• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Joy the Baker
Joy the Baker
  • Cookies
  • Bread
  • Cakes
  • Pies
  • Recipes
    • All Recipes
    • Cookies
    • Birthday Cake Recipes
    • Biscuits
    • Muffins
    • Cupcakes
    • Drinks
    • Breakfast
    • Lunch
    • Dinner
    • Fruit
    • Nuts
    • Buttermilk
    • Chocolate
    • Vanilla
    • Holiday
    • Healthy
    • Gluten-Free
    • Vegan
  • Blog
    • Baking 101
    • Tips
    • Beyond the Kitchen
    • Let It Be Sunday!
    • New Orleans
  • Shop

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

September 14, 2015 by Joy the Baker 53 Comments

Jump to Recipe

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Have you heard about the latest trend?  Don’t say Kylie Jenner… don’t you dare.  

The latest trend has everything to do with fire, applied with intention and concentration to… basically anything and everything covered in granulated sugar.  

A few weeks ago we all pat ourselves on the back for Meyer Lemon Bar Brûlée.  We were a success and deserved the recognition.  This week we’re getting down and torchy  with crisp-sugar-topped, browned butter, soft and tender yeasted doughnuts.

Yea.  I mean… we all know you didn’t come here for bronzer or hair tips.  You came for doughnuts.  Let’s not beat around the bush. 

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes


Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Before we get started, it’s best to take a deep inhale and scream at the top of our lungs ‘DOOOUUUGGHHNNUUUTTS!”.  It’s a battle cry.  Lettin’ our neighbors know what’s up.  

Brûléed Doughnut Holes

The dry ingredients include all-purpose flour, sugar, salt, and a few dashes of ground cinnamon for dough flavor depth.  

Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Everyone needs a sunny Kitchen Aid mixer.  Buttercup yellow?  Too good. Kitchen dreams, right?  

Dry ingredients into the mixer fitted with a dough hook.  

Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Wet ingredients, one at a time.  

In with three egg yolks and the risen yeast mixture. 

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Butter is melted to until browned because we respect butter enough to make it as delicious as possible.  

Related:  How To Brown Butter!  

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Milk is streamed into the dough as the mixer spins on low.  

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

The dough will be soft and wet.  Not sticky, but certainly not dry.  

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

The mixer does all the work of kneading the dough this round.  The bottom of the bowl is scraped, a good dusting of flour on top, plastic wrap, and a nice warm place for the dough to rest and rise.  

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

A thoughtful hour of rise time and we’re one step closer to doughnuts! 

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Now we knead.  

Lightly floured.  Risen and soft.  We knead the dough into shape before rolling.  This is the softest, most lovely dough.  It’s my favorite yeasted dough.  Eggs and browned butter, too easy. 

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

The soft dough is rolled to somewhere between 1/2-inch to 1-inch thick.  

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

A 1 1/2-inch round biscuit cutter to make our doughnut rounds.  

The dough is left to rise for about 30 minutes while a few inches of canola oil heat in a medium saucepan.  

Every time I make doughnuts I insist that you make this fry thermometer a part of your kitchen arsenal.  I’m bossy.  It’s important to know that our oil is at 350 degrees F to make for golden, perfectly cooked doughnut rounds.   

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

As soon as the doughnuts come out of the fryer, they’re smothered in granulated sugar.  The hot oil will make the sugar stick, hence… fryer to the sugar.  

This would be a perfectly reasonable place to pause, look over your shoulder, and shove as many of these doughnut bites into your mouth as possible.  

But why would we stop at this reasonable place when we own a blow torch! 

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Sugar torching.  

A quality pastime.  

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

Now would be a good time to call a friend and brew some coffee.  

Life is short and these are doughnuts.  Also… browned butter + brûlée!  

Someone stop the world.  (That’s a Maxwell song… not sorry.)

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

If your instinct is to add a cream filling to these doughnuts, thus making them Creme Brûlée Doughnuts… you’re a genius.  Get on it.  

Photos with and by Jon Melendez.

Print
clock clock iconcutlery cutlery iconflag flag iconfolder folder iconinstagram instagram iconpinterest pinterest iconfacebook facebook iconprint print iconsquares squares iconheart heart iconheart solid heart solid icon

Brown Butter Brûléed Doughnut Holes

  • Author: Joy the Baker
  • Prep Time: 105
  • Cook Time: 10
  • Total Time: 1 hour 55 minutes
  • Yield: 20 1x
Pin Recipe
Print Recipe

Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 (1/4-oz) package active dry yeast (2 1/2 teaspoons)
  • 2 tablespoons warm water (105–115°F)
  • pinch of sugar
  • 3 1/4 to 3 3/4 cups all-purpose flour plus additional for sprinkling and rolling out dough
  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 cup whole milk, at room temperature
  • 1/4 cup + 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, melted until browned and cooled slightly
  • 3 large egg yolks
  • About 10 cups vegetable oil for deep frying
  • 2–4 cups granulated sugar for rolling and torching

Instructions

  1. Stir together yeast, warm water, and pinch of sugar in a small bowl until yeast is dissolved. Let stand until foamy, about 5 minutes. (If yeast doesn’t foam, discard and start over with new yeast.)
  2. In the bowl of an electric stand mixer with a dough hook attachment, combie flour (3 1/4 cups), milk, butter, yolks, sugar, salt, cinnamon, and yeast mixture. I like to stir the mixture by hand, with a spatula, to loosely incorporate before transferring to the stand mixer to beat with the dough hook.
  3. Beat at low speed on the mixer with the dough hook until a soft dough forms, about 3 minutes. Add a bit more flour if the dough seems too wet. It will tend to stick to the sides of the bowl a bit, but add flour it it seems overly wet and soft. Increase speed to medium and beat 5 minutes more.
  4. Scrape dough down side of bowl (all around) into center, then sprinkle lightly with flour (to keep a crust from forming). Cover bowl with plastic wrap and a clean kitchen towel (not terry cloth) and let dough rise in a draft-free place at warm room temperature until doubled in bulk, 1 1/2 to 2 hours. (Alternatively, let dough rise in bowl in refrigerator 8 to 12 hours and make fresh doughnuts in the morning.)
  5. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface and roll out with a lightly floured rolling pin into a roughly 12-inch round (1/2 inch thick). Cut out as many rounds as possible with 1 1/2-inch cutter and transfer doughnuts to a lightly floured large baking sheet. Cover doughnuts with a clean kitchen towel and let rise in a draft-free place at warm room temperature until slightly puffed, about 30 minutes (45 minutes if dough was cold when cutting out doughnuts). Do not reroll scraps. They tend to get tough.
  6. While the doughnut rounds rise, prepare your frying ingredients. Begin to heat your oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Spread sugar on a rimmed baking sheet for after the doughnuts have been fried.
  7. Heat 2 1/2 inches oil in a deep 4-quart heavy pot until it registers 350°F on thermometer. A thermometer is key for this recipe. You need to know just how hot your oil is before the doughnuts fry. Fry doughnuts, 3 at a time, turning occasionally with a wire or mesh skimmer or a slotted spoon, until puffed and golden brown, about 2 minutes per batch (1 minute per side). Transfer the freshly fried, hot doughnuts to the sugar and immediately toss to coat. Coating the doughnuts in sugar works best just out of the fryer so the sugar can stick to the hot oil. Remove from the sugar and allow to rest on a cooling rack before torching.
  8. Return oil to 350°F between batches.
  9. Once the doughnuts are all fried and generously coated in granulated sugar, using a kitchen torch to brûlée the tops of the doughnuts. Allow to cool and set before serving.
  10. Doughnuts are best enjoy the day they’re fried.

Did you make this recipe?

Share a photo and tag us — we can't wait to see what you've made!

Previous PostNext Post

Filed Under: Bread, Breakfast, Most Polular Block Two, Recipes

Previous Post: «
Next Post: What Makes A Great Cookbook? »

Reader Interactions

All Comments
I Made This
Questions
  1. Ellie Peck

    May 14, 2017 at 9:53 am

    Oh my word – me and my MAJ just made these – and used up the extra bits from cutting out too, as our own version of churros. All worked as per recipe and taste DELICIOUS! We have had to move away from the kitchen so we don’t eat them all in one go! I was scared about frying them but it was so easy! We altered ours to cinnamon sugar after too which cut through the sugar a tiny bit and reminded me of child hood chelsea buns we have in the UK. Thanks again Joy!

    Reply
  2. Jessie

    May 12, 2017 at 5:45 pm

    dear sweet lord, oh my YES!

    Reply
  3. Amber Renee

    May 3, 2016 at 1:01 pm

    OH MY GOSH. I love bruleed anything. Especially donuts. mmmm!

    I’m also a blogger. I blog about art/lifestyle and diy mostly. I was searching for beautiful style blogs that I enjoy so that I can expand my blog community. <3

    I'm looking for any blog-community building advice you could offer as well! I think it's more tough when one has their own domain; it's standalone from the community. I've heard of bloggers promoting content through blog listings like bloglovin', as well as sites where you can earn promotional opportunities for having good content content like Advowire (https://advowire.com//users/profile/new?referral_code=AW36707). Do you use any of these sites to promote content or to collaborate with other bloggers? Do you know of other sites/resources you'd like to recommend?

    Thank you so much for reading! Hope to hear from you. xox

    Reply
  4. Kathryn @ Hungry Little Bear

    April 8, 2016 at 5:16 am

    Oh my gosh these look divine! Love the bruleed style on top. Look at that drippy carmelisation! Oh gosh I need these in my life.

    Reply
  5. debraneedles

    April 6, 2016 at 5:54 am

    I never knew I would want a blow torch for my kitchen. I do now. Can I be the friend that comes over for coffee and doughnuts??? Puh-leeeeease???

    Reply
  6. Acacia

    April 4, 2016 at 1:15 pm

    I am now extremely hungry. I think I am going to try this this weekend. My family loves anything and everything donuts and these look soooooooo delicious.

    Reply
  7. vintagekittycom

    March 27, 2016 at 10:32 pm

    Doughnuts are my weakness! These are going to make me fall off the wagon! They look so so, irresistibly good!

    Reply
« Older Comments

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe rating ★☆ ★☆ ★☆ ★☆ ★☆

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS IN Bread

jambalaya buttermilk biscuits in a row
Smoked Sausage Jambalaya Buttermilk Biscuits

These mile-high jambalaya buttermilk biscuits are stacked with all the savory flavors of New Orleans’ most comforting rice dish.  These tender biscuits are absolutely stacked with Zatarain’s Cajun-Style Smoked Sausage, onions, peppers, and roasted tomatoes. We’re taking big bites of Mardi Gras this year – here’s how! Friends, we have a bonafide tradition in the…

Read More

inside of warm cinnamon roll on plate
How To Make The Best Single Serve Cinnamon Roll

Micro batch baking – the invitation is to get all the way into it with me!  This is all very Kristin Wiig  making herself a single, sad cupcake in the movie Bridesmaids, save for the fact that there is absolutely zero sadness in me eating a single cinnamon roll over the kitchen sink in my…

Read More

Orange roll on a plate with a fork.
Christmas Morning Orange Rolls

Think of tender breakfast rolls and cinnamon rolls without the cinnamon, scented with heavenly orange and just the right amount of warming nutmeg and ginger. Honestly if cinnamon rolls disappeared from the world, we’d all be just fine – these orange rolls hit the spot. I’m headed back to Los Angeles for the Christmas weekend…

Read More

Primary Sidebar

Fresh baked emails, delivered to your inbox

Jump to Recipe

Receive recipes from Joy the Baker and updates on events at The Bakehouse.

HI! I’M JOY!

Jump to Recipe

Welcome! This has been my little corner of the internet since 2008!

I’m a baker, photographer, cookbook author and teacher.  I live laugh love in New Orleans. 

MORE ABOUT JOY AND THE TEAM

BOOKS + Magazines

Jump to Recipe

JOY THE BAKER 2022 SUMMER MAGAZINE

JOY THE BAKER 2021 HOLIDAY MAGAZINE

JOY THE BAKER 2020 HOLIDAY MAGAZINE

HOMEMADE DECADENCE

OVER EASY: SWEET AND SAVORY RECIPES FOR LEISURELY DAYS COOKBOOK

JOY THE BAKER COOKBOOK

Jump to Recipe
joy the baker on facebook joy the baker on twitter pinterest-social instagram-socialbloglovin-social

JOY @ WILLIAMS SONOMA

Jump to Recipe

SHOP THE CAKE LINE OF CAKE MIXES!

DRAKE ON CAKE

Jump to Recipe

Passionate from miles away since 2015.

Check it out on Instagram

Drake on cake instagram.

 

BREADS YOU’LL LOVE

jambalaya buttermilk biscuits in a row

Smoked Sausage Jambalaya Buttermilk Biscuits

inside of warm cinnamon roll on plate

How To Make The Best Single Serve Cinnamon Roll

Orange roll on a plate with a fork.

Christmas Morning Orange Rolls

LET’S MAKE COOKIES!

a stack of white chocolate macadamia nut cookies with a bite taken out of the top one with milk

Classic White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies

wider shot of lemon bars stacked on a plate with a bite taken out of one lemon bar

My Favorite Classic Lemon Bars Recipe

completed recipe close up shot of a blondie so the toasted almonds, chocolate chips, and sea salt can be seen

My Best Classic Blondie Recipe

Footer

Instagram

joythebaker

📚Baker and author of books and magazines
🎂Creator @drakeoncake
💁🏻‍♀️Classes with me @thebakehousenola
🍰 Products with @williamssonoma

joythebaker
🍓🌼 Pan Dulce is the best way to bake spring! 🍓🌼 Pan Dulce is the best way to bake spring! Full recipe linked in the @joythebaker bio! Xo
Second coffee: the perfect way to re-start the day Second coffee: the perfect way to re-start the day. 
✨Beignet Café au Lait✨⁣
⁣1/3 cup sweetened condensed milk⁣⁣
Splash of vanilla extract⁣⁣
½ cup heavy cream, whipped to stiff peaks⁣⁣
2 cups fresh brewed strong coffee⁣⁣
½ cup toasted cinnamon cereal, lightly crushed⁣⁣
Powdered sugar for topping⁣⁣
⁣⁣
Place sweetened condensed milk and vanilla in a small bowl. Add half of the whipped cream and fold to combine.  Add the remaining half and fold until you have a fluffy sweet cream. ⁣⁣
⁣⁣
Divide brewed coffee between two mugs. Spoon dream on top.  Sprinkle cinnamon cereal between the cups.  Dust with powdered sugar and enjoy immediately.
Life Skill No. 458: How to Make 1️⃣2️⃣ Cup Life Skill No. 458: How to Make 1️⃣2️⃣ Cupcakes with just 1️⃣ Stick of Butter⁣
⁣
Full recipe linked in my bio! xo
Someone call @foodnetwork because Dad and I need a Someone call @foodnetwork because Dad and I need a baking show stat. Here’s our very best chocolate chip cookies and all the little tips that make them perfection. ✨🍪 Find the full recipe linked in the profile!
We’re baking the classics on Joy the Baker this We’re baking the classics on Joy the Baker this month and up next, my very favorite Lemon Bar recipe with fresh lemon juice and the tiniest hint of coriander. ⁣🍋🌼✨
⁣
Find the full recipe linked in the profile and bust out the white chocolate and macadamia nuts for next week’s bake! ⁣
⁣
#lemonbars #easybaking #bakedfromscratch #joythebaker
Day in the Life: out in the woods writing a little Day in the Life: out in the woods writing a little cookbook about camp food. 💖🏕️🙋🏻‍♀️
Load More... Follow on Instagram

Copyright © 2023 · Joy the Baker
All rights reserved. Violators will be whupped and sent to bed with no dessert · Privacy Policy

Scroll Up