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Chabad.org » Women » Recipes & Cooking » Shabbat and Holiday Recipes » Chanukah Recipes & Tips » Doughnuts - Sufganiyot » Sufganiyot


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Sufganiyot



A well-known bakery in Jerusalem produces over 200,000 of these each day during the month leading up to Chanukah.

  • 2 packages yeast
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 3/4 cup water
  • 1/4 cup orange juice
  • 1/3 cup margarine
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 4 or 5 cups. flour
  • 3 egg yolks
  • Jelly of your choice for filling
  • Powdered Sugar

Mix water, sugar, juice, and yeast. Let stand 10 minutes. Melt margarine and add to yeast mixture. Beat in eggs and salt. Add flour, mixing and kneading by hand to form a soft dough. Let rise 1-1/2 hours. Roll dough 1/4 inch thick and cut circles (approximately 2 inches). Let circles rise 1/2 hour.

Deep fry at 400° F about 3 minutes, turning once. Pipe in jelly and roll in powdered sugar.


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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Dec 24, 2008
Tips on bread making
When buying the bread from the store, read the label, and do not buy enriched breads. Buy whole wheat... Hope it is whole wheat and not mixed with white flour. If they say, it is a rye bread, make sure that it is whole rye bread and not just fistful of rye dumped in.

Secondly, according to Dr. Bader from Food Secrets, when we toast the bread, the sugars become indigestible fiber and a percentage of protein (amino acids) loses their nutritional value. The toast then has more fiber and less protein than a piece of bread that is not toasted. If you are making your own bread, you can increase the protein content by just reducing the amount of regular flour by 2 tablespoons and replacing it with an equal amount of a quality soy flour.

Enjoy bread making.
Posted By Elizabeth

Posted: Dec 24, 2008
Food Secrets!
I shall get back to you tomorrow, since I am going to prepare it today. I read that sweetners can be molasses, honey, or cane sugar that they tend to slow down the coagulation of the protein allowing the dough to increase in volume making a fluffier loaf or doughnut. I have a book on food secrets by Dr. Bader. I might use cane sugar. For the yeast, some people are allergic to yeast and thereby, there is a secret that we can substitute for yeast, by using one teaspoon of baking soda with one teaspoon of powdered vitamin C.

By the way, if you are making latkes, please note try separating the egg yolks, then beat the whites until stiff . Stir the yolk along with the other liquid ingredients into the dry ingredients before folding in the egg whites.
Also, if your doughnut or cake shrinks or falls, the egg whites have probably been beaten too long. Another problem may be that you forgot to cool the cake upside down allowing the steam to dissipate throughout the cake which creates a lighter, fluffy cake.

Enjoy the cooking tips!
Posted By Elizabeth

Posted: Dec 23, 2008
answers
Anonymous: one .6 oz fresh yeast is equivalent to one envelope of dry yeast. About the flour, it depends on the climate of the place in which you live, I would start with 4 and add as necessary up to and not more than 5.

Elizabeth: I've never tried the sweetner but it sounds like it should be ok...try it and let us know how they came out.
Posted By Chani Benjaminson, chabad.org



 


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