Hey everyone, I hope you are having an amazing day today. Today, I’m gonna show you how to make a distinctive dish, melt-in-your-mouth hawaiian malasada donuts. One of my favorites. For mine, I am going to make it a little bit unique. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
Melt-in-your-mouth Hawaiian Malasada Donuts is one of the most favored of current trending foods in the world. It’s simple, it’s quick, it tastes yummy. It is appreciated by millions every day. Melt-in-your-mouth Hawaiian Malasada Donuts is something which I’ve loved my entire life. They’re nice and they look wonderful.
Great recipe for Melt-in-your-mouth Hawaiian Malasada Donuts. I referred to a recipe from a malasada wagon, and adapted it so be easier to make in a home kitchen. It's a variation of "Melt-in-your-mouth Krispy Kreme style donuts".
To begin with this recipe, we have to prepare a few components. You can cook melt-in-your-mouth hawaiian malasada donuts using 10 ingredients and 11 steps. Here is how you cook that.
The ingredients needed to make Melt-in-your-mouth Hawaiian Malasada Donuts:
- Prepare 150 grams Bread (strong) flour
- Make ready 100 grams Cake flour
- Get 25 grams Katakuriko
- Prepare 100 grams Condensed milk (You can use, homemade condensed soy milk)
- Take 1 small or medium egg Beaten egg
- Make ready 200 ml in total egg + condensed milk + water Water
- Get 6 grams Dry yeast
- Make ready [Toppings]
- Prepare 2 tbsp or (to taste) Granulated sugar (or raw cane sugar)
- Get 1 Try variations with cinnamon powder, kinako, powdered dried coconut etc. mixed with the sugar
Malasadas, technically Portuguese in origin, but very popular in Hawaii, are hole-less, sometimes cream-filled doughnuts. They're fried in oil like any other doughnuts you'd find, but malasadas are a little chewier, a little less sweet, and way better than any other fried dough treat I've put in my mouth. When you bite into one it's airy yet moist and silky - the best feel ever. It's a variation of "Melt-in-your-mouth Krispy Kreme style donuts".
Steps to make Melt-in-your-mouth Hawaiian Malasada Donuts:
- I used this condensed milk, which is canned in a factory in Kumamoto, using domestic milk and sugar from Australia or South America.
- Put the egg → condensed milk → water in a measuring cup in that order, so that the total comes to 200 ml. Put all the ingredients (except for the sugar and coatings) in a bread machine and start the "dough only" program.
- Make ready 12 pieces of 10 cm square kitchen parchment paper. When the dough making program is done, divide the dough into 12 portions, round them off and put them on the pieces of paper.
- (This dough is not rested.) Use your microwave oven's bread-rising function to let the rise rise for 45 minutes or so at 40°C (2nd rising) until the dough has doubled in volume.
- Try your best not to touch the dough. As soon as the 2nd rising is done, gently place the dough in oil heated to 170℃, with the squares of paper to prevent it from sticking to your hands.
- Since this dough is low in moisture, it won't make any sound or bubble up even in hot oil. But that means it's doing well, so don't worry!
- Fry on both sides for about 2 minutes each until golden brown. They won't make a sizzling sound even when you turn them over. But that's OK!
- Put the cooked donuts on a draining rack on their sides to drain off the oil. If you set their top/bottom on the rack, the excess oil won't drain off properly.
- Once the oil has drained off, put a malasada while it's still hot in a plastic bag with granulated sugar one at a time and shake it around to coat with the sugar.
- Please enjoy these freshly fried! You can warm them up in the microwave for 20 seconds the next day. Try mixing cinnamon powder, powdered coconut, kinako flour and so on in the sugar.
- You maybe wondering if 100 g of condensed milk is needed, but not to worry. For that unique malasada feel, it's needed. You can use homemade condensed milk made by simmering soy milk and sugar together.
Kamehameha Bakery is best known for their poi donuts, a warm, gooey treat that will leave your sweet tooth clamoring for more. Instead of baking, fry prepared dough in hot oil to make melt-in-your-mouth malasadas, Portuguese style donuts. Dust them off with sugar and enjoy! When it comes to doughnuts—Hawaiian style—Leonard's is king. Portuguese in its origin, the popular malasada is Hawaii's obsession, and rightfully so.
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