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!
It’s been a month of Sundays since I made doughnuts. I plan on making these very soon.
What is the best substitute for canned biscuit and what is the measurement In our place there is no canned biscuit. Please, I’m dying to make this doughnut.
Any biscuit recipe will work, the key is to make sure your oil is hot so you will just have to experiment with that. Here is a link to my buttermilk biscuit recipe: https://southernplatecom.bigscoots-staging.com/2009/05/buttermilk-biscuits-tutorial.html
Made these over a campfire at church camp years ago. They’re also good with powdered sugar or chocolate syrup.
Are you going to being signing your book at the Swiss Pantry Saturday? I don’t live far from there!
Hey! I am not entirely sure I’ll get to go and if I do, it will be one of those days where we leave when we are ready and get there when we get there, lol. I’m afraid with my family that is very unpredictable. We do enjoy meandering on our Saturdays out.:) So I don’t know what time I’ll get there or how long it will take us to shop. I’m always happy to sign anything if I run into you but I don’t want you to have to stake out Swiss Pantry (but they would feed ya well!). However, I do have some more book plates left if you’d like to send in for some!
I have those same dishes!!! My husband of 53 years and counting made those when we first married. Love them. I always enjoy your recipes!!
I hope you love your dishes as much as I love mine, they just make me happy with all the colors 🙂
My Mom made this for us growing up and I still making them. I love the food that my Mom and Grandma taught me. Those kind of memories are irreplaceable. Using the things we raised and didn’t have to buy so much to make our hearts and stomachs full.
Those memories sure are irreplaceable!!!
Had to get up and make these. I usually do powdered sugar on top. Delicious either way. Thank you for all your recipes. I feel like I can cook for my family.
Doing Powdered Sugar ones is it the same process melted butter then powdered sugar if not how do you make yours please.
I don’t make powdered sugar ones so I can’t tell you from personal experience but I do believe I would forego the melted butter and just try dipping them in powdered sugar as the melted butter would form a sort of glue when mixed with powdered. 🙂