Fried Buttermilk Doughnuts
These buttermilk doughnuts are super fluffy, made with a yeast-based, lightly enriched dough that’s easy to work with and with great flavor. They’re coated generously in cinnamon sugar or with a sweet vanilla glaze.
This recipe is best made over two days, so the dough can proof overnight in the refrigerator for the best flavor.
- Enriched dough. The soft dough is enriched with buttermilk, butter, and egg. This gives great flavor and texture. The acidity in the buttermilk helps create a more tender doughnut.
- Yeast-based. It’s a yeast-based dough so it’s lovely and light when fried.
- Cinnamon-sugar coating or a simple glaze. Cinnamon sugar is a classic topping and a perfect match for these doughnuts. If you want a sweet glaze instead, you could do a vanilla glaze or chocolate glaze too. Or, dust them in powdered sugar!
- Buttermilk – make your own buttermilk or store-bought. This is rich in flavor. Its acidity adds tenderness to baked goods, and its tang adds flavor. If you’ve got no buttermilk, just use regular milk (like in my basic doughnut dough recipe.)
Equipment
- Stand mixer. The dough is easiest to make in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook attachment. However, it can be made by hand too.
- Doughnut cutter. The shapes used are up to you. You can buy a special cutter, biscuit cutters, a large mason jar band or similar, and a really small jar lid or band for the middle hole. You can also just cut big doughnut circles without a middle hole. These will take a little longer to cook. See these lemon curd donuts for example.
- A deep fryer or large pot and candy thermometer. For deep frying. If you’re not using a deep fryer (which usually comes with a thermometer) you’ll need a candy thermometer for this. One that can handle reading at a high temperature.
Here’s how it’s done
- Start with proofing your yeast in a stand mixer bowl, or large mixing bowl.
- Add all the remaining dough ingredients and mix into a dough.
- Keep mixing until the dough is smooth and strong and pulls cleanly away from the sides of the bowl.
Kneading by hand
Use a wooden spoon or fork and mix all the dough ingredients in a medium bowl until they form a shaggy dough ball. Once it forms a dough ball, pull it onto a lightly floured surface and knead by hand for around 10-15 minutes until it becomes a strong and smooth dough. If you need a break, take it. The dough responds well to resting time.
- Then, cover the bowl tightly and place it in the refrigerator for 4 to 24 hours. The longer it’s left, the more flavor the donuts will have. If you want to skip the cold-proof, let the dough double at room temperature (around 1- 1 1/2 hours). Then, continue with the shaping.
Shaping
- Then it’s time to roll the dough and shape it. I like to do either in a traditional doughnut shape,
- or as a circle (bomboloni-style). Then let them rise until they’ve puffed.
Then it’s time to fry them! The oil in the pan should be at least 3 inches of oil deep.
Don’t let the oil get too hot or too cool. A food thermometer is a great tool to gauge the temperature
- After cooking, toss in cinnamon-sugar,
- or while the doughnuts are slightly warm, coat in vanilla glaze.
Serving and storing
They are best enjoyed on the day they are fried. Leftover buttermilk doughnuts can be stored once cooled in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days.
If you made bomboloni-style doughnuts, they are so good when filled! You can fill them with lemon curd, caramel sauce, or vanilla pastry cream or blueberry filling.
Fried Buttermilk Doughnuts
Ingredients
Dough
- 1 ½ teaspoons instant yeast or active dried yeast
- 25 g granulated sugar
- 230 g buttermilk or use whole milk, lukewarm
- 405 g all-purpose flour
- 42 g unsalted butter melted
- 1 large egg
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
Frying
- 1-2 quarts neutral oil – enough to fill the pot around 3″ deep.
Cinnamon topping (option 1)
- 200 g granulated sugar
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
Vanilla glaze (option 2)
- 120 g powdered sugar
- 3-4 Tablespoons milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Add the warm buttermilk and stir in the yeast and sugar to the stand mixer bowl fitted with a dough hook. If using active dry yeast, let this sit for 5-10 minutes until foamy.
- Add the remaining dough ingredients and fit the mixer with a dough hook. Turn the mixer on low and combine until it forms a thick but slightly sticky dough. Once combined, keep mixing on medium speed for 8-10 minutes until the dough is smooth, glossy, and elastic.
- Kneading by hand – Use a wooden spoon or fork and mix all the dough ingredients in a medium bowl until they form a shaggy dough ball. Once it forms a dough ball, pull it onto a floured surface and knead by hand for around 10-15 minutes until it becomes a strong and smooth dough. If you need a break, take it. The dough responds well to resting time.
- Place the dough ball in a lightly greased large bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a lid and refrigerate for 4 to 24 hours. The longer it’s left, the more flavor they will have. If you want to skip the cold-proof, let the dough double at room temperature (around 1- 1 1/2 hours). Then, continue with the shaping.
Shaping
- Punch the dough down and pull it from the bowl onto a floured work surface or parchment paper.
- Using a rolling pin, roll the dough into a ½ inch / 1.3cm thick square. Use a doughnut cutter or or a jar lid or glass to cut out the shapes.
- Place the shaped doughnuts on parchment paper. Use kitchen scissors to cut around each so that each doughnut is sitting on an individual piece of parchment. The doughnuts can now be transported into the oil on parchment paper, which makes transferring them easier. If you don't have parchment paper, you can transfer the dougnuts without it.
- Any remaining dough can be rolled out and cut again. Bombolini-style doughnuts – You can also simply cut them as circles and use a large jar lid or cookie cutter to cut circles of 3.5 inches/9 cm in diameter without a hole in the middle. These will be cooked slightly longer and at a lower temperature than those with a dougnut hole removed from the middle.
- Leave the doughnuts to rise slightly for around 30-45 minutes until they have puffed a bit. This timing is dependent on room temperature – the warmer the room, the faster they’ll rise.
- When they have risen, pour the frying oil into a deep fryer or pot and heat it to 356°F/180°C. The oil in the pan should be at least 3 inches deep. Note- if your doughnuts were cut bomboloni-style, your oil should be less hot, 340°F / 171°C as they will take longer to cook in the middle so you don't want them going brown too fast on the outside.
- When the oil is hot, fry the doughnuts in it for 2-3 minutes, around 60-90 seconds per side. Use tongs to remove the pieces of parchment paper from the oil. It will be much less for the smaller donut holes. Bomboloni-style donuts will need around 2 minutes on each side. Don't add too many at a time because they will lower the oil temperature. If it drops too much your donuts won't fry well and will absorb too much oil. Don't let the temperature surpass 375°F / 190C.
- After frying, use a slotted spoon to remove the doughnuts from the oil, then place them on paper towels to drain.
Topping
- If using a cinnamon topping, combine the granulated sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl.
- Add the doughnuts into the sugar bowl and coat them on all sides.
- If you are glazing them in a bowl, combine powdered sugar and vanilla enough to create a thick but pourable glaze. When the doughnuts come from the oil, place them on paper towels to soak up excess oil. Let them cool on a cooling rack for 5 minutes, then dip the still-warm donuts into the glaze. Let them dry on the rack.