GadgetGuy
(Formerly Shermie)
Has anyone ever made donuts before? There are two types that I know of. Raised & the fried method. Which one do you like to make? I'm thinking about making some. Never tried it before. 

I've made churros twice, 1 real good, 1 real bad. I forget which the good recipe was??
Russ
I guess you're making them again. 50/50 shot at getting the good ones!I've made churros twice, 1 real good, 1 real bad. I forget which the good recipe was??
Russ
Yep - we have a variety of filled doughnuts here.I think that US doughnuts are more or less the same as those in the UK. Do you inject them with jam? Here is a straightforward recipe from Paul Hollywood (whose recipes I trust).
Jam doughnuts
I think that US doughnuts are more or less the same as those in the UK. Do you inject them with jam? Here is a straightforward recipe from Paul Hollywood (whose recipes I trust).
Jam doughnuts
Churros are not what Shermie is asking about. They are made of pate choux type dough.
I'm pretty sure Shermie is asking about cake or yeast donuts. I've made yeast donuts several times before and they get fried Shermie. I don't like cake donuts (except once in a very, very, very great while I'll get a bag of those little white powdered sugar ones) so don't make them, though Craig likes cruellers and will get a couple every once in a great, great while.
The thing about donuts is they are a lot of work and have to be eaten immediately as they get stale and soggy very quickly after you glaze them. So, if making them for a crowd, make a batch of rich sweet dough, let it rise, deflate and roll out, cut out the donuts and holes, let rise, fry in hot oil, turning 3 times, then glaze over racks with a mix of white corn syrup, sifted 10X sugar and a bit of vanilla extract, and serve. Don't expect to eat any leftovers more than a few hours later because they'll be gross.
The average donut here from a bakery are not yeast. Churros is passed off as Mexican donut....kind of. And cinnamon sugar coated. Just saaaaaaying.
Russ
I've never heard of them being referred to as Mexican donuts. The Cubans make them too, though generally without the cinnamon. The first time I had them was 40 plus years ago along with cafe con leche (1/2 Cuban coffee ((REALLY STRONG and sweet espresso)) and 1/2 warm milk) from a little Cuban snack shack in Little Havana in Miami. I couldn't handle the colada (slang for the Cuban coffee) back then. They weren't eaten for breakfast either, but were a snack, lots of times a very late night snack.
Bakeries here have mostly yeast donuts and very few, if any, cake donuts. Those are mostly sold premise and packaged in groceries