Chiltern Firehouse Crab Doughnuts Recipe
Recreate the famed dish
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The crab doughnuts at Chiltern Firehouse are iconic – and now you can try your hand at making your own with this recipe from chef Nuno Mendes.
Ingredients
For the doughnuts:
- 540g strong white flour, plus extra to dust
- 70g caster sugar
- 2tsp Maldon sea salt, plus 1 tbsp to dust
- 1 tsp instant yeast
- 140ml water, at room temperature
- 4 large free range eggs
- Grated zest of 3 unwaxed lemons
- 130g unsalted butter, thinly sliced and chilled
- 500ml sunflower oil, for deep frying, plus extra for greasing
- 3 tbsp icing sugar, to dust
- 1 tbsp ground cinnamon, to dust
For the tomato juice:
- 10 beef tomatoes, or the largest variety you can find
- 2 cloves garlic, green germ removed and cloves chopped
- 1 shallot, chopped
- ¼ red chilli, de-seeded and chopped
- 1 tbsp sherry vinegar
- 1 tbsp fish sauce
- Maldon sea salt, to taste
For the crab doughnut filling:
200g picked white crab meat (from the claws)
2 tbsp tomato juice
2 tbsp crème fraiche
1 tbsp thinly sliced basil leaves
2½ tsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
Maldon sea salt, to taste
Method
To make the doughnuts:
- Place the flour, sugar, salt and yeast in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment and mix at slow speed. In a separate bowl, combine the water, eggs, and lemon zest.
- Slowly add the liquid mixture to the flour mixture, with the mixer at slow speed, until it forms a dough. Increase the speed and knead for 10-12 minutes, until the dough comes away from the sides of the bowl and is smooth and elastic.
- Reduce the speed to slow and add the butter, a slice at a time. Once all the butter has been incorporated, increase the speed, and knead for a further 5-6 minutes, until you have a smooth dough. You can make the dough warm by hand, but you need to work quickly, to make sure the dough doesn’t get too warm.
- Cover the bowl with clingfilm and place it in the fridge for at least 6 hours or overnight, to allow the dough to rest and prove slowly. The next day, oil a baking sheet. Roll the dough to a 2cm thickness on a lightly floured work surface and cut out 8 x 3cm circles. Roll each circle into a ball and place them on the oiled baking sheet. Cover and leave to prove for about 2-3 hours.
- Fill a deep saucepan or deep-fat fryer with the sunflower oil (so it’s roughly half filled with oil), and place over a medium heat until it reaches 175˚C. Deep-fry the doughnuts, four at a time, for 2-3 minutes, basting them constantly with the oil until they are golden brown. Transfer to a plate lined with kitchen paper, to drain.
To make the tomato juice:
Cut the tomatoes in half and squeeze out the seeds. Grate the flesh of the tomatoes on the side of a box grater over a bowl. Place the grated tomato flesh in the bowl of a food processor with the remaining ingredients and blend until smooth, or use a stick blender. Transfer the mixture to a muslin cloth and hang the cloth over a bowl for 2 hours.
To make the crab filling:
Combine all the ingredients in a bowl and mix well. Cover and chill until ready to assemble.
Assemble and serve:
Cut each doughnut in half and fill it with the chilled crab mixture. Mix the icing sugar in a bowl with the cinnamon and salt and dust the doughnuts with the mix. Serve immediately (the doughnuts won’t keep for long once filled).
Nuno’s Tip:
The quantity of doughnut dough will give you more doughnuts than you need. The leftover dough can be cut into 5-6cm circles, and deep-fried until golden brown, then coated in sugar for a quick treat. The doughnut is a perfect vehicle for any type of filling or dip. Roll them in vanilla-cinnamon sugar as soon as they come out of the deep fat fryer. Serve them with a vanilla pastry cream custard flavoured with the grated zest of an orange and a lemon and spiked with aged rum.
A savoury alternative is to cook a mix of Japanese mushrooms with rosemary, butter, mirin and soy sauce, chop them into a rough paste, stuff the doughnuts with the mix and dust them with dehydrated ground black trumpet mushroom mixed together with icing sugar, salt, and 5-spice powder (3 parts icing sugar to 1 part salt and 1 part 5-spice).
Recipe from Chiltern Firehouse: The Cookbook – André Balazs & Nuno Mendes, £30.
MORE RECIPES:
Tom Kitchin’s Smoked Salmon Pancake / Avocado Hummus from The Social Pantry / Raymond Blanc’s Hake Grenobloise