I really appreciate Glen's channel. I love how he does the research and discusses the sources and history of his recipes, and he comes off as just a wholesome, genuinely good guy, (without being sanctimonious or anything like that). No crazy personality for the camera or over-the-top editing or long, unnecessary intro/theme song either. It keeps the attention on the recipe itself in my opinion. Sorry for all of the unsolicited commentary, I just really like your channel Glen!
He comes across as like the perfect uncle you want to baby sit the kids. They'd come home talking about how today they learned to make authentic chowder from 1921.
Don't worry, I share the same sentiment. I usually can't stand watching "chef" videos, but like the food they make, these videos are warm and comforting. They present cooking like it is, and I always feel like I learned something about the ingredients themselves, or a bit of history. What we eat here at home has certainly gotten more varied thanks to Glen & Friends Cooking, as we love trying out the things we learn.
Syndicate yes I totally agree. How I found Glen was when he made peanut butter sheet cake from Noreen's Kitchen. Watched another video right I watched that. Had to subscribe. Loved his videos. I really enjoy.him. Pleasant to watch.
In Berthierville, QC, there's a place called Délices d'Antan, they make a great potato doughnut. Plain, tossed in cinnamon and sugar, dipped in hot maple syrup or dipped in honey. Eat them right away or reheat them on a grill. To die for.
I wonder how that's going to go? Wikipedia didn't used to accept RUclips videos as "reliable sources". Has that changed? Update: there's already been a few additional edits and reversions, lol.
@@OptimusWombat To be fair though its not necessarily the video that's just saying it's a thing, Glen did cite a specific source which can be looked into. (The "Five Roses Cook Book")
In college they always told us to always site from reliable sources and Wikipedia wasn't one of them. 😂🤣🤣 But at this point for a potato donut 🤷♂️ Hey 🙂
Spudnuts was a popular donut franchise in the 1960s -1970s. I believe they used potato starch instead of mashed potatoes and they used yeast. Spudnuts business model was to give 12 year olds baskets full bags that contained 1/2 dozen Spudnuts . The 12 year olds would sell donuts door to door on Saturday morning.
My mother made potato doughnuts all the time. She made extra mashed potatoes some meals just to have enough left over for doughnuts. One thing she did differently was added spices to the dough - generally cinnamon and cloves. Then when they came out of the fryer, she had us shake them in cinnamon/sugar mixture in a paper bag. Oh my they were so good! She also made cake doughnuts and risen doughnuts but I never got her recipe for those. It is so nice to have a recipe, though, for potato doughnuts.
Every time you mention the Five Roses Cookbook, I think of the time when Anne of Green Gables was trying to get published and her story kept getting rejected, so Diana inserted a small blip of using baking powder to make a cake and resubmitted it and it sold! Timing wise it doesn't actually match, but it's not far off as the final book in the series, Rilla of Ingleside, starts just before the Great War begins.
My mother made potato candy which was a roll of mashed potatoes, flour, and sugar with peanut butter. I'm not sure how far that recipe goes except that it was traditional in Indiana around Christmastime
I grew up in a small town in Northern New Mexico called Farmington. They had a donut shop that was called “Spudnuts”. It was a favorite of mine! I spent my lunch money there more than once. Will definitely try the recipe. 👍🏼
Thanks for that bit of information. When I saw the recipe was for potato doughnuts, Spudnuts immediately came to mind. Then I thought maybe I just imagined it (memory isn't what it used to be).
@@noniefuss There were a couple in the Valley. If I recall correctly one at or near Roscoe and Sepulveda. It was still there last time I was in that area, so 99-2000. We had one up in the Antelope Valley as well. They were great, as was Foster's, but both switched to a premixed dough and their quality suffered. Still better than Winchell's or Dunkin' though.
John, I'm also from Farmington. Spudnuts are definitely a blast from the past. Spudnut shop returned to Farmington a few years ago. Not in the original location. But still so, so good.
In German communities here in Texas we can still find Spud-nuts. Lots of German families have handed down versions of this recipe. I am 60 yrs. old and I have my great grandmother Gardner's hand written wedding cookbook, written in German and later translated, with a potato doughnut recipe very similar to this one. Love them! We are German-Jewish so that might be an angle to look into.
My grandma would make spudnuts every halloween and people would come over and have a donut with apple cider. I got to help her for many years before she officially decided it became too much work at her age. This style of donut is my absolute favorite. And she also did either sugar (we threw them into a paper bag with sugar and got to shake them around to coat them) or onto a wooden spoon that we would hang over a container and pour glaze on them. Thanks for sharing!!
We still have a spud-nuts location here in California . I think it was family owned until the early 2000”s, but the recipe lives on with the new owners and the donuts are great. There are two other shops that use the spud-nuts recipe, but only say that it is a family recipe. Thanks for the great video, I’m putting on my mask and heading out to donut shop now...
There is a farm about 2 minutes from my place that sells fresh potato donuts in their little roadside kiosk. Every time my wife sends me to get some fruits or vegetables I bring home a half dozen. So good. There’s also a food truck that posts up in the local grocery store’s parking lot for a few days at a time throughout the year. My favorite time of the year is in the late fall when it’s hovering around the freezing mark and you get in the car with the hot doughnuts and the aroma fills up the interior.
I made these with my great grandma when I was 13 or 14, she passed when I was 15, I never got the recipe and always wish I had so I could make them in honor of her, thank you
I haven't made my Great Grandmother's potato donut recipe. Just because of all the donuts! The instructions sound the same. Now I am tempted! If you have donuts, you have friends! Lol!
My 18 year old loves to cook and bake . We watch all your videos. When he saw this he was floored at the idea of potato donuts. Tonight he was bored and gave it a try. Man oh man over twenty donuts and holes . He even cut a few Maple 🍁 leaf donuts. And he loves them. They certainly are more substantial. I bet they were part of a farm hand fare. Carb energy. Interesting that one of papers that posted the recipe was from Burlingame Ks. Just miles outside of Topeka where . I grew up. Oh well enough rambling I've got to figure out where to put all the donuts 🍩.
don't overlook the sour cream doughnut a true Southern favorite , slightly sweet, with a crunch to the initial bite and a bit of sour on the back of the tongue
My auntie used to make potato donuts and she always but a pinch of nutmeg. They were delicious. She also took them out of the fat with her large red handled fork and immediately gave them an extremely quick dip into boiling water to remove the fat on the outside of the donut. You really stirred up a memory for me with this recipe. Thank you.
The next town over, in north central Washington state, used to have doughnut shop called Spudnut. My grandmother's doughnut recipe uses potatoes, with the fried doughnuts tossed in cinnamon sugar while warm. My favorite! I make them occasionally, using her recipe.
Fond childhood memories of trips that included a stop at the Spudnut shop in Hangtown (Placerville, Ca.) in what must have been the late 1950's. I remember it as being very near the historic gold rush era "hanging tree" which of course was where the "hangtown" name originated. I still pass thru Placerville infrequently and find myself looking for some remnant of that Spudnut store. There are Spudnut Donut shops remaining today with at least one in Los Angeles and one in Sacramento. I will be making some of these a soon as we buy some oil for the frying.
There's a not written recipe, coming from the extreme west of Sicily, in Italy, which goes long back in time! A lovely Sicilian grandma born in 1913 told me that this was already a local culinary tradition during her grandma youth!! They used to make it around Christmas and is not exactly a doughnut but the dough is very similar to the one you make in the video... they actually are little ball, like the one you had on the side, they deep fried them and then put sugar on top, and in some cases they add cinnamon. They call them "Sfingi" word which can be used for different kind of sweetness in different part of the island. I thought you could find it interesting :) Thanks for the video
@@GlenAndFriendsCooking thanks for the message :) as per tradition in the city of Marsala, they actually are... that was the ingredient that surprised me the most, while I was watching the making of this amazing ball of goodness!!
Honestly, I gravitate to the Crullers. French Crullers are one of my top picks for doughnuts when I go to Krispy Kreme if they have them. I'd like to see you do some of those at some point. Also someone has already attempted to update the page, I'm going to see if I can make a quick little edit. And done. Congrats, Glen. If my edit isn't reverted, this video is now immortalized in Wikipedia as a reference source.
@@theablanca17 Yeah, and has not been removed. The only thing I couldn't do when citing the video was put the Emoji from the title (Wikipedia doesn't like Emoji's from unregistered accounts).
@@Kinkajou1015 It may get reverted because you need to cite the newspaper article itself and not a video that references the newspaper article. Edit: Of course that is how it should be, not sure how Wikipedia is currently, haven't used that in a long time.
@@CST-ft9dv Well there was an auto revert that was done by a bot because I linked the RUclips video, I undid that revert because the cookbook and recipe are shown in the video itself. If Wikipedia is really THAT stuck up to not allow the video to be a source for the information, that's their loss.
Was terribly sad to hear that the Spudnuts in Amarillo Texas closed down :( my family would get tasty Spudnuts there while visiting our family. Thanks for uploading this! Gonna give it a try and see how it holds up. These were the best doughnuts I have ever tasted in my life. Lol. Peace.
I am so happy you did this Recipe. My grandfather used to own a donut shop in only made these kind of donuts in Massachusetts. I’ve been looking for the recipe and could never find it. I never thought to use the Wikipedia
There is a chain of donut shops called SpudNuts in southern California. The closest one is a few hours away from me, but now I can just make my own. Thanks for the video!
I just watched your video this morning. After you mentioned Wikipedia I had to go see if the info had been updated and it had. It was very interesting to read.
2 years as a finisher at a Tim Horton's in Mississauga. Back when they used to fry the donuts on premise. This style wouldn't happen now but back then!!! Great job as usual Glen!😎👍👍🥇🏅🏆☕
Those look good . I am going to make Spudnuts the version I learned from my Great Grandma ( born 1892 ) here soon . it is the yeast version she learned from her mom as a child and taught me how to make in 1978 . She lived 102 years and was very helpful in my history class homework . LOL I will also try to make these sometime . I never thought there was an easier way to make them ! LOL Thanks.
I lived in Dodge City, KS in the late 1960s. There was a donut store there called the Spudnut Shop at which my Mom and Dad treated my brother and me regularly!
Julie likes the same types of donuts as I do! 🙂 I know Lethbridge, in Western Canada, had a handmade potato donut place (Otto’s Spudnut and Ice Cream Shop 1960’s -2000) that was a favourite treat when I was in Uni there.
My Grandmother used to own a Spudnut Shop in Longview, WA. I used to help her out at the shop when I was a young girl. I have so many great memories. I can’t wait to try this recipe.
My favorite doughnut at Timmy's is by far, the old fashion sour cream :) My mother-in-law makes potato doughnuts every year and freezes a batch for Christmas gatherings. They are as good as when she first baked them.
Back decades ago I use to go through El Dorado, Arkansas quite a bit and they actually had a donut shop called Spudnuts. Had to stop and get a box of holes for the trip. Good times.
We live in central Ohio and everyone here talks about the good old days when you could buy doughnuts at the Spudnuts shop!! I'm excited to find the recipe!! Thanks!
I know these as spudnuts made with yeast and raised before frying. Like a glazed donut but the flavor is so much better. I heard it originated from Idaho potato farmers. Not sure, but will have to try this cake type. Your videos are so interesting!
Tip for handling ring doughnuts in oil, use a stiff wire (a wire coat hanger is ideal) with a 30-40 degree bend a few inches from one end, you can easily flip your doughnuts whilst cooking and use it as a hook to extract many at a time when done
youre looking really well glenn. you know what i have trouble finding? the old fashioned sour cream donut, the hard crusty one. i like them without glaze. i'd like to learn how to make them.
If you have a problem eating all those donuts you can send a bunch my way! I love the Sunday morning old cookbook show!!! It is so fascinating to see the history of some recipes!
There is a chain of donut stops in Cleveland OH, called Spud Nuts which as you can imagine use potatoes. Possibly the greatest name for a regional donut chain. Donuts are pretty good too.
We have a donut shop "Sandy Pony's" ( in honor of the Assateaque ponies on the Maryland Shores). They do the cake donut that's the batter version. It's like a Baskin Robbins in flavors. My fav is the Sea Foam which is glazed then coconut or the Porky Pony which is cinnamon glaze dipped with real shredded bacon. DEVINE!
Thanks for watching Everyone! The recipe is in the Description box.
Thanks Glen! Love these potato recipes, Things like Boxty (Irish potato pancakes). Potatoes are a great ingredient for so much.
El Dorado AR has a Spudnut shop ....there are none better
Looked to see if this cookbook was still available and there are some available for 90 or so us currency. So sad. Seems like a good book.
The extra effort you put into researching the history and/or science of cooking adds a lot to these videos, great stuff
I agree I learn so much .
I see that someone has updated Wikipedia and they mention Glen & Friends in a footnote!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potato_doughnut
Cool!
I just checked the same thing! The internet certainly works fast.
@@Syndicate_01 same and was about to comment. We are certainly a quick bunch these days.
Glen & Friends are mentioned in the notes. Good.
@@charlesbaldo glan and friends still in the notes.
I really appreciate Glen's channel. I love how he does the research and discusses the sources and history of his recipes, and he comes off as just a wholesome, genuinely good guy, (without being sanctimonious or anything like that). No crazy personality for the camera or over-the-top editing or long, unnecessary intro/theme song either. It keeps the attention on the recipe itself in my opinion.
Sorry for all of the unsolicited commentary, I just really like your channel Glen!
He comes across as like the perfect uncle you want to baby sit the kids. They'd come home talking about how today they learned to make authentic chowder from 1921.
Don't worry, I share the same sentiment. I usually can't stand watching "chef" videos, but like the food they make, these videos are warm and comforting. They present cooking like it is, and I always feel like I learned something about the ingredients themselves, or a bit of history. What we eat here at home has certainly gotten more varied thanks to Glen & Friends Cooking, as we love trying out the things we learn.
Syndicate yes I totally agree. How I found Glen was when he made peanut butter sheet cake from Noreen's Kitchen. Watched another video right I watched that. Had to subscribe. Loved his videos. I really enjoy.him. Pleasant to watch.
In Berthierville, QC, there's a place called Délices d'Antan, they make a great potato doughnut. Plain, tossed in cinnamon and sugar, dipped in hot maple syrup or dipped in honey. Eat them right away or reheat them on a grill. To die for.
True!
that sounds awesome.
I live in Quebec and I never heard of them. :/ but I will go when COVID is over for sure
Their maple syrup doughnuts are my favourite and also the reason why I watched this video.
For a minute I was worried that Julie had too many choices and almost short-circuted....;-) Loved the history lesson too, Glenn!
Someone already edited Wikipedia and cited the show ;-)
I wonder how that's going to go? Wikipedia didn't used to accept RUclips videos as "reliable sources". Has that changed?
Update: there's already been a few additional edits and reversions, lol.
@@OptimusWombat To be fair though its not necessarily the video that's just saying it's a thing, Glen did cite a specific source which can be looked into. (The "Five Roses Cook Book")
In college they always told us to always site from reliable sources and Wikipedia wasn't one of them. 😂🤣🤣 But at this point for a potato donut 🤷♂️ Hey 🙂
Spudnuts was a popular donut franchise in the 1960s -1970s. I believe they used potato starch instead of mashed potatoes and they used yeast. Spudnuts business model was to give 12 year olds baskets full bags that contained 1/2 dozen Spudnuts . The 12 year olds would sell donuts door to door on Saturday morning.
My mother made potato doughnuts all the time. She made extra mashed potatoes some meals just to have enough left over for doughnuts. One thing she did differently was added spices to the dough - generally cinnamon and cloves. Then when they came out of the fryer, she had us shake them in cinnamon/sugar mixture in a paper bag. Oh my they were so good! She also made cake doughnuts and risen doughnuts but I never got her recipe for those. It is so nice to have a recipe, though, for potato doughnuts.
Every time you mention the Five Roses Cookbook, I think of the time when Anne of Green Gables was trying to get published and her story kept getting rejected, so Diana inserted a small blip of using baking powder to make a cake and resubmitted it and it sold! Timing wise it doesn't actually match, but it's not far off as the final book in the series, Rilla of Ingleside, starts just before the Great War begins.
In Pennsylvania Dutch country we eat potato doughnuts once a year, on Fastacht Day, also known as Shrove Tuesday. The doughnuts are called fastnachts.
better eat em 3 times a year
We have a local Spudnut Shop in Richland, WA that’s been around since 1948. Very used to hearing the term.
I was going to say I remembered them along the west coast. We left Seattle in '71 though so I wasn't sure...
My mother made potato candy which was a roll of mashed potatoes, flour, and sugar with peanut butter. I'm not sure how far that recipe goes except that it was traditional in Indiana around Christmastime
I grew up in a small town in Northern New Mexico called Farmington. They had a donut shop that was called “Spudnuts”. It was a favorite of mine! I spent my lunch money there more than once. Will definitely try the recipe. 👍🏼
Thanks for that bit of information. When I saw the recipe was for potato doughnuts, Spudnuts immediately came to mind. Then I thought maybe I just imagined it (memory isn't what it used to be).
They had them here in El Paso too. They would be sold by bicycle around the different neighborhoods into the 60s'.
There used to be a place called Spudnuts in Southern California too. Used ot be one of my favorite hang outs in high school and college.
@@noniefuss There were a couple in the Valley. If I recall correctly one at or near Roscoe and Sepulveda. It was still there last time I was in that area, so 99-2000. We had one up in the Antelope Valley as well. They were great, as was Foster's, but both switched to a premixed dough and their quality suffered. Still better than Winchell's or Dunkin' though.
John, I'm also from Farmington. Spudnuts are definitely a blast from the past. Spudnut shop returned to Farmington a few years ago. Not in the original location. But still so, so good.
In German communities here in Texas we can still find Spud-nuts. Lots of German families have handed down versions of this recipe. I am 60 yrs. old and I have my great grandmother Gardner's hand written wedding cookbook, written in German and later translated, with a potato doughnut recipe very similar to this one. Love them! We are German-Jewish so that might be an angle to look into.
My grandma would make spudnuts every halloween and people would come over and have a donut with apple cider. I got to help her for many years before she officially decided it became too much work at her age. This style of donut is my absolute favorite. And she also did either sugar (we threw them into a paper bag with sugar and got to shake them around to coat them) or onto a wooden spoon that we would hang over a container and pour glaze on them.
Thanks for sharing!!
I'm with Julie, I love a cake donut and these appeal to me greatly. Wish I could taste these, might just have to make them!!
It's nice to have Canadian friends.
We still have a spud-nuts location here in California . I think it was family owned until the early 2000”s, but the recipe lives on with the new owners and the donuts are great. There are two other shops that use the spud-nuts recipe, but only say that it is a family recipe. Thanks for the great video, I’m putting on my mask and heading out to donut shop now...
There is a farm about 2 minutes from my place that sells fresh potato donuts in their little roadside kiosk. Every time my wife sends me to get some fruits or vegetables I bring home a half dozen. So good. There’s also a food truck that posts up in the local grocery store’s parking lot for a few days at a time throughout the year. My favorite time of the year is in the late fall when it’s hovering around the freezing mark and you get in the car with the hot doughnuts and the aroma fills up the interior.
We used to have a Spudnuts in my home town. Best donuts ever.
Look forward to these Sunday morning videos. These historical ones are my favorite videos of yours.
Me too its become a tradition in my home .
I made these with my great grandma when I was 13 or 14, she passed when I was 15, I never got the recipe and always wish I had so I could make them in honor of her, thank you
Have you ever done a cake doughnut recipe ? Thanks too you both for these videos.
I haven't made my Great Grandmother's potato donut recipe. Just because of all the donuts! The instructions sound the same. Now I am tempted! If you have donuts, you have friends! Lol!
Made them today, they did take a little more cooking than maybe a yeast donut, but no eggs, no yeast, no failure! They were perfect and a keeper.
My 18 year old loves to cook and bake . We watch all your videos. When he saw this he was floored at the idea of potato donuts. Tonight he was bored and gave it a try. Man oh man over twenty donuts and holes . He even cut a few Maple 🍁 leaf donuts. And he loves them. They certainly are more substantial. I bet they were part of a farm hand fare. Carb energy. Interesting that one of papers that posted the recipe was from Burlingame Ks. Just miles outside of Topeka where . I grew up. Oh well enough rambling I've got to figure out where to put all the donuts 🍩.
Spud nuts. Awesome.
Appreciate your work. Not to long but clearly explained. Wonderful.
Hello from Australia👋🏼 love the channel, keep up the good work!
I'm with you Julie! Cake donuts are the best. But a cruller just hits the spot sometimes!
We had a spudnut shop where I grew up... The nutbars and the chocolate spudnuts were to die for.... miss having such a place to go
don't overlook the sour cream doughnut a true Southern favorite , slightly sweet, with a crunch to the initial bite and a bit of sour on the back of the tongue
The sour cream doughnut is far from Southern. It's Scandinavian in origin and popular in northern Minnesota and Wisconsin.
A sour cream doughnut; sounds really yummy.
@@PapagenoMF I’d say it’s regional for both the south and the north I’ve been all over America and it’s not everywhere
My auntie used to make potato donuts and she always but a pinch of nutmeg. They were delicious. She also took them out of the fat with her large red handled fork and immediately gave them an extremely quick dip into boiling water to remove the fat on the outside of the donut. You really stirred up a memory for me with this recipe. Thank you.
The next town over, in north central Washington state, used to have doughnut shop called Spudnut. My grandmother's doughnut recipe uses potatoes, with the fried doughnuts tossed in cinnamon sugar while warm. My favorite! I make them occasionally, using her recipe.
Fond childhood memories of trips that included a stop at the Spudnut shop in Hangtown (Placerville, Ca.) in what must have been the late 1950's. I remember it as being very near the historic gold rush era "hanging tree" which of course was where the "hangtown" name originated. I still pass thru Placerville infrequently and find myself looking for some remnant of that Spudnut store. There are Spudnut Donut shops remaining today with at least one in Los Angeles and one in Sacramento. I will be making some of these a soon as we buy some oil for the frying.
These are absolutely amazing! Just made these for my birthday dessert tonight.
These look scrummy and I was so glad you said you were drawn to the molasses ones because so was i and now I'm going to watch you make them!
There's a not written recipe, coming from the extreme west of Sicily, in Italy, which goes long back in time! A lovely Sicilian grandma born in 1913 told me that this was already a local culinary tradition during her grandma youth!! They used to make it around Christmas and is not exactly a doughnut but the dough is very similar to the one you make in the video... they actually are little ball, like the one you had on the side, they deep fried them and then put sugar on top, and in some cases they add cinnamon. They call them "Sfingi" word which can be used for different kind of sweetness in different part of the island. I thought you could find it interesting :) Thanks for the video
Interesting - but I've never seen Sfingi made with potato.
@@GlenAndFriendsCooking thanks for the message :) as per tradition in the city of Marsala, they actually are... that was the ingredient that surprised me the most, while I was watching the making of this amazing ball of goodness!!
Honestly, I gravitate to the Crullers. French Crullers are one of my top picks for doughnuts when I go to Krispy Kreme if they have them. I'd like to see you do some of those at some point.
Also someone has already attempted to update the page, I'm going to see if I can make a quick little edit. And done. Congrats, Glen. If my edit isn't reverted, this video is now immortalized in Wikipedia as a reference source.
yeah, it's there now
@@theablanca17 Yeah, and has not been removed. The only thing I couldn't do when citing the video was put the Emoji from the title (Wikipedia doesn't like Emoji's from unregistered accounts).
@@Kinkajou1015 It may get reverted because you need to cite the newspaper article itself and not a video that references the newspaper article.
Edit: Of course that is how it should be, not sure how Wikipedia is currently, haven't used that in a long time.
@@CST-ft9dv Well there was an auto revert that was done by a bot because I linked the RUclips video, I undid that revert because the cookbook and recipe are shown in the video itself. If Wikipedia is really THAT stuck up to not allow the video to be a source for the information, that's their loss.
It's still there
Those look terrific.
Was terribly sad to hear that the Spudnuts in Amarillo Texas closed down :( my family would get tasty Spudnuts there while visiting our family. Thanks for uploading this! Gonna give it a try and see how it holds up. These were the best doughnuts I have ever tasted in my life. Lol. Peace.
Back in the 1960s in Bangor, Maine, there was a shop named "Spudnuts" that sold the yeasted variety that were delicious!!!
I can't tell you how much I love the research that goes with these great recipes.
Same!
Thank you Glen for my daily dose of sunshine, even when it's storming outside.
When I was a kid, there was a donut shop franchise called Spudnuts. It was a franchise from the northern midwest to the west coast (USA). Delicious!
The sour cream doughnut recipe right next to it looks good too. One of my favorites.
Definitely vote for the molasses doughnuts! Thanks🌟
I am so happy you did this Recipe. My grandfather used to own a donut shop in only made these kind of donuts in Massachusetts. I’ve been looking for the recipe and could never find it. I never thought to use the Wikipedia
There is a chain of donut shops called SpudNuts in southern California. The closest one is a few hours away from me, but now I can just make my own. Thanks for the video!
I just watched your video this morning. After you mentioned Wikipedia I had to go see if the info had been updated and it had. It was very interesting to read.
2 years as a finisher at a Tim Horton's in Mississauga. Back when they used to fry the donuts on premise. This style wouldn't happen now but back then!!! Great job as usual Glen!😎👍👍🥇🏅🏆☕
Yeah, back when Timmies was actually good. I miss those times.
@@EngineeringVignettes Yes, you are so right! The donuts were way better and they had walnut crunches!
Those look good . I am going to make Spudnuts the version I learned from my Great Grandma ( born 1892 ) here soon . it is the yeast version she learned from her mom as a child and taught me how to make in 1978 . She lived 102 years and was very helpful in my history class homework . LOL I will also try to make these sometime . I never thought there was an easier way to make them ! LOL Thanks.
I lived in Dodge City, KS in the late 1960s. There was a donut store there called the Spudnut Shop at which my Mom and Dad treated my brother and me regularly!
Julie likes the same types of donuts as I do! 🙂 I know Lethbridge, in Western Canada, had a handmade potato donut place (Otto’s Spudnut and Ice Cream Shop 1960’s -2000) that was a favourite treat when I was in Uni there.
Looks good thanks for shareing
I just made yeasted potato donuts on mother's day! Very interesting
My Grandmother used to own a Spudnut Shop in Longview, WA. I used to help her out at the shop when I was a young girl. I have so many great memories. I can’t wait to try this recipe.
They look so yummy
kind of reminds me of potato bread. that stuff is really great. I bet the spudnuts would be just as good.
You made that look so easy!
Bet they're great made with sweet potatoes too. !!!
wonderful recipe!
My favorite doughnut at Timmy's is by far, the old fashion sour cream :) My mother-in-law makes potato doughnuts every year and freezes a batch for Christmas gatherings. They are as good as when she first baked them.
Love your channel learning a lot
Sour cream donuts sound VERY interesting to me!
You made Julie so happy with this one!! Also being a cake doughnut fan, I'm loving a new recipe! Thanks, Glen!
These are something my family has made for generations. I haven't made them lately, need to do so. They are a cherished childhood treat.
I made them yesterday and they were still fresh and tasty the next day at work, everyone liked them with just powdered sugar.
Back decades ago I use to go through El Dorado, Arkansas quite a bit and they actually had a donut shop called Spudnuts. Had to stop and get a box of holes for the trip. Good times.
We live in central Ohio and everyone here talks about the good old days when you could buy doughnuts at the Spudnuts shop!! I'm excited to find the recipe!! Thanks!
Would love to see you make tractor wheels doughnut (crullers) those are probably my favorite from TimHortons
Fascinated to know what you two do with so much food. I don't know if you've got family, but even if you do that's a lot of food!!
I love potato doughnuts!!! It's a staple in my family. Use the oil to make fries afterwhile, it gives them such a great taste.
Love your channel! How do the two of you stay so thin with all those delicious recipes you make?
I know these as spudnuts made with yeast and raised before frying. Like a glazed donut but the flavor is so much better. I heard it originated from Idaho potato farmers. Not sure, but will have to try this cake type. Your videos are so interesting!
I am also a cake doughnut fan they are my favorite.
Those look delicious
There's an old bakery in Ogden Utah with these old fashioned treats, and yes, by that name... Spudnuts 😋😊
I'm gonna have to try those molasses ones
Great video as always!
Definitely gonna try this! As a kid I remember my sister making potato fudge funny what a potato can do.
Oh those Donuts look absolutely gorgeous! I am 100% going to make them soon!
I’m drooling
Tip for handling ring doughnuts in oil, use a stiff wire (a wire coat hanger is ideal) with a 30-40 degree bend a few inches from one end, you can easily flip your doughnuts whilst cooking and use it as a hook to extract many at a time when done
youre looking really well glenn.
you know what i have trouble finding? the old fashioned sour cream donut, the hard crusty one. i like them without glaze. i'd like to learn how to make them.
If you have a problem eating all those donuts you can send a bunch my way! I love the Sunday morning old cookbook show!!! It is so fascinating to see the history of some recipes!
I’m looking forward to the molasses doughnut. I’m glad I’ve subscribed!
Looks great must Try. QLD Australia here. 😁
Less than 22 hours later, Wiki correct, citing the newspapers and the 1915 cookbook, great work Glen!
Lethbridge had a donut shop called Spudnuts. Best donuts ever. Thanks for the up load and trip down memory lane.
There is a place called Spud Nuts in El Dorado, Arkansas. Their potato donuts are so amazing.
There is a chain of donut stops in Cleveland OH, called Spud Nuts which as you can imagine use potatoes. Possibly the greatest name for a regional donut chain. Donuts are pretty good too.
I just noticed that the Wikipedia page for potato donuts was updated and also uses your RUclips channel as a reference.
Wauuu they looks delisiosos
Yum-o!! Always home runs on this channel😊
My eye caught the sour cream doughnuts recipe... Pretty please??? 🙏
I'm with Julie on this one. I love cake doughnuts. My favorite is one coated with toasted coconut.
Have fond memories of going to the Spudnut shop in Richland WA decades ago. Sadly not many such places are left.
I always stop at Spudnuts in Santa Barbara, Ca. when I'm there on business. Saw the Wikipedia entry was updated already. Good work!
We have a donut shop "Sandy Pony's" ( in honor of the Assateaque ponies on the Maryland Shores). They do the cake donut that's the batter version. It's like a Baskin Robbins in flavors. My fav is the Sea Foam which is glazed then coconut or the Porky Pony which is cinnamon glaze dipped with real shredded bacon. DEVINE!
Here in Saskatchewan we always have sudnuts at the Exhibition/ town and country fairs. usually plain or with a hunny glaze. The best part of the Ex.