As you can see, all it is is a round glazed doughnut, sliced through the middle, and stuffed to bursting with large fresh strawberries covered in a glaze. Easy to make yourself, Christy! However, I'm hoping some of you more culinary-minded blog readers out there might be able to help Christy out on the glaze on these strawberries. It's a thin glaze--definitely not as thick as pie filling--but it's not watery, either. And while it's slightly sweeter than the actual strawberries, it's not terribly so. The overwhelming flavor of the glaze is of strawberries--not sugar. My best guess would be that the strawberries have just been sprinkled with, say, a little fine granulated sugar and left to set in their own juices. But there's got to be something added (tapioca? cornstarch? gelatin?) to give it a little bit of the glaze-like consistency. I just don't know what. Any suggestions?Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Donut Man(ia)
As you can see, all it is is a round glazed doughnut, sliced through the middle, and stuffed to bursting with large fresh strawberries covered in a glaze. Easy to make yourself, Christy! However, I'm hoping some of you more culinary-minded blog readers out there might be able to help Christy out on the glaze on these strawberries. It's a thin glaze--definitely not as thick as pie filling--but it's not watery, either. And while it's slightly sweeter than the actual strawberries, it's not terribly so. The overwhelming flavor of the glaze is of strawberries--not sugar. My best guess would be that the strawberries have just been sprinkled with, say, a little fine granulated sugar and left to set in their own juices. But there's got to be something added (tapioca? cornstarch? gelatin?) to give it a little bit of the glaze-like consistency. I just don't know what. Any suggestions?
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7 comments:
That photo makes me want to run out and get a donut right now :-) yummy! I've only made a few fruit pies, and I used sugar (granulated) with the fruit's own juice and added quick cook tapioca for the thickener. But I can usually see the tapioca, so if you can't see the little beads of tapioca, they might use cornstarch or a gelatin/thickner.
We are going to be in Denver over July 4th...so if you and Matt are road tripping, come to CO! We are hanging out with Phil, Carol and Elaine. I'm hoping some Beau Jo's pizza is in the plan :-)
My suggestion was going to be a sprinkling or so of cornstarch...I think a glaze like this is usually boiled first, before being added to the strawberries. How about looking to a strawberry pie recipe to see how the filling is made? Whichever thickening agent they use, just use less of it to get the consistency you want.
Very good suggestions! Thanks, ladies. As I said, the glaze isn't very thick at all--if pure juice was a 1 and full-on thick glaze was a 10, this stuff would be like a 3. And it's not very sweet at all. Also, it's not cloudy, so that rules out (probably) tapioca and powdered sugar.....
I agree with Kelly. Boiled with a little cornstarch to thicken it a titch. I might have something similar in a recipe I actually just read last night. I'll take a look at it later today and see if it inspires anything!
When you say boil it, you mean boil some strawberry juice with a little sugar and cornstarch? Not boiling the actual strawberries themselves, right?
Right, D. Don't boil the strawberries. Maybe take a few strawberries and mash them up, and then boil that with the sugar & cornstarch...
Everyone,
As the person trying to make these donuts next week, thank you so much for the pictures Denise and for the suggestions for making the glaze. I'll start experimenting next week with the boiling, cornstarch, juice, sugar idea, but any additional ideas before then, please share.
I'll let you know how it goes.
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