Raised Doughnuts
Instructions
- 1
Old-fashioned "raised doughnuts" are seldom seen nowadays, but are easily made.
- 2
Make a sponge as for bread, using a pint of warm water or milk, and a large half cupful of yeast; when the sponge is very light, add half a cupful of butter or sweet lard, a coffeecupful of sugar, a teaspoonful of salt and one small teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a little water, one tablespoonful of cinnamon, a little grated nutmeg; stir in now two well-beaten eggs, add sifted flour until it is the consistency of biscuit dough, knead it well, cover and let rise; then roll the dough out into a sheet half an inch thick, cut out with a very small biscuit-cutter, or in strips half an inch wide and three inches long, place them on greased tins, cover them well and let them rise before frying them.
- 3
Drop them in very hot lard.
- 4
Raised cakes require longer time than cakes made with baking powder.
- 5
Sift powdered sugar over them as fast as they are fried, while warm.
- 6
Our grandmothers put allspice into these cakes; that, however, is a matter of taste.