Sep 9, 2008
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7 Doughnut Shops

From coast to coast, these fried dough masterpieces are worth the trip.
By John T. Edge
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7 Doughnut Shops Photo: Sarah Karnasiewicz

After spending a year on the road researching my book Donuts: An American Passion (Putnam, 2006), I can claim a semblance of objectivity and declare that America's love for fried, glazed, filled, and jimmie-sprinkled poufs of dough is renascent. Sure, Krispy Kreme was a catalyst. But now that the cumulus of powdered sugar has cleared, I've come to believe that the best American doughnuts transcend fads. They are honest and forthright. They are goofball and flyweight. The best are cooked by iconoclasts, dedicated to the exaltation of fried dough rounds. The following are exemplars of the art.

BUTLER'S COLONIAL DONUT HOUSE Mario Gulinello, a reformed 30-year veteran of Dunkin' Donuts, plies his trade in a faux Colonial doll house of a bakery in Westport, Massachusetts. Gulinello fries yeast-raised rectangles called Long Johns; then his wife, Lorene (who also worked at Dunkin'), slits the finished doughnuts along their seams, pipes in thin streams of black raspberry jelly, and strafes them with whipped cream—real whipped cream.

DOUGHNUT PLANT The look is Lower East Side industrial. The vibe is downtown Manhattan hip. The proprietor, Mark Isreal, is a doughnut Don Quixote, always dreaming. Among the fried fantasies he has realized are blueberry pinstripe doughnuts in honor of the New York Yankees and fresh ginger doughnuts for the Chinese New Year. His grandest feat of windmill tilting yielded a sometime specialty, a banana cream–filled peanut butter–glazed Elvis-inspired doughnut.

JIM THE DONUT MAN If you're lucky enough to arrive at Jim Nakano's on a spring day, when he is conjuring strawberry doughnuts from his roadside shop on Route 66, east of Los Angeles, you won't have to be told that the ruby-hued berries he uses were picked that very morning. You'll be able to taste the truth. Ditto the summertime peach doughnuts, which also owe their brilliance to local fruit—sliced, glazed, and then stuffed inside the cottony interior of what is in effect a jellyless jelly doughnut.

SHIPLEY DO-NUTS Doughnuts need not be precious. By empirical standards, the glazed yeast rounds served by the Oxford, Mississippi, branch of this Texas chain are not worthy. They have the texture normally ascribed to Wonder bread, and they are drenched in a one-dimensional sugary veneer. They don't challenge the eater. But these downy indulgences do satisfy. And sometimes that's just what we crave.

TEX DRIVE-IN Founded by Ernest Texeira on the Big Island of Hawaii, this popular drive-in (there are two locations) pays tribute to the malasada, a kind of holeless Portuguese doughnut that has long been popular in the 50th state. Tex gouges the centers to make room for such delights as pepper jelly, sublimely subverting the tradition.

TOP POT DOUGHNUTS Brothers Mark and Michael Klebeck of Seattle call their tart lemon-filled doughnuts slicked with lemon icing Valley Girls. The rose-colored vanilla-iced variety, haloed with flaked coconut, is known as the Pink Feather Boa. Chocolate cakes with chocolate icing are Double Troubles. The brothers have designs on expansion and, in a stroke of pure genius, have acquired the moribund trademark of the onetime king of the hill, the Doughnut Corporation of America.

ZINGERMAN'S ROADSHOW Sold from a retrofitted aluminum Spartan trailer coach parked outside Zingerman's Roadhouse restaurant, in Ann Arbor, Alex Young's nutmeg- and lemon zest–spiked doughnuts draw inspiration from an old Dutch recipe and from formulae in the new Joy of Cooking and the Jamisons' A Real American Breakfast.

Comments (11)

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Last week I had the best doughnut ever at Rise n' Roll an Amish bakery in Middlebury Indiana. It was their Caramel Cinnamon doughnut! I am basically a plain doughnut kind of gal, but after a sample of this I was hooked. I keep thinking of it, wishing I could order some overnight..
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I am a doughnut connoisseur and have been known to travel a hundred miles to search out doughnut shops. The best doughnuts I've ever had are from a small town in Mississippi called Ocean Springs. The shop is called Tato-Nut Donut Shop on Government Street. They sell out early so be sure to get there in the morning!
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Portland, Oregon boasts Voodoo Donuts, with two locations open all night. Famous for novelties such as the Nyquil Donut and the Blazer Blunt, they also produce the best home-made cake and raised delights, including my favorite, a giant plain glazed donut (9 inches across!) known as the TexAss. The creepy decor might scare the kiddies, but the place is a lot of fun, and the donuts are great.
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John T - Your word is like gospel truth to me. Almost! Your writings, your musings, your sensible approach to food are exemplary and worth all attention one can give them. Please take me up on that offer to host your family and you at the farm. If you come between late-spring and early-fall, I promise you a donut discovery that shall impress you and leave you sated beyond measure. It is of course a local treasure for us in North Country (NY/So.VT)but a treasure that pleases one and all. Our mutual friend and fellow food-writer and honest-foodie Kim Sunee fell in love with these donuts as did the erstwhile Rose Levy Beranbaum who waxed poetic about the apple fritters.
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Hands down, DONUT PLANT.
Tres Leches and Blackout donut are unbelievable.
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Forgot to share the address and name:
KING BAKERY AT DOUBLE K FARM
108 West Main Street
Cambridge, NY 12816
Tel: 518-677-3530

http://www.thegourmetro.net/2009/08/farm-dispatch-the-donut-king-cambridge-ny/
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Todd Coleman - The offer to host at the farm and share these donuts some weekend is extended to you as well. If you are reading these comments, email me. Lets cook some Indian fare and end the feast with donuts.
And if you find yourself at the CIA sometime in Napa Valley, you might find my mothers donuts from American Masala served at the Greystone campus. The chefs seem to have fallen in love with them. Now only if I had the will to fry them and make a business doing that.
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Although I have not been as of yet, Dynamo Donuts in San Francisco is supposed to be amazing! For bacon fans, Maple Glazed Bacon Apple sounds good- but the one I would try first is Caramel Del Sel. I am planning on checking them out next time I am in San Francisco.
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I would have to say the best donuts I have ever had has to be DutchMonkey Donuts in Cumming GA. The owner's used to work for one of my favorite chefs, Tom Colichio, and their restaurant is probably the most customer focused place in Atlanta.

But most importantly they have a donut that is wrapped in bacon...
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If you've not been to Psycho Donuts in The Bay Area, you haven't lived. The asylum-themed store has Nurse Ratched-look nurses as cashiers, a padded cell for photos, and unusual art. And oh, their donuts are as good as they are unusual. Oreo-topped donuts, vegan donuts, cereal-topped donuts, and even something called The Dead Elvis. It's a must-experience place.
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You HAVE to give Dutch Monkey Doughnuts of Cumming, GA a try! Before they came along, I never knew how good a doughnut was. Yes, I would grab any donut in the past and enjoy it but your eyes will pop open when you take a bite of any of the doughnuts that Dutch Monkey Doughnuts offer. All ingredients are made in the store and everything is natural down to the fruit filling. All doughnuts are made fresh daily so don't get there late or your favorite doughnut will be sold out. Dutch Monkey Doughnuts is a testament of what happens when you truly pour your passion into something and the result is just pure bliss.

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