Boston Cream Doughnuts

Updated Aug. 18, 2022

Boston Cream Doughnuts
Sam Kaplan for The New York Times. Food stylist: Claudia Ficca.
Total Time
About 3 hours, mostly unattended
Rating
4(359)
Comments
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This is a recipe for a popular riff on the classic Boston Cream Pie, with a crisp, flaky doughnut as the vessel for silky pastry cream. The only specialty tool you’ll need is a pastry bag. But you can also poke a funnel into the side of the doughnut and spoon the cream into the center of the pastry.

Featured in: Time to Make the Doughnuts

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Ingredients

Yield:About 1 dozen

    For the Doughnuts

    • cups milk
    • teaspoons (one package) active dry yeast
    • 2eggs
    • 8tablespoons (1 stick) butter, melted and cooled
    • ¼cup granulated sugar
    • 1teaspoon salt
    • cups all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling out the dough
    • 2quarts neutral oil, for frying, plus more for the bowl

    For the Glaze

    • cups powdered sugar
    • ¼cup unsweetened cocoa powder
    • ¼cup milk
    • 1teaspoon vanilla

    For the Pastry Cream

    • cup sugar
    • 2tablespoons flour
    • 2tablespoons cornstarch
    • a pinch of salt
    • 2eggs
    • 2cups cream
    • 2tablespoons softened unsalted butter
    • 2teaspoons vanilla
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

719 calories; 44 grams fat; 14 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 20 grams monounsaturated fat; 8 grams polyunsaturated fat; 73 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 35 grams sugars; 9 grams protein; 253 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. For the Doughnuts

    1. Step 1

      Heat the milk until it is warm but not hot, about 90 degrees. In a large bowl, combine it with the yeast. Stir lightly, and let sit until the mixture is foamy, about 5 minutes.

    2. Step 2

      Using an electric mixer or a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook, beat the eggs, butter, sugar and salt into the yeast mixture. Add half of the flour (2 cups plus 2 tablespoons), and mix until combined, then mix in the rest of the flour until the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl. Add more flour, about 2 tablespoons at a time, if the dough is too wet. If you’re using an electric mixer, the dough will probably become too thick to beat; when it does, transfer it to a floured surface, and gently knead it until smooth. Grease a large bowl with a little oil. Transfer the dough to the bowl, and cover. Let rise at room temperature until it doubles in size, about 1 hour.

    3. Step 3

      Turn the dough out onto a well-floured surface, and roll it to ½-inch thickness. Cut out the doughnuts with a doughnut cutter, concentric cookie cutters or a drinking glass and a shot glass (the larger one should be about 3 inches in diameter), flouring the cutters as you go. Reserve the doughnut holes. If you’re making filled doughnuts, don’t cut out the middle. Knead any scraps together, being careful not to overwork, and let rest for a few minutes before repeating the process.

    4. Step 4

      Put the doughnuts on two floured baking sheets so that there is plenty of room between each one. Cover with a kitchen towel, and let rise in a warm place until they are slightly puffed up and delicate, about 45 minutes. If your kitchen isn’t warm, heat the oven to 200 at the beginning of this step, then turn off the heat, put the baking sheets in the oven and leave the door ajar.

    5. Step 5

      About 15 minutes before the doughnuts are done rising, put the oil in a heavy-bottomed pot or Dutch oven over medium heat, and heat it to 375. Meanwhile, line cooling racks, baking sheets or plates with paper towels.

    6. Step 6

      Carefully add the doughnuts to the oil, a few at a time. If they’re too delicate to pick up with your fingers (they may be this way only if you rose them in the oven), use a metal spatula to pick them up and slide them into the oil. It’s O.K. if they deflate a bit; they’ll puff back up as they fry. When the bottoms are deep golden, after 45 seconds to a minute, use a slotted spoon to flip; cook until they’re deep golden all over. Doughnut holes cook faster. Transfer the doughnuts to the prepared plates or racks, and repeat with the rest of the dough, adjusting the heat as needed to keep the oil at 375.

  2. For the Glaze

    1. Step 7

      For the glaze, whisk together 1¾ cups powdered sugar, ¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder, ¼ cup milk and 1 teaspoon vanilla until smooth. Dip the tops of the doughnuts in the glaze, and let it harden on a rack.

  3. For the Pastry Cream Filling

    1. Step 8

      Combine ⅔ cup sugar, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons cornstarch and a pinch of salt in a small saucepan. Over medium heat, whisk in 2 eggs and 2 cups cream. Continue cooking, whisking almost constantly, until the mixture just begins to boil and thickens, about 10 minutes. Adjust the heat so the mixture bubbles gently; cook until it coats the back of a spoon (when you draw your finger through this coating, the resulting line should hold its shape). Stir in 2 tablespoons softened unsalted butter and 2 teaspoons vanilla. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve, and cool to room temperature before using.

    2. Step 9

      To fill the doughnuts with the pastry cream, insert the tip of a pastry bag filled with cream into the side of the doughnut, and squeeze. (Alternatively, poke a chopstick into the side of the doughnut, and wiggle it around to hollow out some space inside. Plunge a small funnel into the hole, spoon some filling into the funnel and use the chopstick to push it into the doughnut. If the filling clumps up toward the center of the doughnut, just press lightly on the top to distribute it evenly.)

Ratings

4 out of 5
359 user ratings
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Comments

So I made these donuts and would like to give a piece of advice to anyone else making them. I didn't have a thermometer to test the temperature of the oil at the end. Instead, you can drop a piece of popcorn in. Popcorn pops at about 350. However, when I put in the first donut, it burned on the outside and didn't cook in the middle. Make sure you fry your ugliest donuts first (the ones you rekneaded together from scraps). If it cooks in less than 45 seconds, lower the heat!

I tried the recipe step by step but noticed they tasted more like a bread and missed that light fluffy texture. Did I do something wrong??

This recipe skips that you need to add sugar to the milk-yeast for it to foam/feed correctly.

Great recipe that takes time but turns out perfectly if you follow the instructions. Only change I made was to roll out dough slightly less than 1/2" and was able to stretch the recipe to 16 donuts (good for a houseful of teenagers). Only weird thing is a couple of the donuts puffed up on the second side when cooking wiht an air pocket so I had to hold them in place with wooden spoon when cooking the second side. Not really sure why that happened to about 3 of the 16 donuts. Recipe is a keeper.

Every iteration of this donut recipe is fantastic—fluffy wonderfulness. These were delicious. Made the cream about 10 hours ahead; took out of the fridge during the second rise, and it worked great. The chocolate glaze is delicious with the cream and on its own; we made a few donuts with holes and iced them.

After reading the comments i also decided to cook at 350 (176 Celsius) and it turned out great. I also fed my yeast a tiny bit of sugar in proofing but am not sure if that actually helped as It was my first time using the yeast and milk combo.

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