Malasadas (Filled Donuts)
Donuts are iconic American fare,
but this filled version originated with migrant workers from
Portugal and is now most
commonly found in Hawaii. Go figure. The tradition is that the oldest woman
in the household cooks the donuts, (that would be me) while
the children roll them
in sugar on Fat Tuesday,
which is the
last Tuesday before
Lent— and appropriately named.
Best served hot,
these are totally
worth the effort
and time spent waiting for the yeast
to do its thing.
They also freeze
well I have been told,
but I am yet to test
that theory as they don’t
last long enough
in this house to make it to the freezer.
TIP:
I have used coconut oil for frying the malasadas as it lends a slightly sweet taste to the end result; however, I do love my Cobram Estate Extra Virgin Olive Oil and, after some education on their EVOO, I am delighted to recommend deep frying in it as well. You will have a great result and taste.
TASTE:
Consider filling your donuts with Pistachio Pudding, Chocolate Pudding, Vanilla Cream filling (from Salted Caramel Banana Cream Pie recipe), whipped cream, or strawberry or raspberry jam.
Come join our FREE TRIAL on the Insider Club for more great recipes
The Lazy Sourdough Bakery course now baking.
The Whole Scoop Ice Cream course is churning now!
Need
- 2 Teaspoons dry active yeast
- 75 Grams full-cream milk
- 75 Grams cream
- 40 Grams water
- 1 Teaspoon raw asugar, plus more for rolling
- 1 Teaspoon vanilla bean paste BUY
- 1 Teaspoon apple cider vinegar
- 50 Grams butter BUY
- 1-2 Pinches pink salt flakes BUY
- 350 Grams bakers or strong flour
- coconut oil for frying
- Fillings of choice, see Taste
Do
- 1
Place yeast, milk, cream, water, sugar, vanilla paste, vinegar and butter into the Thermomix bowl and warm 1 min/37°C/speed 1.
- 2
Add salt and flour and combine 6 seconds/speed 6.
- 3
Knead 3 minutes/Interval/dough setting.
- 4
Transfer dough onto a floured silicone mat, wrap and allow to double.
- 5
Roll dough out to about 3-centimetres thick and cut rounds using a 7-centimetre ring cutter. Set each donut onto a floured piece of baking paper and cover with a clean tea towel. Allow to rise again until doubled.
- 6
Heat enough coconut oil in a saucepan with a small circumference so that you can submerge a donut or two at a time. The oil temperature should be around 170°C–180°C. Reduce the heat anytime the thermometer reads above 180°C as you will burn the exterior of the donut before the centre is cooked.
- 7
Fry each donut for about 2 to 3 minutes until golden on both sides.
- 8
Roll straight away in a bowl of raw sugar. Cool slightly.
- 9
To fill, place your filling into a piping bag with a pointed nozzle. Cut a small slit in the side of the donut and insert the tip. Fill with filing until you can see it starting to just peep out.
- 10
Serve whilst still warm ideally.
Served with
1000's of recipes that work Join us today and start cooking!
Tenina Holder is a wife, mother of five and grandmother of eight, who started cooking in the olden days before Thermomix was even a thing.
Tenina has become the premium go to source for all Thermomix expertise and of course fresh and easy recipes that work. Her cooking classes and foodie trips are sold out in literally hours, her cookbooks appear on the Australian best seller lists and her social reach is in the millions. Her Insider Club is the most fun you can have with a Thermomix and you really should join her! She believes chocolate, butter and salt are health foods. Her food positivity mantra is, eat everything, just not all at once!