How to Make Donuts: Temps, Tips, and More (2024)

There’s nothing like a fresh, warm donut. Pillowy and soft, they are one of the great achievements of the bready arts.

It is a shame, though, that donuts (we’ll talk names in a minute) seem forever stuck in the province of the diner and the specialty shop. Rows of coffee pots, counter-hops in short aprons slinging Java and sinkers, paper bags, brown boxes and racks and racks of fried creations are all images that the popular mind associates with the donut. Seldom, if ever, do we think of the home counter, the kitchen flour sack, or the stove with an oil pot on it.

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To get donuts with that crispy on the outside, pillowy soft on the inside perfection, you have to hope you get to the donut shop at just the right time. Unless, of course, you make your donuts at home. Yes, friend, homemade donuts are possible, and they’re not even that hard to make.

Here, we want to give you the knowledge and tips you need to succeed at frying your own yeast donuts. (Interested in cake donuts? Take a look at our post on homemade cider donuts.) A lot of what you need to succeed is temperature-related, so we’ll be leaning heavily on our ChefAlarm®. With the right tools and a recipe adapted from SeriousEats.com, making great donuts at home is a cinch. Let’s take a look.

Shop now for products used in this post:

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ChefAlarm leave-in probe thermometer

First things first: donut vs doughnut

There is a bit of a debate about the “correct” spelling for a fried bready pastry with a hole in the center of it. The origin of the word doughnut seems to come from an old usage of the word nut, meaning a small cookie or cake. A dough-nut, then, would just be a doughy cookie, or a cake made from dough. 3 But the term donut has been in play since at least 1900. Both doughnut and donut are used widely in America, and I tend toward the simpler spelling. The food itself has moved beyond a dough-nut, why shouldn’t the word, as well?

As a matter of historical interest, there is great debate about the origin of the donut with a hole in the center. There are many claims of origination that seem as spurious as they are entertaining. Still, it is certain that sweet, rich fried doughs—with or without holes—have no one point of origin in American or world cultural history. Convergent evolution has yielded a panoply of variations on the delicious theme of deep-fired and sugar-coated dough, and I couldn’t be happier about it.

How to make donuts

There are a few factors that will affect your donut outcome. Using the right tools and the right oil are key to the process, but so are the temperatures you encounter along the way.

Rest your dough

For donuts to get the structure we need, they need some gluten development. But that same gluten development makes them dang hard to roll out. After you make the dough, let it rest. The best thing would be to let them rest in the fridge overnight. This has two advantages. First, longer, cooler fermentation yields better flavor in the final product. Second, making the dough last night so you can fry more quickly this morning is a great idea.

If you can’t give it that much time, give it an hour or so at least for the gluten to slacken. You’ll be much happier when rolling things out.

Let your donuts rise

Light, fluffy donuts just do not happen without proper proofing. If you try to fry them before they’ve risen, you’ll end up with fried bread, sure, but there will be nothing light and delightful about it. Allowing the donuts to proof imbues them with thousands of tiny pockets of air that, when heated, expand, giving the donuts loft and lightness.

To proof them, they are first cut to shape, then allowed to sit at about 85°F (29°C) until they are larger, puffy, and tender-feeling. (The springiness of the dough should be slackened by the time the proof is done. They will not spring back when pressed with your finger.) If you’re not sure about the air temperature where you’re proofing, you can set up your ChefAalrm to monitor it.

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Note: to speed the proof along, start your dough with warm water, about 90°F (32°C) (measure with your Thermapen® ONE). This will activate your yeast more quickly and get the whole proofing process on the road.

Use an appropriate frying vessel

To fry donuts safely, you need a pot large enough to accommodate a couple of quarts of oil and a few donuts. Something deep, heavy, and wide is best. A Dutch oven or a very large saucepan are both good, but J. Kenji Lopéz-Alt uses a wok, a solution that makes a lot of thermal sense.

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Use the right oil

Frying donuts is like deep-frying anything else: you should choose a fat or oil with neutral flavor so the food you’re cooking isn’t overwhelmed by the flavor imparted during cooking. Peanut and corn oils are examples of neutral oils. You’ll also need to use an oil that can withstand high temperatures—something with a high “smoke point.” 4 (Serious Eats has a great article that delves into the details of smoke points of cooking fats with an index of more than twenty different fats.)

We have found that peanut oil or vegetable shortening yield the best texture for donuts, with shortening producing the crispest exteriors. However, frying in shortening can result in a somewhat waxy/fatty mouthfeel, but not everyone finds that to be the case. High-quality shortening will help avoid the problem.

Use the right thermometer and fry at the right temperature

Hands down, the best thermometer for deep frying is the ChefAlarm. The high and low alarms on the ChefAlarm allow you to set a temperature window in which you want to stay while you’re cooking the donuts.

Set your high-temp alarmto 375°F (190°C) and your low-temp alarm for 350°F (177°C) to keep your donuts from cooking to quickly or too slowly.

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Don’t crowd the pan

Look, we all want donuts, and we all want them now. But if you put too many in the pot at once, you’re not going to get any donuts that you want to eat. Patience is the watchword when it comes to donut cookery. Cooking only two to four donuts at a time will keep the oil temp from dropping too far during cooking. If you put six donuts in at once, there’s a good chance your oil temp will plummet, and you’ll get greasy, soggy donuts.

The donuts cook for about 2 minutes per side, depending on thickness. Flip them with tongs, chopsticks, a long fork…it doesn’t matter. Just be safe! If you want to check a donut on the first batch through the cook, you can stick it with a Thermapen and look for a reading in the range of 185–190°F (85–88°C).

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After you cook one set of donuts, give the oil time to come back up to temp before cooking more. Be patient, and watch your thermometer!

Drain the donuts properly

Draining the donuts on a bed of paper towels will keep them from getting greasy. A cooling rack seems like a good idea, but paper towels actually pull the oil out of the donut and wick it away. A cooling rack lets the oil pool in the bottom of the donut, and that’s just no good.

A note on how to glaze donuts and donut toppings

Donuts are best when hot, so you’ll want to serve them as soon as you can, But donuts are also best when glazed, or otherwise frosted. A simple glaze can be made with powdered sugar, vanilla, and some milk, but you can do just about anything you want to make the glaze, from a flavor perspective. The chocolate frosting you see on our donuts simply incorporated a heavy dose of cocoa powder in with the powdered sugar (and a corresponding change in the required hydration). Add some cinnamon to your glaze. Add some tart sour cherry juice. Or cranberry juice. Or horchata! And, of course, there’s nothing wrong with plain sugar. But no matter how you choose to top your donut, you want to do it as soon as it’s cool enough to handle.

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The world of donuts need not be confined to the diner or the baker. There’s no reason why we can’t enjoy the glory of fresh, hot donuts in our own homes any time we want, as long as we understand how to make them. This recipe can be your guide in learning these techniques, but the thermal principles that we’ve discussed in the post go well beyond this one recipe. Try making them with different hydrations, different sugar ratios, or even try making spud-nuts using mashed potatoes as part of the dough. The thermal principles are the same, and the results, if you follow those principles, will be delicious.

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Homemade Yeast Donut Recipe

5 Stars4 Stars3 Stars2 Stars1 Star4.8 from 4 reviews

  • Author: Martin
Print Recipe

Description

Yeast (raised) donuts, adapted from a recipe found at SeriousEats.com

Ingredients

For the donuts

  • 1 1/8 C whole milk, 90°F (32°C)
  • 1/2 C sugar
  • 2 1/4 tsp active dry yeast
  • 2 whole eggs, room temperature
  • 3/4 C butter, melted then cooled
  • 4 C (480 g) bread flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 qt frying fat (lard, Crisco, or peanut oil)

For the glaze:

  • 1/4 C whole milk
  • 2 1/2 C confectioner’s sugar (powdered sugar)
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 1 pinch salt

Instructions

Make the dough

  • Activate the yeast by combining it with the warm milk and sugar. Set aside for a few minutes.
  • Beat the egg and butter together in a separate bowl.
  • Combine the flour and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer.
  • Mix the milk/sugar/yeast into the flour. Mix on low until well combined. The dough will be very dry. Switch to a dough hook.
  • Add the egg/butter mixture and beat on low speed to incorporate. Increase speed to medium-high and knead for 10 minutes. The dough should become soft and supple and slap around inside the bowl as it kneads.

  • Remove the dough from the bowl, oil the bowl, and put it back in. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap. Set the dough bowl in the fridge to rest and slowly ferment overnight, or for a few hours at least.

Form the donuts

  • Flour your work surface. Turn the dough out onto the surface. Flour it as well, and press it out until flat.
  • Use a rolling pin to roll it out until it is slightly thinner than 1/2-inch thick.
  • Place two pieces of parchment in two sheet tray pans, one in each pan.
  • Use a donut cutter (or a biscuit cutter and a smaller-diameter cutter) to cut out the donuts. Place them, and their holes, on the parchment-lined pans.

  • Smoosh the dough scraps back together, roll them back out, and cut out more donuts.
  • Cover the donuts with oiled plastic wrap and place them in a warmish place to rise. An oven with a proof setting at about 85°F (29°C) is perfect. Allow them to rise until nearly doubled in size, tender, and poofy.

Fry the donuts

  • While the donuts are proofing, prepare the glaze by combining all the glaze ingredients and mixing together until smooth and a good consistency. If it’s too thick, add more milk; if too thin, more sugar.
    • For chocolate frosting, add 3 Tbsp cocoa powder to the powdered sugar and increase the milk quantity. The cocoa will require a disproportionate amount of milk. Add liquid until it is a thinnish, easily spreadable consistency.

  • Heat the oil. Use a pot clip to suspend a probe in the oil in a heavy pot. (Don’t fill the pot more than halfway.) Set the high-temp alarm to 375°F (190°C) and the low-temp alarm to 350°F (177°C). Heat the oil over medium-high heat.
  • When the oil is hot and the donuts are ready, cut the parchment the donuts are on into squares using a sharp knife.
  • lift the squares one at a time and use them to slide/flip the donuts into the hot oil.
  • Monitor the oil temp as you cook 2 or 3 donuts at a time.
  • Flip them after cooking for 2 minutes. Cook another two minutes and remove them to a paper towel-lined tray.
  • Bring the oil temp back up and fry more donuts.
  • Once the donuts are cool enough to handle, dredge them in the glaze. Using chopsticks to lift and turn them will make it easier.
  • Serve the donuts while they are still hot and fresh.

Want to make donuts for someone you love but they can’t have gluten? No problem! Check out our post on making gluten-free mochi donuts.

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How to Make Donuts: Temps, Tips, and More (15)

And for a classic donut for fall, check out this recipe for cider donuts. It’s a cake donut, as opposed to these raised ones, and well worth a taste!

How to Make Donuts: Temps, Tips, and More (2024)

FAQs

What is the best temp for proofing donuts? ›

Proofing -- Proof box should be 95° to 100° F (35° to 37.8° C), with sufficient humidity to prevent crusting. When touched, a properly proofed donut will hold an indentation without collapsing. If the indentation returns to the surface, the donut is underproofed. If the donut collapses when touched, it is overproofed.

What makes doughnuts soft and fluffy? ›

What makes a doughnut soft and fluffy? Yeast. Raised doughnuts made with yeast are light, fluffy, and airy.

Why are my donuts not light and fluffy? ›

If your flour is weaker, then you may need to lower the hydration. If you are using active dry yeast, then you may need to let it sit in the water for 10 minutes before adding the other ingredients or else it could take a lot longer to raise the dough.

What temperature do you grease donuts? ›

Once oil is heated to 360 degrees F gently drop rounds into the oil in batches of 3-5 depending on size of your frying pan. Don't crowd the donuts! Crowding will drop the temperature to much and the dough will absorb the oil instead of cooking it instantly.

Is 170 degrees too hot to proof dough? ›

Heated oven: Turn your oven on to the lowest temperature it will go and turn it off once it reaches about 100 - 110 degrees. Place the dough in the oven and close the door. Some ovens don't go that low (mine goes only to 170F). If that is the case with yours, turn it off before it gets to that temperature.

What temp is too high for proofing? ›

Temperatures above 90°F (32°C) may adversely affect the flavor of yeast bread. Pre-ferments that rise overnight need a cool temperature to help ensure that they don't over-ferment while unattended. Set the Proofer to 70-72°F (21-22°C).

Why are Krispy Kreme donuts so light and 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).

How are Krispy Kremes so soft? ›

The secret ingredient, mashed potato, gives the donuts moistness and tenderness. It's rumored potato is in the secret Krispy Kreme recipe too! The first Krispy Kreme shop was opened in 1937 in North Carolina by Vernon Rudolph, who used his uncle's yeast-raised donut recipe.

How long should I let donut dough rise? ›

Place the dough in a greased bowl, turn it over to coat the top, cover, and let it rise for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until doubled in bulk. To shape the doughnuts: Deflate the dough and turn it out onto a lightly floured surface. Gently roll it 1/4" thick, and cut out doughnuts with a 2 1/2" to 3" round cutter.

Why are my homemade donuts dense? ›

Yeast. 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.

How to keep homemade donuts soft? ›

The best way to store a yeast-based doughnut is in an airtight container or Ziplock bag. You can use aluminum foil, but it isn't as effective for preventing air from getting into the container.

What is the best oil to make donuts in? ›

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.

Is it better to bake or fry donuts? ›

While many prefer the light and crispy texture of a fried donut, leaving the deep fryer in the cabinet and baking your cake donuts instead makes for healthier, less oily donuts. It's also safer and easier to clean up, given that you don't have to deal with lots of hot oil.

How to make donuts soft again? ›

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. In my house growing up, it was eight seconds—period.

What temperature do you ferment donuts? ›

Yeast works well in the temperature range of 78°f to 82°f. Cooler than 78°f, the yeast ferments too slowly and produces a low level of carbon dioxide. Warmer than 82°f, the yeast produces gas too rapidly, and some of the yeast cells will be killed, so no carbon dioxide gas will be produced by them at all.

What temperature is needed to prove dough? ›

Whereas proofing bread dough, also known as the final fermentation, is when you let the dough rise between 75 and 80ºF. This process can be done in either a glass bowl at room temperature, the oven, a slow cooker or a proofing box.

What temperature is best for yeast proofing? ›

Then again, if your water is too hot, you will kill the little buggers and they will be useless. Typically, hot water somewhere in the range of 105° and 115°F is ideal for proofing dry yeast. 95°F is often recommended for live yeast, but it may not be hot enough at 95°F for activating the dry yeast.

What temperature does dough rise best? ›

Studies have shown that the optimum temperature for yeast to grow and flavor to develop is 75°F to 78°F.

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