Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (2024)

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Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (1)

Apple Fritters represent everything wonderful about the change of season. Every fall we wait with bated breath for the apple varieties to show up in the markets, or better yet, we head off to the orchard to pick them ourselves. There are very few activities that are more romantic or satisfying than picking fruit and then creating something delicious with them. These fritters are the perfect way to show off your favorite apples. If you have a bucket of brioche dough on the ready, you can have these in just minutes.

I started with our Brioche Dough fromHoliday and Celebration Bread in Five Minutes a Day. See recipe below.

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (2)

I made the dough withPlatinum Yeast from Red Star. Making the dough with Platinum yeast, which has dough enhancers, give extra insurance the fritters will be light even when you pack the dough densely with chopped fruit. You can watch memake the dough and fritters in Red Star Yeast’s Instagram story highlights.

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (3)
Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (4)

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (5)

These fritters are the perfect way to show off your favorite apples. If you have a bucket of brioche dough on the ready, you can have these in just minutes.

1

Reviews

Ingredients

Brioche Dough

  • Makes about 4 1/2 pounds (2041g) of dough
  • 1 1/2 cups lukewarm water
  • 1 tablespoon Platinum Yeast
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
  • 6 large eggs
  • 1/2 cup (170g) honey
  • 1 1/2 cups (340g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
  • 7 cups (990g) unbleached all-purpose flour (see note)

Apple Fritters

  • 1 1/2 pounds Brioche dough (recipe above)
  • 1 large apple (cored and chopped into 1/4-inch pieces)
  • Oil for frying – the oil should be deep enough so the fritters can float. The oil should never be more than 3 inches from the rim of the pot.
  • Confectioners’ sugar for dusting the top

Instructions

  • Mix the dough: Mix yeast, salt, eggs, honey and melted butter with water in a 6-quart round food-storage container with lid (not airtight).

  • Mix in flour without kneading, using a spoon, a Danish Dough Whisk or a heavy-duty stand mixer (with paddle). The dough will be loose but will firm up when chilled.

  • Cover (not airtight), and allow to rest at room temperature until dough rises for approximately 2 hours. Then refrigerate for at least four hours before first use, it is easier to handle when thoroughly chilled. This dough can be stored for up to 5 days in the fridge.

  • Make the fritters: Dust the surface of the refrigerated dough with flour and cut off a 1½-pound (680g, small cantaloupe–size) piece. Roll the dough out to a 12×8-inch rectangle. Spread the apples over the dough and roll into a log. Coil the dough into a disk and knead the apples into the dough.

  • Pinch off 1-ounce (28g) pieces of dough. (No need to roll them; they should be a bit shaggy.)

  • Heat the frying oil in a deep saucepan to 360°F to 370°F, as determined by a candy thermometer .

  • Drop the pieces of dough in the hot oil three or four at a time so that they have plenty of room to rise to the surface. Be careful not to overcrowd them or they will not rise nicely.

  • After 1 minute, gently flip the fritters over with a slotted spoon or Skimmer and fry for another minute or so until golden brown on both sides.

  • Remove the fritters from the oil and place them on paper towels to drain the extra oil.

  • Repeat with the remaining dough until all the fritters are fried.

  • Dust with confectioners' sugar. Serve slightly warm.

Notes

Artisan Bread in Five recipes use thescoop and sweep methodfor measuring flour.

Recipe by Artisan Bread in Five.

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (6)

Jeff Hertzberg and Zoë François met in their children’s music class in 2003 and have written bread cookbooks with more than 715,000 copies in print. Jeff, a doctor by training, is a self-taught baker who grew up eating great bread and pizza in New York City, and longed to recreate it himself. Zoë is a pastry chef and baker trained at the Culinary Institute of America. Her work appears in blogs all over the United States, and her dessert menus grace fine restaurants in the authors’ hometown, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Jeff and Zoë were among the very first cookbook authors to support their readers with personal responses on their website, BreadIn5.com, beginning in 2007, where they blog about their super-fast yeast breads.

Christine Soto | Reply

Making these fritters will not use up all the brioche dough. How long can i hold onto that before i use it for another recipe?

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (7)Red Star Yeast | Reply

Hi Christine – The dough can be stored up to 5 days in the refrigerator.

Sheri | Reply

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (8)
These look fabulous!

Ellen Flanagan | Reply

My coworkers love apple fritters. I will try this soon! Thank you!

Leave a Reply

Brioche Apple Fritters Recipe - Red Star® Yeast (2024)

FAQs

Why are my homemade apple fritters soggy? ›

Why are my apple fritters soggy? This is most likely the result of oil temperature. If your oil is too cool, your fritters will take a long time to fry and will end up greasy.

Why are my apple fritters not crispy? ›

Best tips for apple fritters:

Use two spoons to drop the batter into the oil and spread gently. If you drop a scoop of batter into the oil, the outside will be crispy and the center will be raw. To make them really crispy, I prefer to fry them until they are dark brown not just golden brown.

Do apple fritters contain yeast? ›

To make the apple fritter, you make the dough by combining the water, honey and yeast together. Then you mix in the egg and vanilla to the liquid. Flour, sugar, melted butter, spices and a little bit of baking soda are mixed in (by hand or using a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook). The dough is left to rise.

Does baking soda make fritters crispy? ›

Is baking soda or powder best for frying? A pinch of baking soda can help produce crispy fried foods. It reacts with the acid in the batter to create carbon dioxide bubbles. These lead to an airy batter and a crisper, fluffier result.

How do you fix soggy fritters? ›

Recipe Notes:

Batter consistency is key to good fritters. If too runny, add a touch of extra flour (otherwise fritters soggy inside). If way too thick, add a touch of water. It does come down to how juicy / how well the water was removed from the zucchinis.

What makes batter more crispy? ›

Rice flour and cornstarch work particularly well because they fry up crispier than wheat flour. They also absorb less moisture and fat during the frying process, making the products less greasy. This is why rice flour is often used when making tempura because it produces a very thin and crispy, dry crust.

Why do you put baking powder in fritters? ›

So we use both to get the best of both worlds; Baking soda (bi-carb) OR baking powder – just a touch, to aerate the batter every so slightly (without it, it's slightly denser); Parmesan – for a good hit of savoury flavour AND to make the fritters extra crispy! Green onion and coriander – for a hit of freshness.

Why are my fritters doughy? ›

If the fritters feel raw and doughy on the inside there could be two possible reasons. One is that the oil is just too hot, causing the outside to brown too quickly. You may find that you need to reduce the heat under the pan during cooking.

Why are my apple fritters greasy? ›

The oil temperature is important!

I like to cook my Bourbon Apple Fritters at about 350°. If the oil is too hot, the outside will burn and the inside will be under-cooked. If the oil is not hot enough, the fritters will absorb a lot of oil and will be greasy.

What's the difference between a bear claw and an Apple Fritter? ›

There are actually quite a few differences between a bear claw and an apple fritter. Apple fritters have a very different taste and texture than a bear claw. They have a dough mixed with apples and cinnamon and then deep fried. Bear Claws have a very distinct shape and are usually oven baked.

Why are my fritters soft? ›

When frying, work in batches and avoid sticking the fritters too close together in the pan. If they are too close, they'll create steam which will make them too soft. Use hot oil! Don't add the fritters to the pan until the oil is nice and hot.

Why is my batter soggy? ›

If it is soggy, heavy or tough, then you made have made the batter too thick or overfilled the tin. In order for batter puddings to rise and be light and airy, they need a hot oven and hot fat so problems such as the above may also be as a result of the oven or fat being too cool.

How do you keep apple crisp from getting watery? ›

The best way to prevent a watery apple crisp is to use a thickener in the filling – some recipes use flour, but I've chosen to use cornstarch in this recipe (or arrowroot starch, which can be substituted 1:1 for cornstarch) because I think it provides superior thickening power.

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