If you received this months issue of Saveur magazine in the mail just recently you may have done something like me and gasped at the beauty of the front cover then flipped furiously through the pages to behold the recipe to such a mouthwatering strawberry doughnut. Well I had plans you see. To make and post other recipes. I dropped those plans because on the cover of their magazine they posted a picture of the most perfectly pink, strawberry doughnut that had fresh written all over it (well technically half of it was strawberry. It was two doughnut halves, one strawberry the other chocolate, positioned closely together to appear like one). Anyway, I was so excited to try out the recipe… only to be really let down. I’m not trying to give them a bad rap at all, I’ve always loved their magazine, but please Saveur tell me it was a typo in the recipe. I don’t know how 2/3 cup oil with only 1 1/4 cups of flour and 1 egg could ever work out – but I tried it anyway, and yes to my dismay they stuck in the pan, the sunk flat on top and they had nothing to hold them together (I’m thinking half the amount of oil would have been plenty). So what’s a woman to do? I tossed it out and went to work to make my own recipe, because at this point I just had to have what I saw on that magazine cover.
Next issue – when you think of a glazed doughnut, do you think of a sticky, wet, glossy coating or a matte, somewhat shell like and dry coating? My thoughts lean toward the matte coating. Maybe that’s just me, but I don’t think doughnut glaze should be really sticky because that, in turn will usually result in a soggy doughnut. I don’t know what the deal is lately but the third times a charm with me. I made their recipe. Bad (who knows though, maybe I’m the mistaken one). Created a second recipe, doughnut good, glaze bad. Not taste wise bad, consistency bad. What happens when you mix strawberries with sugar? Basically the strawberries begin to break down and some of the liquids are extracted (some sort of osmosis) and the mixture becomes juicy. So why did all of the strawberry glaze recipes I saw online call for water? I added it in mine the first time around and the glaze didn’t set and dry, so the simplest solution? Omit the water and rely on the juices from the berries to thin the glaze. It worked like a charm.
And if you are wondering why their are two different tones of glaze, the first one doesn’t have any of the strawberry powder in it and the second, more vibrantly reddish pink does have the freeze dried strawberry powder. If I’m going to give a certain something a main flavor I want to taste that main flavor. I just wasn’t getting enough strawberry flavor with fresh strawberries alone so I went with a more concentrated flavor without all the liquids by adding in some freeze dried strawberries as well. Yes, you can leave it out if you really don’t wan’t to purchase them, but you won’t get that vibrant strawberry flavor – you’ll get more of a light and mellow strawberry flavor. I must say though these doughnuts are a.maz.ing! My family and I had them devoured in no time. Enjoy!
Print Baked Strawberry Doughnuts
Ingredients
- 2 Tbsp butter, at room temperature
- 2 cups (270 g) all-purpose flour, plus more for doughnut pan
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 3/4 cup buttermilk
- 1/4 cup + 2 Tbsp vegetable oil
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 large eggs
- 2/3 cup finely chopped strawberries Strawberry Glaze
- 3 cups powdered sugar
- 1/2 cup finely chopped strawberries*
- 1/2 cup (6 g) freeze dried strawberries, finely crushed to powder (place in a Ziploc bag, crush with rolling pin)**
Directions
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Butter doughnut pans with room temperature butter, then sprinkle lightly with flour and shake upside down to remove excess flour. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking soda and salt, make a well in center of mixture and set aside. In a separate mixing bowl, whisk together buttermilk, vegetable oil, vanilla and eggs (mixture will appear to curdle a bit which is fine), then pour into well in flour. Using a wooden spoon, stir mixture just until combine, then fold in 2/3 cup finely chopped strawberries. Spoon 2 1/2 Tbsp batter evenly into each well of the doughnut pans. Bake in preheated oven 11 - 13 minutes until toothpick inserted into center of doughnut comes out clean. Allow to cool several minutes in doughnut pan then invert onto a wire cooling rack to cool completely. Once cool dip top halves of doughnuts into glaze and allow some of excess to run off, then return to wire rack, glazed side facing upward. Transfer doughnuts to freezer to allow glaze to set, about 5 minutes.
- For the Strawberry Glaze:
- Prepare glaze just before dipping cooled doughnuts. In a mixing bowl, combine 1/2 cup finely chopped strawberries and half of the powdered sugar. Stir until mixture starts to become moistened, then allow to rest 1 minute. Add in remaining powdered sugar and freeze dried strawberry powder and stir until well combine (at this point mixture should be have the consistency of a thick glaze, and have a dip-able consistency, if not allow to rest another minute or two until some of the liquids have been extracted from the strawberries then stir again. I would not recommend adding water to thin. Just allow it to rest if needed until the strawberries begin to break down). Use glaze immediately.
- *For the 1/2 cup finely chopped strawberries for the glaze, don't chop until just before adding to glaze mixture (so they don't break down and become too watery) and don't prepare glaze mixture until doughnuts have cooled completely and are ready to be glazed.
- **I would say this is optional, if you omit it you just wont get as much strawberry flavor. Still a delicious doughnut just a lighter flavor. Also if used, the color will be more vibrantly reddish pink than the first picture posted.
- Recipe Source: Cooking Classy
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