Try homemade berry fritters the next time a doughnut craving hits! Based off of the popular apple fritters, this summery fried berry fritter combines a soft yeasted dough, blueberries, and a creamy strawberry glaze made from real strawberries.
This recipe is brought to you in partnership with Red Star Yeast.
While brainstorming new recipes to try recently, my brain kept going back to monkey bread. I don’t know how or why, but I have a feeling it was the cinnamon-sugar-butter-dough that kept my mind racing and stomach growling. I used it as inspiration for a totally new recipe—perhaps a doughnut that has the same pull-apart style as monkey bread?
Yes, that’s what I’ll do.
I had never made fritters until recently, but I consider myself a pro at traditional glazed doughnuts. Apple fritters are pretty popular in the fall season, so I decided to put a summery spin on things. Bakers, meet my homemade berry fritters.
Fritters are deep-fried pull-apart style cakes of dough. The shaping process seems like it would be complicated, but there’s really no precise technique required. I’ll get to that in a minute. Apple fritters are the most common variety, but there’s also blueberry fritters, banana fritters, and even shrimp and clam fritters! After frying, the sweet varieties are usually dusted with sugar or dunked into glaze.
The term “fritters” can also refer to little savory cakes such as zucchini fritters, corn fritters, or these zucchini sweet potato fritters. Today we’re talking about doughnut-variety fritters, a warm breakfast indulgence popular at doughnut shops. They’re VERY good. (Obviously!)
To start, let’s revisit my favorite doughnut dough. This is a rich, buttery dough that requires yeast for its rise. Don’t be nervous, this is actually a very straightforward dough recipe. Let’s walk through each ingredient:
. Go light on the blueberries. If you use too many, they’ll just fall out of the frying fritters and burn. You can also use blackberries or chopped strawberries. I recommend fresh blueberries because they aren’t as juicy. Frozen berries or juicier berries make this dough a mess!
Fold it over like a calzone:
Make a bunch of cuts vertically and horizontally:
Divide into 12 pieces, round them out, then cover and let them rest:
You need a large heavy-bottomed pot. This oil gets VERY hot, so a heavy-bottomed, quality pot is the safest choice. I usually use my 5.5 quart dutch oven. Pour a quart or 2 of oil into your pot. You want at least 2-3 inches of oil—don’t let it come more than halfway up the pot. Use a candy/oil thermometer to heat the oil to 350°F (177°C).
Cook a couple berry fritters at a time, only about 1-2 minutes on each side. Some of the blueberries may come loose and float around in the oil. That’s par for the course! Just discard them since they’ll taste burnt. After frying the berry fritters, use a slotted metal spoon or metal spatula to place the fritters on a wire rack. Let some of the oil drip off, then once they’re cool enough to handle, dunk each fritter into strawberry glaze.
Once you’ve mastered the frying here, you’ll be set to try your hand at homemade funnel cakes!
If there’s an opportunity for pink strawberry glaze, let’s take it.
As the berry fritters are cooling, process a few fresh strawberries into a purée. Once liquified, pour over confectioners’ sugar, then add milk or heavy cream and vanilla extract. Whisk together until smooth, then let each fritter take a nice dip!
Most of the berry flavor comes from this glaze, so I don’t recommend skipping it or switching flavors. Instead of strawberries, you can use blackberries or raspberries. Blueberries aren’t quite as juicy, so I don’t recommend using them for the glaze topping.
Like big giant berry pillows! Would love to know if you try these.
This sweet summery fried fritter combines a soft yeasted dough, blueberries, and a creamy strawberry glaze made from real strawberries.