How to make light, airy French crullers with a maple glaze! This easy to follow recipe will ensure those characteristic piped lines that stay even when fried.
In a large bowl, whisk together sugars, flour, and salt and set aside.
In a large, high-sided saucepot combine milk and butter and bring just to a boil over medium-high heat.
Just like with choux you want to make sure that the butter melts before the milk comes to a boil because you do not want the water to evaporate from the milk while you wait for the butter to melt.
Immediately after the milk boils, add the dry ingredients to the pot and stir constantly over medium heat and cook until the residue on the bottom of the pot begins to brown. You are trying to evaporate some of the liquid.
If you don’t cook it long enough, will become too lose when the eggs are added, and it will lose its shape when piped and definitely when fried.
Pour batter into the bowl of a stand mixer. Fit in the paddle attachment and then beat on high speed for about 1 minute. This is cooling the batter and allowing some the steam (more moisture) to evaporate. Slowly add the eggs, one at a time, beating at least a minute in between. Add the whites with the last egg. The batter should look emulsified and smooth.
Scoop into pastry bag fitted with a large Ateco French star tip (869). Pipe rings onto parchment. They will be approximately 2 ½-3 inches in diameter. Chill and then freeze. After frozen you can cut the parchment around each cruller, place them in an airtight container then wrap them well. Store frozen until ready to use.
Before you are ready to fry, mix the glaze. In a large bowl mix all ingredients for the glaze, adding the milk to thin as necessary. It should flow from the whisk like cold molasses. Place a piece of plastic wrap over the surface until ready to use to keep a skin from forming.
Preheat a tabletop fryer to 335°F or canola oil in a skillet or Dutch oven fitted with a clip on fry thermometer.
Get your frying mis en place ready! You want your glaze, a rimmed baking sheet with a wire rack fitted inside and some sort of slotted spoon or spider to transfer the crullers.
Fry from frozen at 335°F until golden brown. I find it easier to transfer the crullers while on the parchment. Be sure to delicately place them in the oil. Fry until golden on one side, flip and fry until golden brown on all sides. Remove to wire rack to let the excess oil drip.
Dip in the prepared glaze while hot, place back on wire rack to cool. Serve room temperature. The texture is not appealing when hot just like choux.
Notes
Yield – 12, 3-inch crullersPresentation – You must fry them from frozen to preserve the piped lines! Variations – Try a different glaze recipe or use citrus juice in place of the maple syrup.Storage – Store piped, unfried crullers frozen on parchment paper until ready to fry. You can freeze them up to 2 months in advance. Fry from frozen. Once fried, dip in glaze while warm and allow to cool to room temperature. The glaze will help keep them fresh for 3 days.