Breakfast donuts recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

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Breakfast doughnuts

Honey, jammy blueberries & yoghurt

  • Vegetarianv

Breakfast donuts recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2)

Honey, jammy blueberries & yoghurt

  • Vegetarianv

“Beautiful blueberries add a vibrant pop of colour to these tasty homemade doughnuts, while also giving us a vitamin C boost, helping us absorb the iron found in both flours ”

Serves 4

Cooks In35 minutes

DifficultyNot too tricky

Super Food Family ClassicsFruitBreakfastHealthy breakfast ideasBrilliant breakfast recipesHoney

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 361 18%

  • Fat 11.3g 16%

  • Saturates 2.3g 12%

  • Sugars 21.4g 24%

  • Salt 0.4g 7%

  • Protein 12.5g 25%

  • Carbs 55.6g 21%

  • Fibre 4.8g -

Of an adult's reference intake

recipe adapted from

Super Food Family Classics

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Method

Ingredients

  • 100g Medjool dates
  • 100g wholemeal self-raising flour
  • 100g self-raising flour , plus extra for dusting
  • 30g ground almonds
  • 1 large free-range egg
  • olive oil
  • 320g blueberries
  • 1 tablespoon runny honey
  • 4 tablespoons Greek yoghurt
  • ground cinnamon , optional
  • 3½ oz Medjool dates
  • heaping ¾ cup wholemeal selfrising flour
  • heaping ¾ cup selfrising flour, plus extra for dusting
  • 1 oz ground almonds
  • 1 large free-range egg
  • olive oil
  • 11 oz blueberries
  • 1 tablespoon liquid honey
  • 4 tablespoons Greek yoghurt
  • optional: ground cinnamon

Tap For Method

The cost per serving below is generated by Whisk.com and is based on costs in individual supermarkets. For more information about how we calculate costs per serving read our FAQS

recipe adapted from

Super Food Family Classics

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Ingredients

Method

  1. Tear the stones out of the dates and place the flesh in a food processor with the flours, ground almonds, egg, a tiny pinch of sea salt and 70ml of water.
  2. Blitz until combined and forming a ball of dough, then roughly knead on a clean flour-dusted surface for just 2 minutes.
  3. Roll out the dough 1.5cm thick, then use an 8cm cutter (or a pint glass) to cut out two rounds. Use a 3cm cutter (or the end of a clingfilm roll!) to cut a hole in the centre of each one, then use those centre bits and the remaining cut-offs of dough to roll it out again, repeating the process until you have four doughnuts in total.
  4. Simmer the doughnuts in a large pan of gently boiling water for 5 minutes, very carefully turning them over halfway through.
  5. Place a large frying pan on a medium heat with 1 tablespoon of oil. Drain the doughnuts well, then carefully transfer them to the frying pan to get golden for 10 minutes, turning regularly to build up a nice crust.
  6. Once looking good, add the blueberries to the pan, then drizzle over the honey. Jiggle and shake the pan over the heat for a couple of minutes, using a spoon to keep turning the doughnuts in all that lovely jammy blueberry juice.
  7. When it looks nice and shiny and the doughnuts are purple, ripple the yoghurt through the pan and divide between your plates. Nice with a sprinkling of cinnamon, to finish.
  1. Tear the pits out of the dates and place the flesh in a food processor with the flours, ground almonds, egg, a tiny pinch of sea salt, and ¼ cup of water.
  2. Blitz until combined and forming a ball of dough, then roughly knead on a clean flour­dusted surface for just 2 minutes.
  3. Roll out the dough ¾ inch thick, then use an 3­inch cutter (or a pint glass) to cut out two rounds. Use a 1¼­inch cutter (or the end of a paper towel roll!) to cut a hole in the center of each one, then use those center bits and the remaining cut­offs of dough and roll it out again, repeating the process until you have four doughnuts in total.
  4. Simmer the doughnuts in a large pan of gently boiling water for 5 minutes, very carefully turning them over halfway through.
  5. Place a large frying pan on a medium heat with 1 tablespoon of oil. Drain the doughnuts well, then carefully transfer them to the frying pan to get golden for 10 minutes, turning regularly to build up a nice crust.
  6. Once looking good, add the blueberries to the pan, then drizzle over the honey. Jiggle and shake the pan over the heat for a couple of minutes, using a spoon to keep turning the doughnuts in all that lovely jammy blueberry juice.
  7. When it looks nice and shiny and the doughnuts are purple, ripple the yogurt through the pan and divide between your plates. Nice with a sprinkling of cinnamon, to finish.

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recipe adapted from

Super Food Family Classics

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© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Breakfast donuts recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

FAQs

Why are my homemade donuts so dense? ›

Yeast. Yeast is a tiny yet magical organism that helps doughs of all kinds rise. Without yeast, your doughnuts might resemble dense disks rather than fluffy rings. There are a variety of types of yeasts available for purchase, and some bakers even capture native yeasts to create their own unique doughnut dough.

What makes old fashioned donuts? ›

Old-Fashioned Doughnuts are basically cake doughnuts that have been fried. This gives them a slightly crunchy outer shell, that's usually lacquered with glaze or dusted with sugar. The inside tends to be less dense than the cake of your typical powdered doughnut and less airy than a Krispy Kreme-style glazed.

What to serve with donuts for breakfast? ›

The best side dishes to serve with donuts are muffin mix waffles, cranberry sauce, banana chips, cake flour pancakes, blueberry jam, chocolate fondue, deviled eggs, Cool Whip fruit dip, apple muffins, banana bread, healthy cookie dough dip, Greek yogurt, and pumpkin spice latte.

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.

Why are my donuts not light and fluffy? ›

To make light and fluffy donuts, make sure that your dough is properly risen by allowing it to rest in a warm place until it doubles in size. Also, avoid overmixing the dough as it can lead to a denser texture. Handling the dough gently and not overworking it will help maintain the desired fluffiness.

Why are Amish donuts so good? ›

Amish doughnuts are always made from scratch with the baking basics—sugar, flour, milk, yeast and eggs. What sets them apart from other doughnut recipes is the method, which requires kneading, stirring and patience. The doughnuts themselves are usually fried in fat, but we'll use vegetable oil.

What is the best oil for donuts? ›

Vegetable oil is the go-to choice for many good reasons. Besides being cheap and easy to find, it has no problem handling high temperatures with a smoke point of around 400 degrees Fahrenheit — well above temperatures needed to brown donuts.

Are baked donuts better than fried? ›

Baked doughnuts are smaller, baking powder driven and more compact. A typical fried glazed donut will be around 269 calories, while a baked donut will have much fewer. The difference is the fact that you won't be dealing with any extra fat from the oil from frying when you bake.

Is it healthy to eat a donut for breakfast? ›

Doughnuts will cost you 250 to 550 calories, but the 15 to 30 grams of sugar in each is the real problem. With such a huge amount of sugar in a small package, your body pumps out loads of insulin to try to accommodate. A huge blood sugar spike leads to an even bigger sugar crash.

What to do after eating 2 donuts? ›

Hydrate. Flush out all that sweet stuff from your system by hydrating ASAP with water or other low-sugar fluids, and foods high in water content. "Drink plenty of water and go for foods like watermelon, cucumbers, strawberries and yogurt," Seaver says.

What is the quote about donuts for breakfast? ›

Donut Quotes and Captions
  • "Donut worry, be happy."
  • "Donut let anyone steal your joy."
  • "Donut judge me until you've walked a mile in my sprinkles."
  • "Donut stop believing."
  • "Donut forget to treat yourself."
  • "Donut underestimate the power of a good pastry."
  • "Donut worry, eat a donut."
  • "Donut worry, be glazy."

Why are my baked donuts so dense? ›

Stiff/Dense Donuts: Under proofed dough. Poke the dough, if it springs back too quickly they are under proofed and need more time. Cracked Donuts: The donuts could be under-proofed, you didn't get a clean cut on the donuts when cutting them out, or the dough was too cold.

Why are my donuts not puffing up? ›

Not enough water; under-mixing: hot frying temperature; too much frying: cutter (damaged or wom, too high over surface, too low-louching shortening).

Why my donut is not soft? ›

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.

Why are my baked donuts hard? ›

Do not overmix the donut batter. Overmixing will make the donuts tough. Bake the donuts until they are golden brown. Be careful to not overbake.

References

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