GBBO: Super easy boozy chocolate orange doughnut recipe (2024)

Last night’s quarter final episode of The Great British Bake Off focused its rolling pins on advanced dough making (no doubt an actual college course somewhere).

The five remaining bakers took on doughnuts for their showstopper bake with varying degrees of success.

Doughnuts don’t have to be difficult, in fact they really are pretty simple and I’ve got a cheat’s version here that will have your friends all begging for the recipe.

I played around with a few dough versions until I found the perfect one and this dough may seem quite wet but it makes the fluffiest doughnuts. You can make all of these doughnuts chocolate orange flavour or split the filling mixture and have half of them as plain vanilla custard as I did.

MORE : The Great British Bake Off 2014, episode 8: A controversial quarter final but who went home?

Super easy boozy chocolate orange doughnuts:

  • 300g strong white bread flour
  • zest of 1 orange, finely grated
  • 50g vanilla caster sugar (plus extra for dredging)
  • 1 tsp fine sea salt
  • 15g fresh yeast, crumbled (ask at your local supermarket bakery, alternatively use 7g fast action dried yeast)
  • 2 medium eggs
  • 100ml whole milk
  • 60g unsalted butter, diced and at room temperature
  • 2L vegetable/sunflower oil for frying

For the chocolate orange filling:(use half the amount if only making half chocolate orange flavour)

  • 500g pot fresh custard (go for the luxury versions with vanilla seeds, if you want to leave half the doughnuts plain then just use half of the custard as it comes.)
  • 200g good quality dark chocolate, broken into small pieces (I used Green & Blacks Blood Orange flavour, go for a chocolate with no big bits in as they will clog up your piping nozzle)
  • 1 tablespoon of Cointreau (or1 capful orange blossom water)

1: Put all your dough ingredients, except the butter, into the bowl of a mixer with the beater attachment fitted and beat on medium speed for about 8 minutes.

2: Very gradually add the butter waiting for each piece to be fully incorporated before adding the next. Once all incorporated beat on high speed for five minutes then cover the bowl with cling film and leave to rise for 2 hours or until it has doubled in size.

MORE : Great British Bake Off recipe: The best loaf of bread you will ever make (seriously)

3: Turn the dough out onto a well floured surface, it will be quite sticky. Flour your hands and using a sharp knife divide the mixture into roughly equal pieces.

GBBO: Super easy boozy chocolate orange doughnut recipe (1)

4: Gently pull the edges of each piece underneath to form a ball then carefully roll the ball under the palm of your hand, it doesn’t have to be perfect, it will be quite sticky so make sure your hands and work surface are well floured. Place each ball on a very well floured baking tray making sure you leave plenty of room around each one as they will spread out during the prove.

5: Flour the tops and cover lightly with cling film, leave for a couple of hours.

6: Heat your oil to 160-170C using either a deep fat fryer or large saucepan with a thermometer in it, I use a saucepan and keep taking it off the heat during cooking to maintain that temperature range. Fry your doughnuts about 2 or 3 at a time depending on the size of the fryer, have a digital timer ready and allow them to cook for just 2 minutes on each side. Remove from the oil and drain on kitchen towel before dredging and rolling in the caster sugar whilst still warm.

MORE : Great British Bake Off recipe: Oozing salted caramel spider cake

7: Once all your doughnuts are done and cooling, make your filling. If you want to have some plain vanilla custard then just use half of the custard mixture for the chocolate filling otherwise put the custard and chocolate into a saucepan and heat gently whilst stirring, once the chocolate has melted stir in the Cointreau then leave to cool a bit before transferring into an icing syringe (I bought 3 plastic squeezy syringes from Sainsburys for £5).

GBBO: Super easy boozy chocolate orange doughnut recipe (2)

8: Once everything is cool use a skewer or chopstick to make a hole around the pale middle ring of each doughnut and fill with some custard. These definitely need to be eaten the day you make them and the fresher the better.

GBBO: Super easy boozy chocolate orange doughnut recipe (2024)

FAQs

Can I use baking powder and yeast for doughnut? ›

Yes, you can. “Cake” doughnuts are made from a dough that uses baking powder or baking soda - like a scone or biscuit dough does. I've made sourdough donuts that did not have added active dry yeast in them, but did have baking soda as an additional leavening agent with the sourdough starter itself. They were delicious!

Why are my baked donuts chewy? ›

The key to good baked donuts is to: NOT overmix the batter. This is similar to making muffins. Overmixing will create gluten which creates a tough, chewy donut and not a light fluffy one.

Are Krispy Kreme donuts yeast or cake? ›

If you're eating a jelly- or a cream-filled doughnut, you are eating a yeast doughnut. Of course, the pinnacle of the yeast doughnut variety is the Original Glazed made by Krispy Kreme (more below). Cake doughnuts, on the other hand, are denser—dare we say, cakier—and better for dunking in your coffee.

What is the secret for soft doughnuts? ›

There's only one way to make doughnuts even softer and fluffier and that is by scalding some of the flour. Scalding is a technique used to not only make bread softer, but also to make it stay soft for longer. You can use it for pretty much any recipe you like.

How does Krispy Kreme make their donuts so fluffy? ›

A batch of original glazed starts with Krispy Kreme doughnut mix, water and yeast, the same single-cell fungi used to make bread rise. The yeast is what makes the original glazed so light -- it puffs the dough up with air, so it's not dense like a cake doughnut (more on this later).

What is the best flour for donuts? ›

Use real cake flour – not DIY cake flour!

DIY substitutions don't really cut it, and AP flour will not create doughnuts with that same soft texture. Also, bleached cake flour will work best. Unbleached (like King Arthur Baking) won't absorb as much moisture, and you may end up with doughnuts that crumble while frying.

Can you add baking powder and yeast? ›

A small amount of I'm Free Baking Powder can be added to any bread recipe that contains yeast too. This gives a final boost to the dough to ensure a more consistent loaf.

Can I use baking powder in doughnuts? ›

Now, Cake Doughnuts get their rise, not from yeast, but from baking powder which makes them pretty quick and easy to make. The batter is similar to a sponge cake batter, and once made, cover and let sit at room temperature until firm enough to roll (about 30 minutes).

Can I use dry yeast and baking powder? ›

No. Yeast is a living fungus that works through biological processes that take time. It digests carbohydrates to produce enzymes, CO2, and alcohol. Baking powder is a combination of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) and an acid, usually tartaric acid.

Is baking powder good for doughnuts? ›

Like a lot of recipes baking powder helps the mix rise. Doughnuts are no exception. Baking powder helps it become nice and fluffy.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jerrold Considine

Last Updated:

Views: 6041

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jerrold Considine

Birthday: 1993-11-03

Address: Suite 447 3463 Marybelle Circles, New Marlin, AL 20765

Phone: +5816749283868

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Air sports, Sand art, Electronics, LARPing, Baseball, Book restoration, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Jerrold Considine, I am a combative, cheerful, encouraging, happy, enthusiastic, funny, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.