Yeast Raised Donuts

Yeast Raised Donuts

Yeast Donuts

Also known as yeast-raised or fermented doughnuts


What are Yeast Donuts?

Yeast donuts are fried bakery products that are yeast-leavened, unlike traditional donuts that are chemically-leavened with baking powder and made with a cake batter.

The unique characteristics of donuts are their traditional ring shape and the method of frying in hot oil. Yeast-leavened donuts are porous, resilient and have a bread-like crumb structure.

Variations

Yeast-leavened donuts can come in many different shapes and sizes. Common shapes include:-

  • Rings: conventional donut with a hole in the middle
  • Twists: made by braiding or twisting one or two pieces of dough together
  • Honey buns: cinnamon swirled rolls
  • Shells: round and usually filled with jelly or cream
  • Long johns: rectangular shape

How are yeast donuts made?

The following formula uses the straight dough process: Ingredients based on Baker’s %:-

Bread flour* 100.0%

Yeast (compressed) 4.0–9.0

Salt 1.5–2.2

Water 45.0–55.0

Fat or shortening 9.0–16.0

SMP 1.0–6.0

Sugar (sucrose) 5.0–14.0

Whole eggs (liquid) 1.0–5.0

Soy flour (defatted) 0.0–3.0

Dough conditioner mix 0.5–2.0

* Patent bread flour from hard wheat classes (protein content of 11.0–13.0%). A blend of 80% hard wheat flour and 20% soft wheat flour can also be used to modify the texture of the finished product.

Processing steps

  1. Ingredient scaling/metering.
  2. Dough Mixing (to full development). Mixing time will be a function of flour strength, mixer speed, batch size, and delayed sugar/fat/salt addition (for proper gluten development). Final dough temperature should be between (26–28°C).
  3. Bulk fermentation. Dough ferments for 15–30 minutes at ambient conditions until it doubles in size. Fermentation time is controlled by dough temperature, water absorption, pH, osmotic pressure, yeast food (fermentable sugars) and yeast level.
  4. Makeup. Dividing of bulk dough into dough blocks (pre-shaping). Blocks are then sheeted and cut into an appropriate shapes (e.g. round or hexagonal) or by extruding with a low-pressure extruder.
  5. Final Proofing, Dough pieces are proofed at (35–38˚C); 40–70% RH for 30–40 min. Indentation test can be done to check final point.
  6. Frying by partial immersion in oil at a temperature of (190–196°C). Dough floats on top of heating oil due to its porous structure and low density, caused by air incorporation during mixing, yeast fermentation, gas expansion and water vapor production during frying.
  7. Glazing (optionally applied to product when still hot).
  8. Cooling to internal temperature of (35-40°C) before packaging. As with cake doughnuts, yeast-raised donuts are allowed to cool before icings are applied.
  9. Icing (optional, applied to cooled product).
  10. Dusting/coating with pulverized dextrose (optional). Due to its low solubility, the doughnut displays a different flavor profile. Dextrose is also less sweet than sucrose and its crystalline structure creates a cooling sensation when it melt in the mouth.
  11. Packaging.

Comments

Sweeteners (especially in dry form such as sucrose) can delay gelatinization of wheat starch, and as a consequence, the temperature at which the “foamy” dough converts to sponge (crumb set) increases. This has processing implications during drying.

Usage of High sugar tolerant yeast, Given the relatively high sugar content in a yeast doughnut formula, significant osmotic pressure builds up within the dough. The high osmotic pressure may not be tolerated by standard baker’s yeast strains and fermentation rate may be greatly affected. Use of dry yeast forms that can withstand high osmotic conditions (osmotolerant) is recommended in case proofing times become excessively long to obtain a proper volume.

Ways to reduce or limit fat absorption during frying

  • Use doughs of lower water absorption.
  • Use stronger flours (higher protein content).
  • Decrease levels of enriching and tenderizing ingredients such as sugar and fat. Doughs that are too rich will brown too fast and absorb too much frying fat.
  • Increase levels of structure-building ingredients, like ones rich in protein (e.g. soy flour, wheat flour, eggs, vital wheat gluten, nonfat dry milk).


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