Doughnuts are a type of
fried dough food. The following is a list of doughnut and fried dough pastry varieties.
Variations and specialties by region
The terms below constitute either names for different doughnut types created using local recipes, or for the local language translation of the term for an imported doughnut product.
Argentina –
Sopaipilla, also called tortas fritas (fried pastries) or Kreppel, is a fried
pastry or
quick bread that was introduced by German immigrants, and is similar to the
Berliner.
Facturas are a popular baked doughnut found in every corner bakery. Other names that may be seen in bakeries are berlinesas and bolas de fraile ("friar's balls").
Armenia – Ponchik, borrowed from Russian, is a deep-fried piece of dough shaped into a flattened sphere and filled with confiture or other sweet filling. Tukalik are similar to
doughnut holes, and Armenian doughnuts are referred to as chickies.
Australia –
Kitchener bun, Similar to Berliner, but with an open face and the use of more cream than jam. Besides traditional ring doughnuts,
jam doughnuts are common in most bakeries, often sold warm.
Austria – Austrian doughnut equivalents are called Krapfen and resemble the
Berliner. Especially popular during carnival season (
Fasching), they are solid and usually filled with
apricot jam (traditional) or
vanilla cream (vanillekrapfen). They are made from sweet
yeastdough fried in fat or oil, usually with a filling of
marmalade, jam,
chocolate,
champagne,
custard,
mocha, or with no filling at all. They are usually topped with
icing,
powdered sugar, or conventional sugar.
Belgium –
Smoutebollen or
croustillons are similar to Dutch
Oliebollen but usually do not contain any fruit, except sometimes for apple chunks. They are typical carnival and fair snacks and are dusted with powdered sugar.
Bohemia – "kobliha", "bavorský vdolek", see the Czech Republic
Brazil – Guava paste, cream, dulce de leche or chocolate ganache filled doughnuts are referred to as sonho, meaning "dream". These are usually coated with a mixture of white sugar and cinnamon or topped with powdered sugar.
Cambodia – nom kong, the Cambodian doughnut, which is named after its shape – the word កង, pronounced 'kong' in Khmer, means "wheel", while 'nom' (
Khmer: នំបុ័ង) is the general word for pastry or any kind of starchy food. A very inexpensive treat for everyday Cambodians, this sweet pastry consists of a rice flour dough moulded into a classic ring shape and then deep fried in fat, then drizzled with a palm sugar toffee and sprinkled with sesame seeds. The rice flour gives it a chewy texture that Cambodians are fond of.
Chile – Round fried filled doughnuts without holes are popular in Chile because of the large German community there. This doughnut is called a Berlin (plural Berlines). They may be filled with jam or with
manjar, the Chilean version of
dulce de leche.
China – Although
Chinese cuisine now features doughnut–type pastries borrowed from American and European kitchens, traditional pastries are somewhat different. They often feature thin, leathery dough surrounding plentiful mildly sweet or savory filling.
Cantonese cuisine features an oval shaped pastry called
Ngàuhleisōu (牛脷酥, lit. "
ox–tongue pastry" due to its tongue-like shape). A similar food is called saa jung (沙翁), fried round dough balls with sugar sprinkled on top. A
Shanghai dessert named 高力豆沙 is a variant of this, with oilier dough (originally made with egg white) and filled with
red bean paste. Another variant uses thickened, lightly sweetened
black sesame paste for filling and is sprinkled with sesame seeds. Other types are tikoy, zha gao, jin doi, chien doi, and zhá miàn quān. A salty variation are deep-fried doughnut sticks that are often quite oily, hence their Mandarin name, yóutiáo (油條, literally "oil strips"); in
Cantonese, this doughnut–style pastry is called yàuhjagwái (油炸鬼); it is often served with
congee, a traditional rice porridge. The most similar in appearance one is called
Mianwo (面窝) popular in
Wuhan. It is fried from rice and soybeans mixed slurry rather than dough and It also has a variant made from potato.
Czech Republic – Koblihy or vdolky (without a hole) are usually filled with jam and dusted with sugar. Vdolky are not as high as koblihy. Bavorský vdolek or Bavorský koblih ("Bavarian doughnut") may be fried or baked and have jam and thick sour cream on top.
Denmark – The "Berliner" without a hole is available in bakeries across the country and are called Berliner like in Germany. Another variant without the filling is
aebleskiver, normally eaten with powdered sugar and jam on the side.
Ecuador – Huevitos Chilenos ("Chilean Eggs"), a small variety of round Doughnut (without a hole), sold year-round on street corners around the country. The original Chilean Eggs are slightly different, and are called "
Sopaipillas" in Chile and other South-American countries.
Finland –
Munkki (without a hole), Berliininmunkki/piispanmunkki (no hole, sugar coating), donitsi (with a hole), munkkirinkilä.
Germany – The
Berliner (Berliner Pfannkuchen) is a predominantly German and Central European doughnut made from sweet yeast dough fried in fat or oil, without a hole. The doughnuts are filled with jams, such as apricot,
plum butter or
rosehip jam. Other varieties and names are Obstkrapfen, Fastnachtskrapfen, Faschingskrapfen, Knieküchle, Auszogne and
Kreppel.
Greece –
Svingi,
Thiples,
Loukoumades. A doughnut-like snack called Loukoumás comes in two types, a crispy one shaped like the number 8, and a larger, softer one shaped like the number 0.
Hawaii – popular doughnut in Hawaii is the
Malasada. They were brought to the Hawaiian Islands by Portuguese laborers from
Madeira and the
Azores who went to Hawaii to work in the plantations. They are small balls of yeast dough, deep fried, and coated in sugar.
Hungary –
Fánk, a round doughnut (without a hole) dusted with sugar, and
Lángos, a flat fried bread made from yeast dough, served with sour cream and toppings like cheese, ham or chopped onions.
India –
Gulgula are soft sweet deep fried round dough balls.
Vadai are savoury rings of dough made from lentils that are popular in
South Indian cuisine. They are not necessarily sweet. Varieties of sweet doughnut-like pastries include
badushah or
balushahi. They are made like an old-fashioned doughnut, by frying the dough in oil, and are soaked in sugar syrup and sometimes flavored with spices. Badushah does not have the center hole. Another sweet in India is imarti, known elsewhere as jalebi.
Adhirasam are a Tamil sweet doughnut with a long history. Another similar dessert is gulab jamun – ball-shaped pastry from
buffalo–milk–based quick dough that is fried and floated in
rose water and
cardamon flavored sweet syrup.
Indonesia – Donat kentang(Potato Doughnut) is an Indonesian style fried mashed potato doughnut; it is a ring-shaped doughnut made from a combination of flour and mashed potatoes, coated in powdered sugar or icing sugar.
Iran –
Zooloobiya is a doughnut that comes in various shapes and sizes and coated in a sticky-sweet syrup. Razavi doughnut is ring-shaped with sugar on it. It is known as a symbol of
Mashhad.
Israel –
Sufganiyah (סופגניה, plural Sufganiyot), like the German
Berliner and the Polish
pączki, are deep-fried, injected with jelly, and then topped with powdered sugar or frosting. They are a traditional
Hanukkah food among
Ashkenazi Jews.
Japan –
Sata–andagi.
An-doughnut (あんドーナッツ, lit. "bean jam doughnut") is widely available and is similar to Germany's Berliner, except it contains
red bean paste. Deep fried dough filled with Japanese–style curry called カレーパン (
curry bread) is also very popular.
Kenya –
Mandazi,
Mahamri,
Mandalas – sweet, triangular shaped breakfast delicacy enjoyed with a
coconut side dish (baazi), made out of flour and sugar, originally from
Mombasa
Korea –
Chapssal doughnut,
twisted doughnut. Many bakeries in South Korea offer doughnuts either filled with or made entirely from the Korean traditional rice dessert tteok. These come in a variety of colors, though they are normally in green, pink, or white. They are often filled with a sweet red bean paste or sesame seeds.
Lithuania – Spurgos are doughnuts with jam filling and sugar coating. There is also a local variety of doughnuts made from cottage cheese dough ("Varškės spurgos") which contains no filling.
Mexico –
Buñuelo,
Churro,
Sopapilla. The Mexican Donas are very similar to doughnuts including in the name; the dona is a fried–dough pastry–based snack, commonly coated with
cinnamon sugar or granulated sugar, or dipped in chocolate. A pelona, alike Berliner, is a pastry similar to local doughnut with no central hole made from sweet yeast dough (Danish dough) deep fried usually in oil, filled with vanilla
dulce de leche (in this case local manjar) and few raisins, conventional sugar as topping. Starting on a local doughnut's dough, rolled, shape molded, deep fried, sliced, opened two halves, filled, recap and topped. Is a popular snack in the street food vending but rarely seen in bakeries or any other food menus because it is dense and loaded with carbohydrates.
Netherlands –
Oliebollen are a traditional Dutch food eaten on
New Year's Eve and at fairs. They are like a round doughnut without a hole (similar to trademarked plain "donut holes" in the US). Oliebollen are a traditional treat.[1]
Poland –
Pączki are round jam-filled doughnuts, known in Poland at least since the Middle Ages. Jędrzej Kitowicz wrote that during the reign of the
August III under influence of French cooks who came to Poland at that time, pączki dough baked in Poland has been improved, so that pączki became lighter, spongier, and more resilient.
Portugal –
fartura,
filhós Portuguese-style doughnuts, dipped in sugar and cinnamon.
Russia –
Ponchik, Russian "ponchiki" (
Russian: пончики), and "pyshki" (
Russian: пышки), as well as Ukrainian
pampushky (
Ukrainian: пампушки), are deep-fried and sphere-shaped pieces of dough which could have a sweet (e.g. jam or
powidl) or savory filling (e.g. ground meat or
quark), or left plain. More traditional are deep-fried versions of
pirozhki, as well as Tatar
pərəməçlər, known as
belyashi in Russia.
Scotland – "Doughrings" is an alternative term for ring doughnuts. Square
fudge doughnuts are also a tradition.
Serbia – Doughnuts similar to the Berliner are also prepared in the Northern Balkans, particularly in Croatia (
uštipci, Krofnepokladnice or
Krafne) and Serbia's Vojvodina province. They are called
Krofna, a name derived from the Austrian Krapfen.
South Africa –
Koeksister, An
Afrikaner desert of plaited dough, fried and steeped in cold syrup. Oliebolle met Suurmelk ("sour milk doughnuts"). Another variation is the
Vetkoek, dough deep fried in oil, served with mince, syrup, honey or jam.
Koe'sister A spiced doughnut rolled in coconut.
Spain –
Churros, Porras, Chimeneas, Orange Roscos, Wine Roscos, Roscos de anis, Rosquillas de Ledesma,
bimuelos, birmuelos, bermuelos, burmuelos, bunyols, chuchos, Rosquillas listas de san Isidro, rosquito tonto, rosquilla tonta.
Buñuelos, bunyols in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands, bolo de vento in Galicia or kruxpeta in the Basque Country, are a traditional Easter pastry in the form of small balls without a hole. They can be sweet or savoury, but usually filled with custard or chocolate. The American or German–style donut is sometimes called a berlina.
Sweden – munk (doughnut),
klenät, flottyrring. One example is vaniljmunk which looks similar to the German Berliner but is filled with a vanilla custard.
Ukraine –
pampushky (sweet filling or garlic flavored) and рonchik, Ukrainian "ponchyk" (
Ukrainian: пончик), as well as Russian рonchiki (
Russian: пончики), are deep-fried and sphere-shaped pieces of dough.
United Kingdom – Traditionally topped with granulated sugar rather than powdered sugar or glaze. Jam doughnuts are ball-shaped, coated in granulated sugar, and have a filling of strawberry or raspberry jam (alternatively, of vanilla custard). In some parts of Scotland, ring doughnuts are referred to as doughrings, with the term doughnut being reserved exclusively for the nut–shaped variety. Glazed, twisted rope–shaped doughnuts are known as yum–yums. It is also possible to buy
fudge doughnuts in certain regions of Scotland. In some parts of Northern Ireland, ring doughnuts are referred to as gravy rings due to their being cooked in oil, itself colloquially known as "gravy".
Doughnuts are a type of
fried dough food. The following is a list of doughnut and fried dough pastry varieties.
Variations and specialties by region
The terms below constitute either names for different doughnut types created using local recipes, or for the local language translation of the term for an imported doughnut product.
Argentina –
Sopaipilla, also called tortas fritas (fried pastries) or Kreppel, is a fried
pastry or
quick bread that was introduced by German immigrants, and is similar to the
Berliner.
Facturas are a popular baked doughnut found in every corner bakery. Other names that may be seen in bakeries are berlinesas and bolas de fraile ("friar's balls").
Armenia – Ponchik, borrowed from Russian, is a deep-fried piece of dough shaped into a flattened sphere and filled with confiture or other sweet filling. Tukalik are similar to
doughnut holes, and Armenian doughnuts are referred to as chickies.
Australia –
Kitchener bun, Similar to Berliner, but with an open face and the use of more cream than jam. Besides traditional ring doughnuts,
jam doughnuts are common in most bakeries, often sold warm.
Austria – Austrian doughnut equivalents are called Krapfen and resemble the
Berliner. Especially popular during carnival season (
Fasching), they are solid and usually filled with
apricot jam (traditional) or
vanilla cream (vanillekrapfen). They are made from sweet
yeastdough fried in fat or oil, usually with a filling of
marmalade, jam,
chocolate,
champagne,
custard,
mocha, or with no filling at all. They are usually topped with
icing,
powdered sugar, or conventional sugar.
Belgium –
Smoutebollen or
croustillons are similar to Dutch
Oliebollen but usually do not contain any fruit, except sometimes for apple chunks. They are typical carnival and fair snacks and are dusted with powdered sugar.
Bohemia – "kobliha", "bavorský vdolek", see the Czech Republic
Brazil – Guava paste, cream, dulce de leche or chocolate ganache filled doughnuts are referred to as sonho, meaning "dream". These are usually coated with a mixture of white sugar and cinnamon or topped with powdered sugar.
Cambodia – nom kong, the Cambodian doughnut, which is named after its shape – the word កង, pronounced 'kong' in Khmer, means "wheel", while 'nom' (
Khmer: នំបុ័ង) is the general word for pastry or any kind of starchy food. A very inexpensive treat for everyday Cambodians, this sweet pastry consists of a rice flour dough moulded into a classic ring shape and then deep fried in fat, then drizzled with a palm sugar toffee and sprinkled with sesame seeds. The rice flour gives it a chewy texture that Cambodians are fond of.
Chile – Round fried filled doughnuts without holes are popular in Chile because of the large German community there. This doughnut is called a Berlin (plural Berlines). They may be filled with jam or with
manjar, the Chilean version of
dulce de leche.
China – Although
Chinese cuisine now features doughnut–type pastries borrowed from American and European kitchens, traditional pastries are somewhat different. They often feature thin, leathery dough surrounding plentiful mildly sweet or savory filling.
Cantonese cuisine features an oval shaped pastry called
Ngàuhleisōu (牛脷酥, lit. "
ox–tongue pastry" due to its tongue-like shape). A similar food is called saa jung (沙翁), fried round dough balls with sugar sprinkled on top. A
Shanghai dessert named 高力豆沙 is a variant of this, with oilier dough (originally made with egg white) and filled with
red bean paste. Another variant uses thickened, lightly sweetened
black sesame paste for filling and is sprinkled with sesame seeds. Other types are tikoy, zha gao, jin doi, chien doi, and zhá miàn quān. A salty variation are deep-fried doughnut sticks that are often quite oily, hence their Mandarin name, yóutiáo (油條, literally "oil strips"); in
Cantonese, this doughnut–style pastry is called yàuhjagwái (油炸鬼); it is often served with
congee, a traditional rice porridge. The most similar in appearance one is called
Mianwo (面窝) popular in
Wuhan. It is fried from rice and soybeans mixed slurry rather than dough and It also has a variant made from potato.
Czech Republic – Koblihy or vdolky (without a hole) are usually filled with jam and dusted with sugar. Vdolky are not as high as koblihy. Bavorský vdolek or Bavorský koblih ("Bavarian doughnut") may be fried or baked and have jam and thick sour cream on top.
Denmark – The "Berliner" without a hole is available in bakeries across the country and are called Berliner like in Germany. Another variant without the filling is
aebleskiver, normally eaten with powdered sugar and jam on the side.
Ecuador – Huevitos Chilenos ("Chilean Eggs"), a small variety of round Doughnut (without a hole), sold year-round on street corners around the country. The original Chilean Eggs are slightly different, and are called "
Sopaipillas" in Chile and other South-American countries.
Finland –
Munkki (without a hole), Berliininmunkki/piispanmunkki (no hole, sugar coating), donitsi (with a hole), munkkirinkilä.
Germany – The
Berliner (Berliner Pfannkuchen) is a predominantly German and Central European doughnut made from sweet yeast dough fried in fat or oil, without a hole. The doughnuts are filled with jams, such as apricot,
plum butter or
rosehip jam. Other varieties and names are Obstkrapfen, Fastnachtskrapfen, Faschingskrapfen, Knieküchle, Auszogne and
Kreppel.
Greece –
Svingi,
Thiples,
Loukoumades. A doughnut-like snack called Loukoumás comes in two types, a crispy one shaped like the number 8, and a larger, softer one shaped like the number 0.
Hawaii – popular doughnut in Hawaii is the
Malasada. They were brought to the Hawaiian Islands by Portuguese laborers from
Madeira and the
Azores who went to Hawaii to work in the plantations. They are small balls of yeast dough, deep fried, and coated in sugar.
Hungary –
Fánk, a round doughnut (without a hole) dusted with sugar, and
Lángos, a flat fried bread made from yeast dough, served with sour cream and toppings like cheese, ham or chopped onions.
India –
Gulgula are soft sweet deep fried round dough balls.
Vadai are savoury rings of dough made from lentils that are popular in
South Indian cuisine. They are not necessarily sweet. Varieties of sweet doughnut-like pastries include
badushah or
balushahi. They are made like an old-fashioned doughnut, by frying the dough in oil, and are soaked in sugar syrup and sometimes flavored with spices. Badushah does not have the center hole. Another sweet in India is imarti, known elsewhere as jalebi.
Adhirasam are a Tamil sweet doughnut with a long history. Another similar dessert is gulab jamun – ball-shaped pastry from
buffalo–milk–based quick dough that is fried and floated in
rose water and
cardamon flavored sweet syrup.
Indonesia – Donat kentang(Potato Doughnut) is an Indonesian style fried mashed potato doughnut; it is a ring-shaped doughnut made from a combination of flour and mashed potatoes, coated in powdered sugar or icing sugar.
Iran –
Zooloobiya is a doughnut that comes in various shapes and sizes and coated in a sticky-sweet syrup. Razavi doughnut is ring-shaped with sugar on it. It is known as a symbol of
Mashhad.
Israel –
Sufganiyah (סופגניה, plural Sufganiyot), like the German
Berliner and the Polish
pączki, are deep-fried, injected with jelly, and then topped with powdered sugar or frosting. They are a traditional
Hanukkah food among
Ashkenazi Jews.
Japan –
Sata–andagi.
An-doughnut (あんドーナッツ, lit. "bean jam doughnut") is widely available and is similar to Germany's Berliner, except it contains
red bean paste. Deep fried dough filled with Japanese–style curry called カレーパン (
curry bread) is also very popular.
Kenya –
Mandazi,
Mahamri,
Mandalas – sweet, triangular shaped breakfast delicacy enjoyed with a
coconut side dish (baazi), made out of flour and sugar, originally from
Mombasa
Korea –
Chapssal doughnut,
twisted doughnut. Many bakeries in South Korea offer doughnuts either filled with or made entirely from the Korean traditional rice dessert tteok. These come in a variety of colors, though they are normally in green, pink, or white. They are often filled with a sweet red bean paste or sesame seeds.
Lithuania – Spurgos are doughnuts with jam filling and sugar coating. There is also a local variety of doughnuts made from cottage cheese dough ("Varškės spurgos") which contains no filling.
Mexico –
Buñuelo,
Churro,
Sopapilla. The Mexican Donas are very similar to doughnuts including in the name; the dona is a fried–dough pastry–based snack, commonly coated with
cinnamon sugar or granulated sugar, or dipped in chocolate. A pelona, alike Berliner, is a pastry similar to local doughnut with no central hole made from sweet yeast dough (Danish dough) deep fried usually in oil, filled with vanilla
dulce de leche (in this case local manjar) and few raisins, conventional sugar as topping. Starting on a local doughnut's dough, rolled, shape molded, deep fried, sliced, opened two halves, filled, recap and topped. Is a popular snack in the street food vending but rarely seen in bakeries or any other food menus because it is dense and loaded with carbohydrates.
Netherlands –
Oliebollen are a traditional Dutch food eaten on
New Year's Eve and at fairs. They are like a round doughnut without a hole (similar to trademarked plain "donut holes" in the US). Oliebollen are a traditional treat.[1]
Poland –
Pączki are round jam-filled doughnuts, known in Poland at least since the Middle Ages. Jędrzej Kitowicz wrote that during the reign of the
August III under influence of French cooks who came to Poland at that time, pączki dough baked in Poland has been improved, so that pączki became lighter, spongier, and more resilient.
Portugal –
fartura,
filhós Portuguese-style doughnuts, dipped in sugar and cinnamon.
Russia –
Ponchik, Russian "ponchiki" (
Russian: пончики), and "pyshki" (
Russian: пышки), as well as Ukrainian
pampushky (
Ukrainian: пампушки), are deep-fried and sphere-shaped pieces of dough which could have a sweet (e.g. jam or
powidl) or savory filling (e.g. ground meat or
quark), or left plain. More traditional are deep-fried versions of
pirozhki, as well as Tatar
pərəməçlər, known as
belyashi in Russia.
Scotland – "Doughrings" is an alternative term for ring doughnuts. Square
fudge doughnuts are also a tradition.
Serbia – Doughnuts similar to the Berliner are also prepared in the Northern Balkans, particularly in Croatia (
uštipci, Krofnepokladnice or
Krafne) and Serbia's Vojvodina province. They are called
Krofna, a name derived from the Austrian Krapfen.
South Africa –
Koeksister, An
Afrikaner desert of plaited dough, fried and steeped in cold syrup. Oliebolle met Suurmelk ("sour milk doughnuts"). Another variation is the
Vetkoek, dough deep fried in oil, served with mince, syrup, honey or jam.
Koe'sister A spiced doughnut rolled in coconut.
Spain –
Churros, Porras, Chimeneas, Orange Roscos, Wine Roscos, Roscos de anis, Rosquillas de Ledesma,
bimuelos, birmuelos, bermuelos, burmuelos, bunyols, chuchos, Rosquillas listas de san Isidro, rosquito tonto, rosquilla tonta.
Buñuelos, bunyols in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands, bolo de vento in Galicia or kruxpeta in the Basque Country, are a traditional Easter pastry in the form of small balls without a hole. They can be sweet or savoury, but usually filled with custard or chocolate. The American or German–style donut is sometimes called a berlina.
Sweden – munk (doughnut),
klenät, flottyrring. One example is vaniljmunk which looks similar to the German Berliner but is filled with a vanilla custard.
Ukraine –
pampushky (sweet filling or garlic flavored) and рonchik, Ukrainian "ponchyk" (
Ukrainian: пончик), as well as Russian рonchiki (
Russian: пончики), are deep-fried and sphere-shaped pieces of dough.
United Kingdom – Traditionally topped with granulated sugar rather than powdered sugar or glaze. Jam doughnuts are ball-shaped, coated in granulated sugar, and have a filling of strawberry or raspberry jam (alternatively, of vanilla custard). In some parts of Scotland, ring doughnuts are referred to as doughrings, with the term doughnut being reserved exclusively for the nut–shaped variety. Glazed, twisted rope–shaped doughnuts are known as yum–yums. It is also possible to buy
fudge doughnuts in certain regions of Scotland. In some parts of Northern Ireland, ring doughnuts are referred to as gravy rings due to their being cooked in oil, itself colloquially known as "gravy".