauce from a school cake stall. A friend at book club introduced me to a chocolate sauce and strawberry combo which went in too. We bought salted caramel ice cream and chocolate wafer sticks at the supermarket and used some chocolate sprinkles.
It was outrageously decadent but lots of good fun. The ice cream was a bit soft and so keen to melt it would not wait for a photo. It definitely made these doughnuts a baking day to remember. I suspect we will return to the doughnut recipe soon but not the sundae. There is only so much decadence we need in our lives.
I am sending these doughnuts to Baking Crumbs and Treat Petite. The sundae goes to We Should Cocoa.
More doughnut recipes at Green Gourmet Giraffe:
Cinnamon doughnut banana muffins (v)
Doughnuts - baked (jam or nutella)
Doughnuts - baked and topped with chocolate and coconut bacon (v)
Doughnuts - baked and vegan (cinnamon sugar or glaze) (v)
Doughnuts - baked, vegan, overnight, sourdough (v)
Baked doughnuts with baking powder
Lightly adapted from Lucy's Friendly Foods
Makes 14 doughnuts
1 1/2 cups self-raising flour
6 tbsp brown sugar
1/4 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1/4 tsp cinnamon
Pinch of salt
1/4 cup margarine, melted
1/2 cup milk
1 1/2 tbsp of aquafaba
Preheat oven to 220 C. Mix dry ingredients in a medium-large bowl. Melt butter and lightly whisk in the milk and aquafaba. Gently stir into dry ingredients. Spoon or pipe into doughnut pans. Bake for 7-10 minutes until just turning golden brown. Leave 5 minutes in tin and then gently turn out (they are quite fragile when warm.) These are best eaten fresh but can be eaten the next day.
NOTES: If you want these to be vegan, use dairy free margarine, milk and aquafaba (the liquid drained from a tin of chickpeas). I did this with soy milk and nuttalex. However they would also work with butter, dairy milk and 1 egg instead of aquafaba. We used a ziplock bag to pipe the doughnuts into our silicone doughnut tins (snipping the end off the bag once it was filled). When they were warm, we tossed them in melted margarine (about a dessertspoon melted for each 6 doughnuts) and tossed them in a mixture of castor sugar and cinnamon.
Choc-caramel doughnut sundae
Cinnamon doughnuts
Salted caramel ice cream
Chocolate sauce
Salted caramel sauce
Fresh berries
Chocolate sprinkles
Chocolate wafers
Spoon a few balls of ice cream into a bowl. Top with doughnut. Drizzle with caramel and chocolate sauces. Dot with berries and balls. Poke a couple of chocolate wafers in and eat before the ice cream melts. It is best to have ice cream that is frozen quite solid rather than soft.
On the stereo:
Hal David and Burt Bacharach: the Songbook Collection: Various Artists
You are getting to be doughnut experts in your house! Sylvia must be delighted with all the experimenting and that sundae - every child's dream :-) I would like my doughnuts plain and they do sound delicious.
ReplyDeleteThese donuts look great - I prefer baked to fried on health grounds.
ReplyDeleteThey sound so delicious and that sundae looks incredible! Thanks for linking up to #TreatPetite
ReplyDeleteDoughnut sundaes -- what a dream! They're beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI have been hankering a doughnut since you and Sylvia got on this dougnut bender, but sadly I have failed to eat one or bake them :( These really really do look good.
ReplyDeleteI do like a doughnut, but I'm a bit shy of making them because they always seemed like a bit of effort. These look great and easy to make too!
ReplyDeleteEvery time I make donuts people ask me where I bought my donut tin from. I had no idea they were hard to find (mine was at Big W). These look great Johanna! Cinnamon and sugar would do a lot :)
ReplyDeleteLove the phrase 'doughnut bender'! And the doughnuts look fab.... why have I never thought of making doughnut Sundae?
ReplyDeleteAs for doughnut tins.... I bought one a few years back and also had to resort to the internet after a fruitless search. Not sure why they don't sell them in pairs though..... I still haven't got round to buying a second one and overtime I make doughnuts, I regret it!
Seriously impressd Johanna! I've tried aquafaba in a few bakes with varying success, to be honest I've had more success in whipping the aquafaba into a meringue than with bakes so far so am fascinated to try these. These look really great and I'm most definitely coveting that sundae! Thankyou so much for joining in with #BakingCrumbs, it's great to have you there :-)
ReplyDeleteAngela x
I need Sylvia in my life. I hate piping and I'm useless at it to boot. I've only made baked doughnuts once and was impressed at how doughnut like they were. Sadly I didn't have a ring mould. Yours look ace and I'm impressed they are vegan too.
ReplyDeleteAs for the sundae, well hello! It looks totally outrageous, but gosh how I want one. Thanks for sharing them with #WeShouldCocoa.