Sour Cream Glazed Donuts

Sunday 12 April 2015



If any of you are Canadian, you'll understand the beauty that is Tim Hortons.


You could drink Timmies coffee out of a sweaty running shoe and it would still taste better than Starbucks... (ouch, sorry)

Put it this way: Tim Hortons' coffee and donuts are heaven on Earth and there is no morning duo to replace it.  




And behold, the one, the only, sour cream glazed hunk of love.

(It's the one on the right, wink wink!)

This Timmies donut melts my heart, it's just so delicious.  But yesterday I came across a copycat recipe that I had to try out.  And yes, it worked! It worked!  I have to say it's not exactly a Timmies donut - I couldn't get my hands on any liquid gold unfortunately - but it's a good second.

Here's the recipe, adapted from The Messy Baker:

Ingredients

Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Donuts
2¼ cups cake flour, plus more for rolling and cutting
1½ teaspoon baking powder
¾ teaspoons nutmeg
½ cup sugar
2 tablespoons shortening 
2 large egg yolks
⅔ cups sour cream
1 bottle canola oil for frying

Simplest Vanilla Glaze
3½ cups confectioner's / icing sugar
1½ teaspoon light corn syrup / golden syrup
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
⅓ cup plus 1 tablespoon hot water, (plus more if needed)

Instructions

Sour Cream Old-Fashioned Donuts
Sift flour, baking powder, salt and nutmeg together in a medium bowl, and set aside.

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.

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.

Transfer the dough to a clean bowl and refrigerate, covered with plastic wrap/cling film, for 45 minutes (or up to 24 hours).

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 ½ 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 donuts 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.
Shake any excess flour off the donuts before carefully adding them to the hot oil a few at a time, taking care not to crowd them. Once the donuts 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
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.

To glaze, dip one side of each hot donut into the warm glaze, and let dry for 10 to 15 seconds before serving.






I sprinkled brown sugar and cinnamon on some and peanut pieces on others but they taste really good just plain!  Let me know how it works out for you or if you discover something else to make them even better.

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