Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts + Moms

How is it possible that after writing a book with over 101 doughnut recipes I still have new ideas, and lots of them?

Like, Samoa Doughnuts. How were those not in the book? HOW have I not made them yet?

Okay, enough questions.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

I kind of adore the recipe for Lemon Curd Doughnuts that you’ll find in the “doughnut shop standbys” chapter. The bright lemon flavor is such a lively contrast to the cakey doughnut.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

So, yes, this recipe is very similar to the one you’ll find in the book. Except for the whole curd thing. No starch! No eggs! If you missed it yesterday this curd is thickened with chia seeds.

It’s slightly softer but still very thick and the perfect doughnut filling.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

It has a burst of lemon and strawberry sweetness + flavor! It’s like spring in your mouth. But not like mowing the grass, spring. More like, lemon-fruity-berry-sunny-bright-SPRING!

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

I’m thinking you should surprise your mom with a batch of these on Sunday. And all 364 days after that. Because moms need to be celebrated all year long.

I would be LOST without my mom. No joke. I cherish every day that she is in my life and wish my whiney, needy [No, really mom. I NEED A PAGER!], teenage self would have loved on her a bit more back then. At least I can make up for it now that I’m much older + wiser + realize she was right about everything.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

I may not be with my mom this weekend, but I’ll be seeing her in a few short weeks and hope I can spoil her a little bit while she’s around.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

I may even buy her a pager.

If she’s lucky. If she keeps her room clean while she’s here.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

Print this!

adapted from: Lemon Curd Doughnuts from my book, Baked Doughnuts for Everyone

Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts

gluten-free, dairy free // yields about 8 standard doughnuts with the Wilton pan

  • 1/2 cup gluten-free oat flour
  • 1/2 cup sweet rice flour
  • 1/3 cup pure cane sugar, or coconut sugar/sucanat
  • 3 tablespoons almond meal
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1/3 cup unsweetened almond or soy milk
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce
  • 2 tablespoons safflower oil, or other baking oil
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 2 teaspoons lemon zest
  • 1 batch Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd
  • powdered sugar, for topping

For the doughnuts:

Preheat your oven to 350* Fahrenheit. Thoroughly grease your doughnut pan with softened coconut oil or butter.

Stir together dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl. In a separate bowl whisk the eggs. Then whisk in the milk, applesauce, oil, vanilla, and lemon zest until fully combined. Pour the wet into the dry and whisk or stir until just combined [when you no longer see dry flour].

Spoon batter into the greased doughnut pan to about 1/8-inch from the top. You want it to come up right to the top of the center piece that puts the hole in the doughnut. Or, see notes below.

Place in the center of your oven for 18-23 minutes until a toothpick comes out nearly clean and the edges are golden brown. The holes should be closed up and the doughnuts may have spread slightly over the edge of each mold. If the holes didn’t fully close up it’s completely fine. It just makes spreading the curd easier!

Remove curd from the fridge about an hour before filling + serving the doughnuts.

Let doughnuts cool for 15-20 minutes in the pan then loosen the edges with a thin spatula or knife and place on a cooling rack for at least 30 minutes.

Cutting + Filling:

Slice the doughnuts in half [directly above where the hole closes – photo 2] with a thin, serrated knife holding the doughnut in one hand and gently sawing with the knife.

Stir the curd and spread on each doughnut right before serving. Place the top half on and lightly press down. Top with powdered sugar. Best served immediately. Can be stored in the fridge for about 1 day without the curd causing the doughnuts to become soggy, but it does soak in a bit. You can also store doughnuts covered at room temp for 1 day and then fill with curd the following day before serving.

----

notes: You can also fill the molds to 1/4-inch below the top if you want the hole visible all the way through. Be gentle when slicing. Instead of slicing you can also just spread the curd on top of the doughnut. There is no sub for sweet rice flour but check an Asian market in your area for the best price. They’re guaranteed to have it. If you weren’t able to make the curd, you can substitute with about 3/4-1 cup of jam/jelly. Add a bit of lemon zest for freshness. If making mini doughnuts, fill the molds just below the top of the pan so the hole closes when baking. Once cooled, fill the holes with the curd.

For a vegan option use my recipe for vegan buttermilk doughnuts. I highly recommend spreading the curd on top instead of trying to slice in half since they are a bit more delicate.

If you cannot tolerate gluten-free oat flour feel free to sub your favorite GF all-purpose flour blend for the oat flour only. My favorite is King Arthur’s.

Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com
Breakfast Friday: Strawberry Lemon Curd Doughnuts | edibleperspective.com

Love to the mamas. <3

Happy weekend!

Ashley

p.s. Head over to Facebook to check out my updated “Mother’s Day Recipe Idea” album. I started it last year and updated today with some new favorites.

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd [no-cook!]

This recipe is part 1 of 2. Part 2 will be coming tomorrow. I figured I would give you a heads up so you can get all the ingredients for this first part today. Maybe you can even whip it up tonight? Just be sure you don’t eat it all because you’re going to need it tomorrow!

You with me?

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan
Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan

On with the show.

For probably the first time ever recorded in history I had a container of strawberries sitting in the fridge that were slowly going bad. Granted, it was 2lb container and they were already treading the line of being slightly too ripe when I bought them, but anyway, I bought them. I never pass on organic strawberry sales. Everrr!

Instead of sending the ruby red strawberries to the freezer I decided to use them in a recipe. It’s rare that fresh strawberries do anything other than go straight to my mouth.

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan
Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan

I knew I needed to make curd for Friday’s recipe and that’s when it hit me. Strawberry curd!

Is there such a thing? There must be.

After sifting through loads of recipes I was left with a bunch of notes but no real game plan. Did I want to make this vegan? Did I want to use egg yolks + butter? Did I want to use a mix of egg yolks + starch? Blah, blah, blah. #bloggerproblems

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan
Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan

I was skeptical of using only starch, but I also didn’t want to use 3-4 egg yolks just for some dang curd. I’m kind of egg crazy if you didn’t know.

And then I got to thinking about…

The mysterious + magical chia seed! Said to cure all of your ailments and halt polar ice cap melt. [I kid.]

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan
Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan

Can you make curd with chia seeds?

Why the heck not?

You can make chia pudding and chia seed jam, so why couldn’t you use these tiny gems to thicken up some curd? Guess what? You can!

And do you know what the best part is!?

You don’t have to cook the curd in a pot on the stove! All you have to do is blend the ingredients, pour into a jar, and throw the mixture into the fridge overnight. By morning you’ll have yourself a jar full of sweet + tangy chia curd. Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd to be exact.

The chia seeds [I used the white kind!] are used to thicken the mixture by absorbing most of the strawberry juice. The coconut oil helps add a bit more body to the curd, keeps it from having a slimy texture, and also helps to thicken since coconut oil hardens when chilled. The curd ends up perfectly smooth and the taste is extremely bright + fresh.

I’m pretty sure you are going to love it.

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan
Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan

Print this!

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd

gluten-free, vegan // yields ~12oz

  • 1 1/2 cups hulled + halved very ripe strawberries
  • 2-4 tablespoons agave nectar, or coconut nectar or honey [if not vegan]
  • 3 tablespoons softened unrefined coconut oil
  • scant 2 tablespoons lemon zest
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon + 2 teaspoons white chia seeds
  • 1 teaspoon black chia seeds

Combine all ingredients into your blender, starting with 2 tablespoons of sweetener. Blend on low working to high for about 20-30 seconds. Scrape the sides and blend on high for another 15-25 seconds until completely smooth. Taste and add more honey if desired.

Pour into a sealable jar and refrigerate for at least 4 hours or overnight. If the mixture became hot in your blender leave the lid off until it’s cooled down a bit. Keep stored in the fridge for about 10 days and use as a topping on pancakes, waffles, muffins, etc.

Notes:White chia seeds can typically be found bagged, right next to the black chia. You can also find “chia shots” that are mini packets of chia seeds if you don’t want to invest in a whole bag. I suggest buying two packets if you go that route. I mixed mostly white but a little black chia for the best color. Feel free to use all white or all black, but note with the black it will look quite a bit darker [but taste the same]. Be sure to use ripe + juicy strawberries. If they are hard and tart it won’t turn out nearly as well. No subs for the chia seeds. If you want your curd to fully set + hold its shape you could try adding in 2 teaspoons of arrowroot starch [or corn starch] and simmering in a pot while stirring frequently for 5-8 minutes.

Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan
Strawberry Lemon Chia Curd | edibleperspective.com #glutenfree #vegan

Now all you have to do is hold your pants on until tomorrow and keep this in your fridge! Mmmk?

Ashley