How To Make Homemade Doughnuts
How about if I told you that you could make these Homemade Doughnuts real quick, serving them warm and golden to your family, with no knowledge whatsoever of yeast or dough, no special equipment other than what you likely have on hand, and have them done start to finish in under ten minutes, including prep time?
Here’s How To Make Donuts at Home… You’re Welcome 🙂
We Southerners (and humans in general), love our doughnuts.
The most important thing about this doughnut making recipe though is that you begin with CANNED BISCUITS. No, they do NOT taste anything like a biscuit when you are done. They taste every bit as melt in your mouth good as they look!
Recipe Ingredients:
- Vegetable oil
- Canned biscuits for the doughnuts
- Butter
- Cinnamon
- And sugar for the coating.
TIP: For the biscuits, any style at all will do, just don’t get the flaky layers because they will absorb the oil whereas normal biscuits won’t if we get our oil hot enough before frying them.
- In a bowl, stir together cinnamon and sugar and set that aside.
- Melt a stick of butter in another bowl and set aside as well. Now they will both be handy as soon as the doughnuts are done.
Making the doughnut hole
Now you can go buy a doughnut cutter or some other fancy finagled device (which I actually have tucked away in the dark recesses of my kitchen drawers) but I like to show y’all how to do things the simple way. I’m a big fan of not over complicating a simple matter. For that very reason, we are going to just use a plain old 20 oz bottle cap to cut the centers of our doughnuts out.
- Cut out the holes in every doughnut, reserving them to cook along with the doughnuts.
- Voila, our doughnuts are done.
Pour your oil in a skillet. You need a little less than a half inch.
Heat your oil on medium to medium high for several minutes. We want it to be hot so that our doughnuts are instantly seared when they enter it. This prevents them from absorbing too much of the oil and being soggy. However, we don’t want it too hot so that the outside gets done before the inside.
TIP: To test my oil, I put a doughnut hole in it. It should sizzle and bubble around the edges and then you know its hot enough. You may need to turn your heat down a bit after testing it with some doughnut holes to see if it is just right. Once the doughnut hole is golden, remove it and let it cool a minute before taking a bite to make sure it’s fully cooked, not gooey, in the center.
Time to cook the doughnuts!
TIP: If your skillet isn’t big enough you may have to do them in batches. By the time you have put them all in, some may already be ready to turn. It takes less than a minute for them to be ready to turn over.
This is how they look, nice and golden.
- Turn them all over and let them cook until the undersides are this way. All in all, this should take less than two minutes.
- Remove cooked doughnuts from oil and place on paper towel lined plate or a drying rack if you’re feeling fancy.
- Now do the same thing with the doughnut holes.
- Here are our cooked doughnuts, now let’s add a little bit of heaven to them!
- The doughnuts should have cooled just enough so that you can handle them but they will still be very warm.
- Pick each one up and dip both sides in melted butter…
- Then press them down into the cinnamon sugar on both sides.
- Repeat with all doughnuts and doughnut holes.
- Eat them warm. They will positively melt in your mouth, they are so good!
No one will believe you started out with canned biscuits so lets just keep that little tidbit to ourselves 😉
Doughnuts in minutes! What a fun breakfast or evening treat when family is visiting!
Ingredients
- 1 large can Grands style biscuits or your preference, just not flaky layers
- 1 Cup Sugar
- 1 1/2 Tablespoons cinnamon
- 1 stick butter melted
- Vegetable Oil For Frying
Instructions
- Pour oil into skillet to the depth of a little less than 1/2 an inch and heat on medium to medium high for about five minutes. In a bowl, melt butter. In a separate bowl, combine cinnamon and sugar.
- Using a plastic bottle cap, cut the center out of each biscuit. Drop dough into hot oil, watching carefully and turning when golden. Once doughnuts are golden on both sides, remove to paper towel lined plate. Repeat until all dough is cooked, including doughnut holes.
- Dip both sides of each doughnut into melted butter, then press both sides into cinnamon sugar mixture. Serve warm.
Nutrition
You may also like these recipes:
Quick and Easy Jelly Filled Doughnuts
Biscuit Pretzels – AMAZING Pretzels From Canned Biscuits!
I used to make these all the time honey. But I never used a cap for the holes, I just poked my finger through and made a hole. Turned out real nice too. I put the sugar mixture in brown paper lunch bag and put the hot donuts in there, give it a good shake and pull out some yummy sugar/cinna donuts.
DITTO!!! But aren’t these more prettily shaped? and who wouldn’t wanna eat the holes? 🙂 I’m thinking I will poke the hole w/the bottle cap like she did next time!
Oh good lord. I need these, thanks for this.
We don’t have canned bisquits here in Iceland, have you ever tried this from scratch? I’ll try and google a recipe 🙂
Nah, don’t change it!!
It just means you’re real like the rest of us and sometimes your brain races ahead of your hands. Or you were refereeing something with your other hand while you typed….who knows.
I like to believe I am not the only one with an insane life that’s pretty well hilarious most of the time. Thanks for helping me keep that illusion alive now and then. 🙂
Christy, I also have share this added suggestion. My favorite food is Thai, and their dessert of Thai donuts are just too yummy. Well, we’ve discovered that if you make donuts with the canned biscuits like you’ve done here, minus dipping them in the margarine & sugar at the end, and then dip them in sweetened condensed milk as you eat them, you’ve just replicated Thai donuts. Oh. My. Yum!
“1 ten count can Texas style doughnuts (or your preference, just not flaky layers)”
Notice anything here?? It made me giggle.
I think that Great Value needs to change their label to read Texas style DOUGHNUTS….they’ll sell a lot more that way, I am quite sure. ;o)
Guess what I’m making on our next lazy Saturday morning??
Which is (unfortunately) WEEKS away…..
LOL!!!! OH my gosh, you’re the first one to catch that! I think you’re right though, it would definitely sell more! Now, should I change it or not? 😉
Christy, I am so super glad you shared this delicious recipe with us beginners. I found this on Pineterst, then made them today for my girls as an after-school snack and they were so very delicious. I had to put them on my blog so that all my followers could enjoy the same yumminess my family enjoyed today!!! Thank you, thank you for your super clever wisdom!! Amy
Just a quick question: Does it make your house smell like fried food? They look amazing, and I want to eat them NOW, but I can’t abide eau de greasy restaurant. :o)
It doesn’t mine, to me it just smells like fresh doughnuts.