Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (2024)

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Classic Cake Donutsmight just be the MOST satisfying thing you could make for a sweet weekend breakfast! Dress them up with some sprinkles or just go for a simple vanilla glaze – the choice is yours! But I really don’t know how you’ll choose because any way you make these donuts, you’re gonna love ’em so much!

Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (1)

Donuts – or do you spell them doughnuts? – were never a big deal to me growing up. Well, scratch that. Sorry.

Because we so rarely ever ate doughnuts, they were a HUGE thing to me and my brother as kids. But they certainly were a special occasion treat, like pool days at our friend Jarrod’s house.

Dude, those were the days!

We literally almost burst at the seams with excitement on those days – both about getting to swim for the day and about the Munchkins that taunted us sitting on my unbuckled lap…in the front seat of mom’s car.

Hey, it was the 80s – what can you do?

Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (2)

These days, as an adult, I won’t lie.

I still get pretty excited about both of these things. Pool swimming, chlorine and all, still rocks my adult world and donuts still send a thrill down my spine.

A few years ago Kyle and I found a nearby old-fashioned diner that sells the best (really, the best) donuts around.

We’re both early birds so getting up at the crack of dawn to get warm, fresh donuts a few times a year is never an issue and it makes for a fantastic start to a Sunday.

Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (3)

Homemade Donuts

Anyway, I’ve been wanting to make donuts like our favorite diner cake donuts at home for ages, and these were pretty spot-on to our favorites.

Once the dough hits the hot oil, it puffs up and creates this fantastic crunchy exterior while still keeping the inside soft and light.

How To Dress Up Your Donuts

There are so many ways to do this, isn’t there? Here are a few of our favorites:

Rolled in cinnamon-sugar right out of the fryer? Absolute perfection.

Draped in vanilla glaze? Not so horrible either.

Dunked in chocolate glaze then coated in toasted coconut? Sweet heavens!

Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (4)

These donuts are without a doubt a special occasion treat and being that they take about 2 hours to make, I can’t see us making them often. But when that homemade donut hankering hits again, we’ll be ready!

Maybe even for the pool days that lie ahead of us this summer.

Travel note: Seriously, if you traveling I-84 through Connecticut, get off at exit 15, drive north on Rt. 67/6 into Woodbury (about 3.5 miles) and stop at Dottie’s Diner on the right. It’s a light blue building at the end of a short row of stores. Freaking.amazing.doughnuts.

Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (5)

Classic Cake Donuts

Yield: 8 to 16, depending on the size of your donut cutter

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 20 minutes

Inactive Time: 1 hour

Total Time: 1 hour 40 minutes

Cake donuts are one of those things you never think to make at home but then you do and your whole world changes.

Ingredients

For the doughnuts:

  • 2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
  • ⅓ cup granulated sugar
  • 1 tbsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 large egg, lightly beaten
  • 5 tbsp unsalted butter, melted and cooled
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 6 to 8 cups vegetable oil for frying

For the cinnamon-sugar mixture:

  • ¼ cup granulated sugar
  • ¾ tsp cinnamon

For the chocolate glaze:

  • 2 oz semi-sweet chocolate, finely chopped
  • ¼ cup half-and-half
  • 1 cup confectioners' sugar, sifted

For the vanilla glaze:

  • 1 ½ cups confectioners' sugar, sifted
  • ¼ cup half-and-half, plus extra if needed
  • ⅛ tsp pure vanilla extract

Topping ideas:

  • Sprinkles/jimmies/shots in various colors
  • Toasted coconut
  • Mini chocolate chips
  • Crushed up candy bars

Instructions

  1. To make the dough: Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt together in a large bowl. In a 2-cup glass measuring cup, whisk the milk, egg, butter, and vanilla together. Pour the wet ingredients over the dry ingredients and mix them together with a rubber spatula only until just combined. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour.
  2. To make the coating and glazes:
  3. For the cinnamon-sugar coating: Mix the sugar and cinnamon together in a medium bowl until well-combined.
  4. For the chocolate glaze: Place the chocolate in a medium bowl. Heat the half-and-half until simmering, pour it over the chocolate and stir until the chocolate melts. Slowly whisk the sugar into the chocolate until completely incorporated.
  5. For the vanilla glaze: Whisk the sugar, half-and-half, and vanilla together in a medium bowl until well-combined and no lumps of sugar remain. Add extra half-and-half by the teaspoon until the glaze reaches your desired consistency.
  6. To fry the donuts: Heat the oil in a large Dutch oven or wide stock pot over medium-high heat.
  7. Transfer the dough to a well-floured work surface and roll the dough out to ½- to ¾-inch thickness. Using the cutter of your choice, cut the dough into rounds then pop out the centers of the rounds with a smaller cutter or large round pastry tip.
  8. Once the oil has reached 365° F (use a candy thermometer for this that attaches to the side of the pot), gently lower 3 or 4 of the donut shapes into the oil. They should sink then rise to the top. The oil temperature will likely drop so you'll need to turn the heat up a little in order to keep the temperature up - keep an eye on it - you want to maintain the oil temperature around 365° F. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes per side until they are puffed up and deep golden brown. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the donuts to a paper towel-lined baking sheet to drain. Repeat with remaining dough.
  9. As soon as you can safely handle the doughnuts, roll some of the donuts in the cinnamon-sugar mixture - the coating sticks better when the doughnuts are still really warm. Allow the other donuts to cool for a few extra minutes before glazing with the chocolate and vanilla glazes.
  10. Keep leftover donuts covered at room temperature. They will last no more than a day if they aren't all eaten first.

Notes

To cut the dough for these donuts, any round cutter will work - biscuit or cookie cutters are perfect. In a pinch, you could also use a glass or just cut them out by hand with a knife. If you don't have a donut cutter, you'll also need something to cut out the centers and a large round pastry tip works great for this. We got 8 really big donuts from this recipe and would likely make them smaller the next time as they were almost overwhelmingly large.

adapted from allrecipes.com via How Sweet Eats | coating/glazes adapted from Annie's Eats

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Classic Homemade Cake Donuts Recipe | Smells Like Home (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between a cake donut and a regular donut? ›

The Obvious Difference

Yeast doughnuts, as the name clearly spells out, are made from dough leavened with yeast (think brioche), whereas cake doughnuts are traditionally made from a kind of cake batter that uses a chemical leavener (i.e. baking powder or baking soda).

How are cake donuts made in a bakery? ›

They are made from a cake batter that is chemically-leavened and fried to develop its traditional taste and aroma. Given their formulation and processing, cake donuts are one of the most challenging bakery products to manufacture.

What makes an old-fashioned doughnut? ›

It is typically deep-fried, and may be deep fried at a lower temperature compared to other doughnut styles, having a crunchier texture compared to other cake doughnut styles. Frying at a lower temperature contributes to its rough, cracked texture.

Why do cake donuts taste different? ›

Cake doughnuts have a richer flavor that comes from the butter, eggs, and sugar used in the batter. They are typically sweeter than glazed doughnuts. Glazed doughnuts have a light and airy texture with a slightly chewy bite. The air pockets in the dough give them a fluffy and cloud-like feel.

What is the difference between old fashioned and cake donuts? ›

Cake doughnuts, lacking that honeycomb structure of big yeast bubbles, are often (but not always) smaller, with a puckered little hole. A subset, the old-fashioned doughnut, always has a cracked, craggy surface, and in the most classic versions the sides splay out like the petals of a flower.

Should donuts be baked or fried? ›

While many prefer the light and crispy texture of a fried donut, leaving the deep fryer in the cabinet and baking your cake donuts instead makes for healthier, less oily donuts. It's also safer and easier to clean up, given that you don't have to deal with lots of hot oil.

What is the best oil to fry cake donuts in? ›

Vegetable oil and canola oil are both very good in this respect. The most important thing is to use the same oil for the same kinds of foods, since oil readily absorbs flavours and aromas. If you don't want donuts that taste like fish or French fries, change the oil in your fryer regularly!

Why are my cake donuts tough? ›

The most important things are: Correct mixing - kneading of the dough. It needs to be thoroughly kneaded but not over-kneaded or they will be tough. Under-kneaded dough will produce donuts that flatten out instead of get taller when they are proofed.

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.

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 a classic doughnut? ›

Classics entail a deep-fried dough covered in a sweet and sugary glaze or chewy, yeasty donut injected with jelly or cream.

What are cake donuts made of? ›

Cake doughnuts are made with all-purpose flour, granulated sugar, milk, baking powder, salt, eggs, shortening, and, depending on the flavor, spices like nutmeg and cinnamon. Look familiar? All those ingredients are also in a basic vanilla cake.

Is cake flour better for doughnuts? ›

Bread flour can also work well for fried donuts, and cake flour is the best bet if you'd like to try your hand at making cake doughnuts.

Do cake donuts need yeast? ›

While yeast is the leavening agent in yeast doughnuts, cake doughnuts rely on baking powder. Cake doughnuts are typically made with a mixture of butter, sugar, eggs, flour and baking powder.

Are Krispy Kreme donuts cake donuts? ›

Yeast, aka raised (because the dough is raised) donuts, are your classic glazed donut ― the kind you get from Krispy Kreme. A yeast donut is made with a yeast dough. It's cut out into a shape before being fried to golden, dough-y perfection.

What donuts are cake donuts? ›

Cake doughnuts get their rise from baking powder instead of yeast, so they have some more heft to them and are slightly crunchy, but still soft and satisfying. They also still have that hint of nutmeg flavor which is characteristic of just about any doughnut – but feel free to omit the nutmeg if you don't like it.

Are cake donuts healthier? ›

What kind of batter: Donuts are typically made with either yeast or cake batter. Airier yeast donuts usually have fewer calories than cake donuts, which have a denser texture.

What is a cake type donut? ›

Unlike yeast donuts, which are made with a yeast-based dough, cake donuts are made with a batter that is leavened with baking powder. The batter is scooped into a donut pan and baked until it is light and fluffy.

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