Easy Apple Cider Doughnuts

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Easy Apple Cider Doughnuts
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This recipe is my ode to crisp mornings, the kind where the house smells like warm cinnamon and slightly-too-sweet apple cider and you can pretend it’s okay to eat something fried before noon. These are easy apple cider doughnuts — cakey, tender, with a cinnamon-sugar finish that clings to your fingers and makes you feel like you’re cheating on adulthood. They’re not fussy, they don’t require a fryer (baked or pan-fried options work great), and they’re perfect for brunch, a school bake sale, or a cozy weekend splurge.

My little family absolutely loses it for these. My kid calls them “the merry donuts” and my husband will literally stop mid-conversation if I bring a warm one to the table. Once, I made a batch during a pandemic-fueled Sunday and we ate half before deciding it might be polite to put the rest in containers — so we hid them in the back of the fridge, only to find them half-eaten the next morning. It’s become our fallback celebration food: bad day? doughnut. Good day? doughnut. Somehow they make everything feel fixable.

Why You’ll Love This Easy Apple Cider Doughnuts

– Warm pockets of apple and spice without needing a doughnut shop or deep fryer.
– Simple pantry ingredients with one show-off item: reduced apple cider for real flavor.
– Cakey, tender texture that’s forgiving — you won’t hate yourself if you slightly overmix.
– Cinnamon-sugar coating that’s addictive and totally optional if you’re feeling virtuous.

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Kitchen Talk

Making these got messy, silly, and kind of gloriously imperfect. The first time I boiled cider down I nearly left the house to chase the smell down the street. I tried frying once and learned my smoke detector has strong opinions about oil temperature — now I usually bake them on a sheet or use a small skillet and flip gently. Also, reducing cider is tiny kitchen theater; it bubbles up and looks like you’re doing something very advanced. I once forgot to cool it and the wet batter was surprise-volcano hot — don’t be me. Chill it for a few minutes and the rest is gloriously easy.

Top Reader Reviews

These easy apple cider doughnuts were such a hit at my house—so much flavor and not too fussy to make. I loved that they baked up moist with just the right amount of spice, and my family couldn’t stop grabbing seconds!

– Allison

Shopping Tips

Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour for the classic cakey crumb; measure by spooning into the cup or weigh if you have a scale.
Fruit: Grab fresh apple cider (or apple juice if cider isn’t available) — unsweetened is best so you control the sugar.
Fats & Oils: Unsalted butter or a neutral oil works; butter gives a richer flavor if you’ll be coating them in cinnamon sugar.
Eggs: Room-temperature eggs help the batter come together smoothly and keep the texture tender.
Flavor Boosts: Pure vanilla extract and a bit of freshly grated nutmeg or orange zest will lift these from good to “I need the recipe.”

Prep Ahead Ideas

– You can reduce the apple cider a day ahead and store it in the fridge; bring it closer to room temp before mixing into batter.
– Mix dry ingredients the night before and keep them in an airtight container or zip-top bag — morning assembly becomes five minutes.
– If you’re frying, you can portion the dough into rounds on a parchment-lined tray and chill; fry from cold for neater shapes.
– Store finished doughnuts in a single layer in an airtight container; if stacking, separate layers with parchment to avoid smudges.

Time-Saving Tricks

– Reduce cider in a wide shallow pan so it concentrates faster; watch it closely — it goes from syrup to burned fast.
– Use a muffin tin or a doughnut pan to bake instead of frying; cleanup is less dramatic and the oven does the work.
– Swap in store-bought apple butter for a flavor shortcut if you’re in a real rush (cut back sweetener slightly).
– Don’t rush cooling entirely — warm doughnuts take cinnamon sugar better, but be careful or they’ll melt the coating.

Common Mistakes

– Over-reducing the cider: been there — then it tastes bitter. Fix by adding a splash of water and simmering briefly.
– Overmixing the batter: I once stirred until my arm cramped and got dense doughnuts; stop when dry and wet ingredients are just combined.
– Frying at the wrong temp: too hot and the outsides burn before the middle cooks; too cool and they soak up oil. Use a thermometer or test with a small drop.
– Coating while too-wet: dunking piping-hot doughnuts into sugar will make a gloopy mess — let them cool a few minutes so the coating polishes up instead of dissolving.

What to Serve It With

– A simple mug of coffee or spiced chai — the tannins cut the sugar beautifully.
– Plain Greek yogurt with a drizzle of maple and sliced apple for a breakfast mash-up.
– Light salad with citrus and fennel for a brunch contrast.
– Warm custard or vanilla ice cream if you’re leaning dessert.

Tips & Mistakes

– Use a thermometer for oil if frying — 350–370°F is the sweet spot.
– Salt your batter lightly even though it’s sweet; it brightens the apple flavor.
– If the batter seems too thin, chill it 10–15 minutes — it firms up and is easier to portion.
– Don’t stack warm doughnuts or they’ll steam and lose that crisp edge.

Storage Tips

Leftovers live fine at room temp for a day in an airtight container, or in the fridge up to 3 days (they get denser but still tasty). Rewarm briefly in a low oven or toaster oven to revive the crust; microwave makes them gummy, but hey — microwaves are not the enemy if you’re desperate. Cold doughnuts? Totally edible for breakfast with coffee. No shame.

Variations and Substitutions

– Swap half the flour for whole wheat pastry flour for nuttier flavor (texture will be slightly heavier).
– Use maple syrup in the glaze instead of sugar for a more autumnal vibe.
– Add chopped toasted pecans to the coating for crunch.
– If you don’t have cider, concentrated apple juice or a mix of apple butter + a splash of water works in a pinch, but the flavor will be richer and less bright.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I bake these instead of frying them?
Yes! Bake in a doughnut pan or muffin tin at moderate heat until a toothpick comes out clean. They’ll be slightly less crisp but still cakey and delicious — and way less splashy cleanup.
How long should I reduce the apple cider for good flavor?
Reduce until it’s syrupy and has thickened enough to coat a spoon — usually 15–25 minutes depending on your pan and heat. Watch it so it doesn’t burn; you want concentrated sweetness, not bitterness.
Can I make these gluten-free?
You can, with a good 1:1 gluten-free baking blend that contains xanthan or guar gum. Expect a slightly different crumb — still tasty, just a touch more fragile.
What’s the best way to re-crisp them?
A quick 5–7 minute blast in a 350°F oven or toaster oven will bring back some of the exterior crunch without drying the center. Skip the microwave unless you want a chewy treat.
Can I freeze these?
Absolutely — freeze in a single layer until solid, then transfer to a freezer bag. Thaw at room temp and warm briefly in the oven before serving. Coatings might be less glossy after freezing.

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Easy Apple Cider Doughnuts

Easy Apple Cider Doughnuts

These cozy apple cider doughnuts are tender inside, crisp outside, and finished with warm cinnamon sugar. Perfect for a fall morning treat.
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Prep Time: 35 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 55 minutes
Servings: 12

Ingredients
 

Main Ingredients

  • 1.5 cup apple cider reduce to about 3/4 cup, then cool
  • 2.8 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 0.5 tsp baking soda
  • 1.5 tsp ground cinnamon for batter
  • 0.25 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 0.75 tsp fine salt
  • 0.8 cup granulated sugar for batter
  • 0.4 cup packed light brown sugar for batter
  • 3.5 tbsp unsalted butter, melted cooled slightly
  • 2 large eggs
  • 0.5 cup buttermilk
  • 1.25 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 qt vegetable oil for frying
  • 0.75 cup granulated sugar for cinnamon-sugar coating
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon for cinnamon-sugar coating
  • 1 cup powdered sugar optional glaze
  • 2.5 tbsp apple cider optional glaze

Instructions

Preparation Steps

  • Simmer the apple cider in a small saucepan until reduced to about 3/4 cup. Let cool 10 minutes.
  • Stir the coating sugar and cinnamon in a shallow bowl. Set aside for finishing.
  • Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt in a large bowl.
  • Whisk melted butter with granulated and brown sugars until sandy. Beat in the eggs until smooth.
  • Pour in the cooled reduced cider, buttermilk, and vanilla. Whisk to combine.
  • Fold the dry mixture into the wet just until a soft dough forms. Rest 10 minutes.
  • Heat oil in a heavy pot to 350°F. Maintain temperature while frying.
  • Lightly flour the counter. Pat or roll dough to 1/2 inch thick. Cut doughnuts and holes.
  • Fry in batches 1–2 minutes per side until deep golden. Drain on a rack and toss warm doughnuts in cinnamon sugar.
  • For an optional glaze, whisk powdered sugar with cider until smooth. Dip warm doughnuts and let set.

Notes

Variation: Swap 1/2 tsp of the cinnamon for apple pie spice, or finish with the cider glaze for extra tang. To store, keep leftovers in an airtight container at room temperature for 1 day, or freeze up to 2 months; rewarm in a 300°F oven for 6–8 minutes.
This recipe is an original creation inspired by classic Easy Apple Cider Doughnuts flavors. All ingredient ratios and instructions are independently developed.
💬

Featured Comments

“Made this last night and it was family favorite. Loved how the traditional came together.”
★★★★★ 5 days ago Aurora
“Impressed! Clear steps and turned out amazing results. Perfect for busy nights.”
★★★★★ 3 weeks ago Scarlett
“New favorite here — turned out amazing. satisfying was spot on.”
★★★★★ today Sophia
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
★★★★☆ 4 weeks ago Zoe
“Made this last night and it was will make again. Loved how the saucy came together.”
★★★★★ 2 weeks ago Chloe
“Impressed! Clear steps and absolutely loved results. Perfect for busy nights.”
★★★★☆ 3 weeks ago Aria
“Impressed! Clear steps and so flavorful results. Perfect for busy nights.”
★★★★★ 4 weeks ago Mia
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
★★★★★ 5 days ago Chloe
“Made this last night and it was will make again. Loved how the flavorful came together.”
★★★★★ 4 weeks ago Harper
“This summer-ready recipe was turned out amazing — the quick bite really stands out. Thanks!”
★★★★★ 8 days ago Chloe

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