PUFF PASTRY CRONUTS
We’re just days away from the sweetest celebration honoring our favorite ring-shaped confection: the doughnut.
National Doughnut Day, which falls on the first Friday of June, was created in 1938 by the Salvation Army to raise funds and honor the Donut Lassies, the women who provided meals, supplies and – you guessed it – doughnuts to soldiers on the front lines during World War I.
The doughnut quickly became the simple symbol of all the Salvation Army was doing to ease the atrocities of war. And soon after, the doughnut craze took the nation by storm.
Over the decades, doughnuts have evolved in many ways, from their shape and fillings to ingredients and toppings.
But it is Dominique Ansel, the creative French pastry chef and owner of Ansel Bakery in New York, who really rocked the doughnut world. In 2013, he masterminded the cronut. It is croissant dough that is shaped and fried like a doughnut (hence the name cronut). Simple enough, eh?
Well, this culinary hybrid tastes like fried heaven and had people lined up for hours waiting to get their hands on one of the 250 cronuts made daily. The cronut even had scalpers selling the $5 cronuts for $40, and people were buying them!
Yes, they’re that good. A bite into their subtle crust reveals a web of light and flaky layers and tastes of sweet buttery deliciousness.
This simplified version of cronuts will have you on cloud nine without having to wait in line – or in an alley for a stranger to flash open a cronut-lined trench coat.
And, no, we won’t be making homemade croissant dough; there’s no rising or kneading involved (exhale). Just a box of store-bought puff pastry, an egg, cinnamon and sugar. Oh, and oil for frying.
The puff pastry dough is perfect for mimicking the croissant dough used for the original cronuts because it is full of layers of butter that expand when it hits the hot oil. That makes them puff up tall, creating multiple layers and airy pockets throughout the cronut.
This super-simple recipe breaks down to unfolding the puff pastry dough and brushing it with a beaten egg, then sprinkling on the cinnamon sugar mixture.
It is then folded back to its original form along the seams, cut into doughnut shapes and chilled before frying. Alternatively, they can be baked at 400 degrees for 22-26 minutes or until golden and puffed, though it will change the texture and flavor.
The fried cronuts are rolled in the cinnamon sugar mixture and then ready to be enjoyed – OK, devoured.
Like most doughnuts, cronuts can be rolled in sugar, dipped in glaze and/or filled with jams or pastry cream. They’re amazing with coffee or a scoop of vanilla ice cream.
And be sure to fry up the scraps, too. Believe me – you will want to savor every last piece!
PUFF PASTRY CRONUTS
INGREDIENTS:
1/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons cinnamon
Flour, for dusting
2 sheets puff pastry dough, thawed
1 egg, beaten
3 cups oil, for frying
DIRECTIONS:
In a medium bowl, combine the sugar and cinnamon; set aside.
Place a wire rack on a rimmed baking sheet; set aside.
Lightly flour a work surface and unfold one sheet of puff pastry. Using a pastry brush, brush the dough with some of the beaten egg, then lightly sprinkle with some of the cinnamon sugar mixture. Fold the puff pastry dough back up along the seams (into thirds), so it's in the same form it started from the box. Repeat with the second sheet of pastry. With the dough folded, use a 3-inch round cutter to cut out 3 donuts out of each sheet (for a total of 6 donuts). (When cutting the dough, be sure to just push down and pull straight up. Do not twist the cutter, as this can seal the edges, preventing the layers from poofing.) Then use a 1-inch round cutter to cut holes out of each donut. Place donut rings and holes on prepared wire rack, and freeze for 15 minutes.
While dough is freezing, add the oil to a large, deep saucepan and heat to 375° F over medium-high heat. Cooking in batches of 2, fry the donuts 4-6 minutes on one side, then flip and fry another 2-4 minutes. Donuts should be golden and puffed, and dough should be cooked thru.
Place cooked donuts on a paper towel-lined plate to drain briefly, and then roll them in cinnamon sugar mixture. Repeat with remaining donuts and donut holes.
Adapted from bijouxandbits.com