Tiny Doughnuts With Orange-Honey Glaze Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Serves a Crowd

by: Carolina Gelen

August9,2021

5

1 Ratings

  • Prep time 50 minutes
  • Cook time 20 minutes
  • makes about 30 doughnuts

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Author Notes

This month’s Choose Your Own Recipe Adventure—an Instagram series where you call the shots!—called for the following ingredients: honey, milk, citrus, and chile powder. As if the chile powder weren’t enough heat, our audience also chose flambéing as the technique to be demoed in the video. I came up with a recipe inspired by my recent trip to Greece: doughnuts glazed with orange and honey. Glistening and bite-size, these are similar to loukoumades, or lokma, a fried dough covered in a sweet topping as soon as it comes out of the oil. Many opt for honey and sesame. But there’s also date molasses, or Nutella, or confectioners’ sugar. I grew up with the last one. This version is light and airy, with a bittersweet orange glaze and a dusting of chile powder and pistachios. Think of it as the most snackable dessert. (Editors’ Note: In our Instagram poll, “chili powder” was a typo. It should have been “chile powder,” which is ground dried chiles, not a spice blend.) —Carolina Gelen

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

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Tiny Doughnuts With Orange-HoneyGlaze

Ingredients
  • Doughnuts
  • 1 cup(227 grams) lukewarm water
  • 1 tablespoonactive-dry yeast
  • 1 cup(227 grams) lukewarm whole milk
  • 2 tablespoonsgranulated sugar
  • 3 cups(360 grams) all-purpose flour, plus more as needed
  • 1 pinchkosher salt
  • Neutral oil (such as vegetable or canola), for frying
  • Orange-Honey Glaze:
  • 2/3 cup(151 grams) freshly squeezed orange juice (about 2 large oranges)
  • 2 teaspoonsfinely grated orange zest
  • 1/3 cup(112 grams) honey
  • 2 ouncesorange liqueur or rum
  • 1/4 teaspoonchile powder (I used Carolina Reaper; cayenne works, too), plus more for serving
  • Crushed pistachios or toasted sesame seeds, for serving
Directions
  1. In a large bowl, combine the water and yeast and mix until the yeast has dissolved. Stir in the milk, sugar, flour, and salt and mix until the dough resembles a thick pancake batter. If the dough is too runny at this point, mix in up to ½ cup (60 grams) of flour. Cover the bowl and let the dough rest for 30 to 40 minutes in a warm spot, until almost doubled in size and bubbly.
  2. Meanwhile, in a deep skillet, simmer the orange juice and zest until the mixture becomes thicker and darker, 15 to 20 minutes—you should be left with about 1 tablespoon of concentrated orange juice. Stir in the honey and turn off the heat.
  3. In a Dutch oven or deep cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat, heat enough neutral oil for the doughnuts to deep-fry in.
  4. Using an oiled small ice cream scoop or an oiled spoon, scoop out tablespoon-sized portions of dough straight in the hot oil. (You can also pipe in the dough: Grease the inside of a piping bag and fill it with dough. Cut off the tip, then slowly start piping the dough in the hot oil, cutting it with a pair of oiled scissors.) Add just enough in the pan so each doughnut has an inch of space around it.
  5. Fry until golden brown on each side, flipping halfway through, 3 to 4 minutes total. Use a spider or strainer to transfer the doughnuts to a paper-towel-lined plate to drain excess oil. Repeat with the remaining dough.
  6. Once done, bring the orange-honey glaze to a simmer, then simmer for 2 minutes. Add the liqueur and, once the glaze starts to bubble again, add the doughnuts, tossing them in the glaze with a wooden spoon or by shaking the pan. Flambé using an electric lighter or the stove burner, then shake the pan until most of the alcohol has burned off and the flames have subsided. (Stand back while lighting and shaking, and be careful!) Keep tossing the doughnuts in the sauce for another 2 minutes or so, until all the glaze is stuck to the doughnuts.
  7. Pour everything on a serving platter. Top with crushed pistachios and a light dusting of chile powder.

Tags:

  • Mediterranean
  • Middle Eastern
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Fall
  • Halloween
  • Summer
  • Rosh Hashanah
  • Winter
  • Spring
  • Valentine's Day
  • Vegetarian
  • Snack

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Recipe by: Carolina Gelen

Carolina is a resident at Food52. She's also one of the hosts of Choose Your Own Recipe Adventure, our YouTube show where our Food52 readers pick the ingredients and techniques for a brand new recipe. Carolina recently immigrated to the U.S. from Transylvania, a place she spent most of her life. She continues to get inspired by the classic Romanian and Hungarian foods she was raised on, creating approachable, colorful, and fun recipes. For more cooking ideas and candid moments, check out her Instagram @carolinagelen.

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Tiny Doughnuts With Orange-Honey Glaze Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why are my mini donuts not fluffy? ›

Why are my donuts tough? This could be due to a few things - either your oil temperature isn't hot or cool enough, or you over or under proofed the donut dough, meaning that it did not puff up in the oil. Check the oil temperature before each batch and make sure the donuts are properly proofed when you fry them.

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.

What is doughnut glaze made of? ›

Glaze or fill as follows, and serve as soon as possible. Whisk together 2 cups powdered sugar, ¼ cup milk and 1 teaspoon vanilla until smooth. When the doughnuts are cool enough to handle, dip into the glaze; if you like, flip them so the tops they're completely covered. Put on racks to let the glaze harden.

What is a honey dip donut? ›

Our award-winning signature dessert since 1955—and ranked by Travel + Leisure as one of the country's top-10! —this perfect donut is drenched in our signature honey glaze. (And, yes...it contains real honey. That's what helped us win!)

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 is the best oil for donuts? ›

Vegetable oil is the go-to choice for many good reasons. Besides being cheap and easy to find, it has no problem handling high temperatures with a smoke point of around 400 degrees Fahrenheit — well above temperatures needed to brown donuts.

What is the forbidden donut? ›

Marge explains that he ate the entire wedding cake by himself… before the wedding. On the back Homer pledges his soul to Marge, and the jury finds that his soul is the property of Marge, not the devil's. The devil begrudgingly agrees, but instead of taking Homer's soul, he turns his head into a big donut.

What makes Krispy Kreme donuts so fluffy? ›

A batch of original glazed starts with Krispy Kreme doughnut mix, water and yeast, the same single-cell fungi used to make bread rise. The yeast is what makes the original glazed so light -- it puffs the dough up with air, so it's not dense like a cake doughnut (more on this later).

What is the secret ingredient in Krispy Kreme donuts? ›

What is the secret to Krispy Kreme Donuts? The secret to Krispy Kreme doughnuts is of course the sweet glaze, and this is achieved by bathing the doughnuts in a glaze of icing sugar, vanilla extract and milk, for a thicker glaze increase the quantity of icing sugar by a few spoons.

What are the 3 basic ingredients in glaze? ›

A BASE GLAZE is a mixture of these three basic groups: SILICA, FLUX AND ALUMINA.

Should I glaze donuts hot or cold? ›

Dip each warm doughnut (don't wait for them to cool!) into the glaze, making sure to coat both sides. Place back onto prepared rack, as excess glaze drips down. After about 20 minutes, the glaze will set. Doughnuts are best enjoyed the same day.

What is a substitute for powdered sugar in donut glaze? ›

It is possible to simply use granulated sugar in a slightly smaller amount, though you'll have to accept that the texture may not be ideal, especially for icing or other recipes that are supposed to be super smooth. Just substitute 1 cup of granulated sugar for every 1 ¾ cups powdered sugar and proceed as directed.

What is an Oprah donut? ›

Oprah Bar. raised bar frosted with maple and sprinkled with freshly cooked bacon.

What is a honeymooners donut? ›

Our honeymooners are made from our donut dough and topped with a generous spoonful of our fruity pie fillings and surrounded by vanilla icing. CHERRY. APPLE.

What is a crack donut? ›

'Amish crack' is a yeast-raised donut, fried, dipped in caramel, and sprinkled (heavily) with cinnamon-powdered sugar.

Why didn't my donuts puff up? ›

It will usually tell you to use “warm” water. The water temperature should be between 110 - 115 F degrees. If your liquid is too hot (i.e. boiling) it will kill the yeast and prevent the rise. If it's not hot enough, the yeast won't have the heat needed to bloom.

What makes a doughnut fluffy? ›

But to make light and fluffy doughnuts we need a dough that is more soft and smooth. So add a little more more water to the dough and knead it once again. I added 1/2 tbsp water of extra water into the dough. As the dough contain moisture, you will find the dough to be sticky in the beginning of kneading.

Why did my donuts come out dense? ›

Yeast is a tiny yet magical organism that helps doughs of all kinds rise. Without yeast, your doughnuts might resemble dense disks rather than fluffy rings. There are a variety of types of yeasts available for purchase, and some bakers even capture native yeasts to create their own unique doughnut dough.

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