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Fluffy Sourdough Doughnuts

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  • Yield: 25 small doughnuts 1x

Ingredients

Scale
  • 250 g active white wheat flour sourdough starter
  • 310 g white wheat flour
  • 3 egg yolks
  • 1 tablespoon rum
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • a pinch of vanilla
  • 1/2 teaspoon of lemon juice + zest of one lemon
  • 3 tablespoons of melted butter
  • 100 g warm milk or water
  • coconut oil for frying
  • 1 70% cacao chocolate
  • ground hazelnuts, desiccated coconut and lemon zest for sprinkle

Instructions

  1. In the morning, prepare two bowls. In one, first beat 3 egg yolks then add rum, honey, vanilla, lemon juice, lemon zest and melted butter. In the second bowl, first mix warm milk and 250 g your active white wheat starter from step 1 then add the liquids from the first bowl and 310 g of flour.
  2. Mix all the ingredients well and starting kneading the dough. If you want to have really airy doughnuts, knead the dough for at least for 10 minutes, 15 is even better. I mixed mine for 15 minutes by hand.
  3. You will notice that the dough is quite sticky in the beginning, so to handle the dough, you can:
    1. wet your hands before kneading + repeat wetting few more times
    2. use slap and fold technique
  4. By the end of the kneading, your dough should be elastic, alive and should have quite a smooth surface. When you shape it into ball, you will also notice small bubbles on the surface.
  5. Move your dough to a clean and slightly greased bowl and let it rise until doubled in volume. This may take up to 3 to 5 hours, depending on how warm the place where you keep your dough is. For the bowl, I used a cylindrical shape container where I marked the dough height at the beginning so I could know exactly when my dough was ready for shaping. I transferred the container on the bottom of the warm oven – it took the dough 3 hours to rise.
  6. When the dough has doubled in volume, use your plastic dough scraper to take it out on a  non-floured working surface and shape it into a ball (having a bench knife or plastic dough scraper helps). The dough should be very alive and easy to work with.
  7. Next, take your ball of dough on a slightly floured surface. Stretch it to be approximately 1 cm /half inch thick. Use a round cookie cutter or a glass and cut out the doughnuts. Transfer each of them on a parchment paper. When your cut out a first series of doughnuts, you will be left with some dough which you simply knead one more time and cut the doughnuts again. Try not to knead the dough too long – the more you knead it, the less fluffy the doughnuts will be.
  8. Cover your doughnuts with a kitchen towel and let them rise for at least 1 (1.5 ) hour, depending on their size – the bigger the doughnut, the longer the resting/rising time. You will know your doughnut is ready, when the indent you make with your finger doesn’t come back quickly. If you let your doughnuts to rise for not enough time, you will find a big hole in the bottom.
  9. When doughnuts are risen, heat the oil. The height of the oil in the frying pan should be at least the height of three fingers. The oil is ready, when the bubbles appear when putting a handle of a wooden spoon in it.
  10. Fry each doughnut for 2-3 minutes on one side (with the lid on) and 2-3 minutes on another side (with the lead off). When baked, transfer them onto a plate lined with a napkin.
  11. Leave to cool and then dip each doughnut into melted chocolate. Sprinkle with ground hazelnut, desiccated coconut or lemon zest. You can wait for the chocolate to harden a little bit but I believe the more possible option is to eat them straight away.

Notes

  • The dough for these sourdough doughnuts was mixed in the morning, left to rise for 3 hours and the doughnuts were fried in the afternoon of the same day. Sourdough starter was mixed a night before.
  • Author: Natasha Krajnc