Old-Fashioned Sour Cream Doughnuts

posted in: Breads, Breakfast, Desserts | 0
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Ílion 2¼ C Cake Flour

1½ tsp Baking Powder

1 tsp Salt1969269_10204764466772934_3883201567832976509_n

1 tsp. Vanilla
2 T Shortening
½ C Sugar
2 Egg Yolks, large
⅔ C Sour Cream
Bread Flour, for dusting
Vegetable Oil, for frying
http://kaminakapow.com/good-egg-crochet-pattern/?share=twitter Glaze
3½ C Powdered Sugar
1½ tsp Corn Syrup
½ tsp Vanilla Extract
Approx ⅓ C Hot Water
Instructions
  1. Sift together the cake flour, baking powder, salt and nutmeg and set aside.
  2. Add the shortening and sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer and mix on low until the shortening is incorporated and the sugar takes on a sandy texture.
  3. Add the egg yolks and increase the speed to medium, mixing just until the eggs have been incorporated and scrape the bowl.
  4. Alternate adding the dry ingredients and the sour cream to the mixer bowl, starting and finishing with the dry ingredients (dry, sour cream, dry, sour cream dry).
  5. Mix just until a sticky dough forms, scraping the bowl as needed.
  6. Scrape the dough into a new bowl, cover and chill in the refrigerator for at least one hour.
  7. During the hour, pour enough oil into a large cast iron pot (or fryer) so that the oil is several inches deep. Heat the oil to 325 degrees F.
  8. Mix up the glaze by combining the powdered sugar, corn syrup, vanilla and hot water and mixing well. If the glaze seems to be too thick, stir in 1 Tbsp of water at a time until you reach the desired consistency.
  9. Prepare a cooling rack set over paper towels or newspaper.
  10. Once the dough has finished chilling, liberally flour a work space with bread flour and gently roll out the dough until it is ½” thick. Use a doughnut cutter or two round cookie cutters to cut out the doughnuts and holes. Lightly score the doughnuts three times, making a triangle in the ring of the doughnut. This helps the “petals” of the doughnut to open up.
  11. When the oil is at 325 degrees F, carefully slide several doughnuts in scored side up. Take care not to overcrowd the pot.
  12. When the doughnuts float to the surface of the oil, let them cook for 15 seconds before flipping them over.
  13. Once flipped over, fry for 90 seconds.
  14. Flip the doughnuts over again so the scored side with the “petals” is now facing up and fry for another 75 seconds – until the doughnuts are nice and golden brown.
  15. Remove the doughnuts from the oil and set them on the rack to drain and cool slightly.
  16. While still warm, drip the doughnuts, petals side down, into the glaze. If a crust has formed on the glaze, be sure to stir it up first. Smoosh the doughnut around in the glaze a bit and then pick it up to let some excess glaze dribble back into the bowl.
  17. Return the glazed doughnut to the rack to let the glaze set up.
  18. Repeat the process until all doughnuts have been cooked.
  19. When you only have the doughnut holes left, cook them the same way, using about 75% of the frying time for each step. When they are ready to be glazed, drop a bunch in the glaze at once and shake the bowl or gently stir the holes in the glaze until the doughnut holes are fully coated. Let the excess glaze drip off of the doughnut holes and put them on the rack to set up.

http://peachesplease.com/old-fashioned-sour-cream-doughnuts/

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