-
Makes
100 small mini doughnuts ("loukoumades")
Author Notes
These are called "loukoumades" in Cyprus. They are eaten often as a dessert, or as a treat when going out for walks in the evening from a street vendor. They are popular around New Years as well. The combination of honey and cinnamon plus fried doughnut is delicious. You often eat a little plate full at a time. They are a real treat! —christina@afroditeskitchen
Continue After Advertisement
Ingredients
-
5
cups flour (2.5 cups bread flour and 2.5 cups all purpose flour)
-
2.5
warm water
-
1
tbs fresh yeast
-
zest of one medium sized orange
-
1/4
cup orange juice
-
1
tsp salt
-
1
tsp sugar
-
3
tbs honey
-
1.5
tbs water
-
2.5 cups
vegetable oil for frying (give or take)
-
cinnamon for sprinkling on top
Directions
-
Mix together the flour, salt, sugar and orange zest.
-
Dilute the yeast in 1/4 cup of your warm water. Stir until it dissolves.
-
Make a well in the center of the flour mixture and add the diluted yeast.
-
Start adding the water until it becomes a sort of sticky, goey texture. Not thick but not think. Whisk the mixture by hand until it becomes a gooey dough. Continue to briskly whisk for about 5 minutes.
-
Cover it and keep it in a warm place and leave it for two hours. The dough should rise and bubble a bit. Then you are ready to start making the loukoumades. If you don’t want to make the loukoumades the same day, place the dough in the fridge for 1 day, ensuring to take it out 1 hour before you intend to make the loukoumades.
-
Bring your vegetable oil to medium heat in a small to medium sized saucepan. When the oil is hot, squeeze the dough between your fingers and thumb and then use a spoon to shape into balls. (I used a plastic spoon because the dough falls off easier than a stainless steel spoon. Also keep a little bowl of oil to the side to dip your plastic spoon in, in between making the loukoumades, because this will help the dough fall off more easily into the oil as well.)
-
Fry the balls in small batches until they float to the surface and turn golden brown (about 10-15 minutes). When you lift them out with a spoon they will feel lighter. Make sure you keep stirring the loukoumades as you cook them so they don’t just brown on one side. You may have to adjust your heat accordingly – you do not want burned loukoumada on the outside and raw loukoumada on the inside!
-
Drain on paper towels.
-
At this stage you can either drizzle honey and sprinkle cinnamon directly on top of the loukoumades and eat them, or you can coat them in syrup.
-
For the syrup. This is not your typical Cypriot syrup which includes orange blossom water. Mix together the honey and water on a small frying pan. Add about 15-20 loukoumades into the pan and heat and stir the mixture until the honey syrup bubbles and the loukoumades are coated with honey. Remove and sprinkle cinnamon on top. Enjoy!!!
See what other Food52ers are saying.