Mama's Date Doughnuts
Submitted by RALPHIE
French Canadian date doughnuts (beignets) with chopped dates, nutmeg, and lemon extract, dropped by the spoonful into hot oil and fried golden in 3 minutes. From the Quebec kitchen tradition.
YIELD
3 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
40 minREADY
45 minThese date doughnuts come from the French Canadian tradition of Quebec, where deep-fried beignets stuffed with dried fruit have been a staple since long before the modern donut shop existed. Chopped dates folded into a nutmeg-spiced batter, dropped by the tablespoonful into hot oil, and fried until crisp and golden brown.
The lemon extract is the signature touch. It adds a bright, floral note that lifts the heavy sweetness of the dates and balances the richness of the fried dough. It’s a more delicate flavor than vanilla and pairs better with dried fruit.
These are drop doughnuts, not shaped or rolled. Just scoop a tablespoon of batter and slide it into the oil. They puff up into irregular golden nuggets with crispy outsides and soft, date-studded centers. Fry only 2-3 at a time so the oil temperature stays steady.
Chef Tips
- Keep the oil at 375°F (190°C). Too cool and the doughnuts absorb oil and go greasy. Too hot and the outside burns before the center cooks.
- Toss the chopped dates in the flour mixture before combining wet and dry. This coats them so they don’t sink to the bottom of the batter.
- Turn the doughnuts once during frying for even browning. About 1 ½ minutes per side.
- Drain on paper towels and dust with powdered sugar while still warm.
Variations
- Cinnamon sugar: Roll the warm doughnuts in a mix of cinnamon and sugar instead of powdered sugar.
- Rum glaze: Drizzle with a glaze made from powdered sugar, rum, and a splash of milk.
- Walnut date: Add ½ cup finely chopped walnuts to the batter along with the dates.
Ingredients
Directions
In a bowl, combine beaten eggs, sugar and melted butter; beat well.
In another bowl, combine flour with baking powder, salt and nutmeg.
Fold in dates.
Add dry ingredients to egg mixture alternately with milk and lemon extract.
Heat oil in deep-fat fryer to 375℉ (190℃).
Drop batter by tablespoonfuls, 2 or 3 at a time, into hot oil and fry until crisp and brown, about 3 minutes frying time, turning once.
Drain on paper towels.
Source: A Taste of Quebec by Julian Armstrong Posted by Linda Davis
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