• javiwhite@feddit.uk
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    1 day ago

    In the UK these are called doughnuts.

    The presence of a hole isnt a pre-requisite to being deemed a doughnut here.

    Calling something that has zero holes a ‘donut hole’, will absolutely have a local refer to you as a doughnut tho…

    • garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      But how do you differentiate between a doughnut ( o ) and a doughnut o. I’d be so pissed if I asked for a doughnut and someone handed me this tiny shit.

          • javiwhite@feddit.uk
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            11 hours ago

            What part of the UK are they called doughballs? ive never heard them called that.

            Only reference I can think of is Pizza express’ dough balls, but they’re a savoury dough ball rather than sweet like a doughnut.

      • javiwhite@feddit.uk
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        1 day ago

        Oh I understand that. I was just being facetious; my point was more to do with the definition of a hole, and how it’s used here to describe something that definitely is not a hole.

        If we’re pedantic, then the doughnut hole is the middle bit of the original doughnut, now that this part has been punched out.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          Doughnuts are typically made from a straight piece of dough shaped into a circle, not a hole punched.

          Doughnut holes are usually just bits of the dough, prior to forming into a circle, that’s cut up and fried

                • Soggy@lemmy.world
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                  14 hours ago

                  Roller if you’re fancy, smaller operations just use a ring cutter. (Source, me, I was baker and hand-cut a couple thousand circles most nights) We didn’t actually fry the holes though, more for process efficiency than anything. They got re-formed into a slightly firmer dough for cinnamon rolls and fritters. “Donut holes” were cut with a small roller with a hexagon pattern.

                  Cake donuts are indeed different because they’re made from a liquid batter. Fancy hopper on an arm over the fryer, drops perfect rings of batter into the oil when you turn a crank.