Vegan Doughnuts Made with Yeast (ORIGINAL Vegan Donut Recipe)
Vegan doughnuts are easy to make! After perfecting regular doughnuts, the recipe can now be made vegan! No one will believe they’re truly egg free and dairy free (this is an original recipe)!
I never thought I’d post a recipe for vegan doughnuts, but I also never would have believed they’d come out so perfectly!
I don’t know how much you know about my site and recipes, but my top performing post is my perfect yeast doughnuts recipe. (We’ll see how long it lasts since my custard peach pie recipe has been coming on strong for 6 months, now.)
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I cannot tell you how many times the photo above has been stolen online. In fact, I flew to Scotland a few years ago and discovered that someone was using it on a sandwich board to promote their business (without as much as asking my permission)!
Anyway, the reason I’m telling you this is because this doughnut recipe is popular for a reason: the doughnuts really just turn out to be perfect! I’ve had rave reviews from all over the world (you can read the comments here). It’s not my recipe, but one I adapted from a bread baking book, so I’m not the one to take credit for the recipe.
I also can’t take credit for “veganizing” the recipe because it was comments left from two of my readers, Jen and Nicole, telling me they’d made my perfect yeast donuts in vegan form and they were amazed at the results. Thank you, ladies!
Just want the glaze recipe? Check out my glazed donuts.
Unfortunately, you’ll find other similar recipes published online and often there is NO CREDIT to where the recipe came from. When you see a recipe online, ask yourself: where is the credit to the source of the recipe, even if it’s an inspiration. So how did I create this perfect vegan donut recipe?
Another reader named Laura told me her children were allergic to eggs and dairy, so I’ve had it in the back of my mind to try and make vegan doughnuts for quite some time.
I’ve made these absolutely perfect vegan donuts twice now, and they are incredible. My dad raved about them saying he thinks they’re even better than the original! If you knew my dad, you’d realize that this means the doughnuts are crazy good! I would also never share a vegan recipe if it meant that the flavor/taste was compromised by having to substitute ingredients.
There’s a printable recipe below. If you make them, please let me know what you think!
Perfect Vegan Doughnuts
Adapted from this recipe for Perfect Yeast Doughnuts.
FULL PRINTABLE RECIPE BELOW
Step by Step Directions
The measurements are critical in this recipe, so a scale is necessary. (This is why there are no cup measurements-please do not ask for them.) The ONLY way to obtain the correct amount of flour is by weighing it.
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Make the vegan doughnut dough in a bread machine (or by hand).
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Knead the dough when doubled, roll out and cut doughnuts.
This is the link to the doughnut cutter in the photo below.
Place the vegan doughnut dough on paper sheets on tray.
Allow to rise.
Heat oil and begin frying the vegan doughnuts.
Remove and place on paper towel.
Fill, coat, dip or dust the vegan donuts.
Eat the Vegan Doughnuts!
Aaaand another doughnut recipe! Mini Italian pumpkin and orange doughnuts.
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I’m not vegan, but have plenty of vegan recipes for you to peruse. All tried, tested and true (most have been passed down within my Italian family) – just click here VEGAN RECIPES.
Perfect Vegan Doughnuts Made with Yeast (Vegan Donut Recipe)
Perfect vegan doughnuts are super light and fluffy! No one will ever know they're vegan.
Ingredients
- 6 Tbsp aquafaba (chickpea water)
- 2 tsp ground flaxseed
- 6 Tbsp (90 ml) water
- 5 oz coconut milk in a carton (150 ml) at room temperature
- 2 oz (57 g) coconut oil, melted
- 16 oz (454 g) all-purpose or bread flour
- 2 oz (57 g) sugar
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 1/2 tsp (5 g) regular or quick-rise yeast (one and a half teaspoons)
- oil for frying (I use sunflower or grape seed oil or a combination)
Toppings & Coatings (optional)
- powdered sugar
- sugar
- coconut, nuts etc.
- jam or any other vegan filling, if desired
Instructions
Make the doughnut dough
- Mix the aquafaba with the ground flaxseed in a small bowl.
FOR BREAD MACHINE
- Place the aquafaba mixture, water, coconut milk, and melted coconut oil in the bread machine pan or stand mixer bowl, then add the dry ingredients, except for the yeast. Make a small indentation in the dry ingredients, then add the yeast. Set the bread machine on the ‘dough’ setting. Remove when dough has doubled in size.
FOR STAND MIXER WITH DOUGH HOOK, OR BY HAND:
- Place the dry ingredients in a bowl. Put 6 tablespoonfuls of lukewarm water in a cup and sprinkle the yeast on top, set aside for about 5 minutes, until the yeast begins to react (you can add a pinch of sugar to help it). Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients, then pour in the yeast mixture, coconut milk, aquafaba mixture, and coconut oil. If using a stand mixer, run with the dough hook until a dough forms then continue for about 5 minutes. By hand, knead for about 10 minutes. Cover and set aside until at least doubled in size.
Roll out the dough and cut
- Once the dough has risen, place it on a floured surface and knead lightly. Divide it in half, keeping half the dough covered, so it doesn’t form a skin.With a rolling pin, roll out half of the dough to about 1/2″ thickness. (Do not rest the dough.)
- Cut with a round, sharp doughnut cutter (about 3″ diameter). Or else use a sharp cookie cutter, then make the holes with a smaller cookie cutter (about 1″ diameter), saving the holes. I recommend this cutter.
- For jelly filled doughnuts: roll each piece of dough into a smooth ball, and place on parchment or waxed paper pieces and place on a cookie sheet; place in the oven with the other doughnuts and holes.
Let the cut doughnuts rise
- Place each doughnut on a piece of parchment paper, then place on a cookie sheet. Put the tray in the oven The oven warming step should not be necessary in the summer unless your a/c is very cool.
- Next, boil some water and pour it into a measuring jug or bowl. Place the jug of water in the oven with the tray of doughnuts (this will create steam will keep a skin from forming).
Fry the doughnuts
- Heat the oil to about 350ºF (180º). If you don’t have a thermometer, test the oil with a doughnut hole. If it doesn’t start frying (bubbling) immediately, the oil is too cold, if the hole turns brown right away, the oil is too hot. Adjust the heat accordingly.
- Drop the yeast doughnuts into the hot oil using the paper to carefully lower them into the oil.
- Turn them over as soon as they become golden brown on the underside, then remove and place on a paper towel lined plate once they are ready.
Decide how you want to finish them (sugar, glaze, filled, or plain)
- When the doughnuts have cooled, roll them in sugar to coat evenly.
- For glazed doughnuts, just put some powdered (confectioner’s) sugar in a bowl and add a little bit of milk or water. Stir and keep adding liquid until you reach a smooth, slightly runny consistency. You want the glaze to run off the doughnuts when you’ve dipped them.
- Dip one and place it on a cooling rack to set. If all the glaze runs off, add more sugar, and if it’s too thick, add more liquid. No measuring needed.
- If you choose to fill the large yeast doughnuts, push a skewer into the center of the doughnut to make a hole. Next, put some room temperature jam, or slightly warmed chocolate hazelnut spread (I’ve gone off Nutella since they’re using tons of palm oil) into a piping bag and pipe the filling into the doughnut.
PLEASE READ NOTES BELOW!
Notes
- I do not specify a time on the dough rising because there are too many factors that will determine the length of time. Which yeast was used (regular or quick rise), if the yeast was fresh or old (older yeast doesn’t work as well, or sometimes not at all), and the temperature of your kitchen.
Special equipment:
- parchment paper, cut into about 4″ squares (smaller pieces for doughnut holes)
- large pot, deep fryer or wok
- a sharp doughnut cutter (a reader asked what I recommend, and I like this one as there is no guessing where the center of the doughnut is–perfect doughnuts every time).
- candy/oil thermometer, not necessary, but very helpful if you’re not a deep-frying pro
Nutrition Information:
Yield: 16 Serving Size: 1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 147Total Fat: 7gSaturated Fat: 4gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 3gCholesterol: 1mgSodium: 174mgCarbohydrates: 20gFiber: 1gSugar: 11gProtein: 2g
Nutrition information is only estimated.
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Absolutely amazing! These came out so good, so yummy. I didn’t use the aquafaba (just used a bit more milk), swapped oat milk for the coconut milk, and grapeseed oil for the coconut oil, and used bread flour. They are so addicting!
Wonderful, Belinda! Thank you so much!
Won’t they taste of coconut? So much vegan food has that awful aftertaste of coconut & it’s unpleasant.
No coconut flavor at all, at least with the product I used.
I know what you mean Cathy! in my early vegan days I got so OVER everything sweet/fatty tasting of coconut! I actually like coconut, but only in things that are supposed to taste of it, not in every chocolate/custard/cheesecake, etc. I haven’t made these yet but am about to give it a go (hmm… I actually landed here looking for a good bread machine dough recipe for tonight’s planned pizza for dinner… yet I seem to be making doughnuts – how does this happen? 😂)
ANYWAY… back to the coconut 🥥 taste, after many so-called chocolate/butter/custard… etc. (ie: “coconut…”) flavoured dessert/sweets failures, I heard (or read) somewhere the trick is to use REFINED coconut oil (or block shortening, in Australia we have “Copha” brand, which i think is probably coconut oil based anyway), and NOT virgin/extra-virgin coconut oil. The refined version has no coconut flavour at all -I managed to successfully revisit many of those failed recipes once I learnt that! Having said that, 10 years on I’ve got a better handle on the vegan cooking/baking thing and do use EV c/nut oil in recipes where the quantity used doesn’t seem enough to affect flavour and I think this one would fall into this category (or maybe I’ve just got used to it 🤷♀️). Good luck!
Christina, if you see this comment, I’d be interested to know whether you used EV or refined coconut oil? I think I’m out of refined so it will either be EV or just vegan butter going in mine – undecided which but either way I’ll let you know how they turn out! Can’t wait 🤩!
Hi Bron, I try to buy organic, but honestly I don’t think it makes a difference in the flavor. Yes, let me know how they turn out!
Hi Christina,
LOVE LOVE LOVE Just love this recipe. I’ve made the egg version as well as the vegan one. Both turned out perfect.
Only thing is in my vegan version, I’m skipping the aquafaba (very difficult to source it at times and also increases my pricing). So this is what I do: 150g buttermilk (i take 145ml Milk + 5 ml Vinegar)
Soak 2 tsp flax powder in 90ml water, activate yeast in another 90ml water. My dough is very sticky. Am I adding too much liquid: pls help!!!
Thanks so much. God bless u always!!
So happy you love it, Sabina! Since you’re changing the recipe, and I haven’t made it that way, I can’t really help, but sounds like too much liquid to me, too. You can make your own aquafaba by boiling your own chick peas.
Hi Yes, it was a bit too much but I manage to adjust it. turned out perfect.
Thanks once again