Breakfast & Brunch
Easy Homemade Jelly-Filled Donuts
Here’s our favorite recipe for easy, homemade jelly-filled donuts. They’re perfect for any occasion, and sure to be your family’s favorite!

Easy Homemade Jelly-Filled Donuts | Favorite Doughnut Recipes
Photo Credit: Amy TraversoMaking Homemade Jelly-Filled Donuts
Once the dough was done rising, I pressed it out on a very well-floured surface and cut the rounds with a biscuit cutter.


Photo Credit : Amy Traverso

Homemade Jelly-Filled Donuts Recipe
Total time: 35 minutes plus about 90 minutes rising time Hands-on time: 35 minutes Yield: About 18 donuts Note: You can use vegetable oil for frying, but I find that vegetable shortening, such as Crisco, makes the donuts less greasy.Ingredients
- 1 package yeast
- 1 cup warm milk
- 1 1/2 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 3 tablespoons salted butter, at room temperature
- 1 large egg plus 1 yolk, at room temperature
- 1/2 teaspoon table salt
- 3 to 3 1/4 cups sifted all-purpose flour, divided, plus more for counter
- Vegetable shortening or vegetable oil for frying (see Note)
- About 1/3 cup jelly of your choice
- Powdered sugar for dusting
Method
- In a mixing bowl (or in the bowl of a standing mixer), combine yeast, warm milk, and sugar and stir until dissolved. Add butter, eggs, salt, and 1 1/2 cups flour. Beat at medium speed until combined, then add 1 1/2 cups more flour and beat until it forms a soft dough (you may need to beat by hand or switch to a dough hook at this point). Knead until smooth, 5 more minutes, adding the additional flour if needed.
- Cover the bowl and set it in a draft-free spot. Let rise until it doubles in bulk, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Stir the dough to let out the air.
- Turn the dough out onto a well-floured surface and roll out with a floured rolling pin until about 3/4 inch thick. Using a 2- to 2 1/2-inch biscuit cutter or glass, cut the donuts into rounds, re-rolling and cutting as needed. Cover rounds with a towel and let rise again for 15 minutes.
- Meanwhile, heat vegetable shortening or oil in a skillet (or two) to about 370° (or until a piece of dough dropped in the oil sizzles nicely). Transfer 3 or 4 rounds to each pan and fry until golden, about 45 seconds. Turn doughnuts over and fry until golden on the other side, another 40 seconds. Transfer to a baking sheet lined with paper towels.
- Fill your pastry bag, squeeze bottle, or syringe with jelly. Poke a hole in the side of each doughnut and squeeze to fill. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve warm.
i am a recipe freak and have many copies of yankee church cookbooks,but i always look to yankee for old new england recipes.i just signed up for recipe newsletter but it wouldn’t go through to you. i get the newsletter but not for recipes[help].
Hi Leo,
If you go to this page — http://www.yankeemagazine.com/feedback — and select Web Site Technical Support from the drop down menu, they will be able to help you figure out why you weren’t able to sign up for the Recipe Box newsletter.
“Tuesday was Saint Joseph’s Day, which is a Saint Patrick’s Day-style holiday for Italians like me. Except rather than indulging in beer, we indulge in delicious fried pastries like zeppole and frittelle.”
Quite the stereotype to assert that all Irish indulge in beer on our piddly little holiday, unlike delicious Italian pastries on your chosen Saint’s day. Tsk tsk… We’re not all knuckle dragging drunks, Ms. Traverso & Irish cakes & pastries are wonderful. Leave your prejudice behind & try them sometime. Far better than zeppole, I assure you.
Oh goodness, I’m sorry to have offended you, Linda! It was truly not my intention. I was trying to draw a comparison between indulgence foods—things that aren’t quite good for you, but that you enjoy nonetheless. So I put beer and fried food in the same category. Both are traditionally consumed on their respective holidays (I don’t think of corned beef as an indulgence food), but did not intent to further negative stereotypes.
I can tell you that I have had Irish pastries (two favorite spots, now closed, were Breads n’ Bits of Ireland in Melrose, MA and Taste of Home in South Boston) and agree with you that they are wonderful.
I love this recipe! I’ve made them twice, and have gotten many complements. The only thing I did different was, I put all the ingredients for dough in my bread machine and set it to the dough cycle. So easy and not as messy.
How much Crisco solid shortening is needed for frying?
The jelly donuts look yummy!
Wondering what size the ‘package’ of yeast would be.
Wow Linda cool it you have anger issues