Copycat Crispy Cream Inspired Melt-In-Your-Mouth Donuts – Light, Fluffy, and Glazed to Perfection
These donuts taste like a weekend treat from your favorite shop, but better because you made them at home. They’re soft, pillowy, and glazed with a shiny coating that melts as you bite. The dough is simple, the rise is forgiving, and the frying is quick.
If you’ve been looking for that famous melt-in-your-mouth texture, this recipe nails it with a few key tricks. Grab your mixing bowl, and let’s make something special.
What Makes This Special
Copycat Crispy Cream Inspired Melt-In-Your-Mouth Donuts - Light, Fluffy, and Glazed to Perfection
Ingredients
- All-purpose flour (about 3 1/2 to 4 cups)
- Cornstarch (2 tablespoons)
- Granulated sugar (1/3 cup)
- Instant or rapid-rise yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons, one packet)
- Whole milk (1 cup, warm)
- Unsalted butter (1/4 cup, melted and slightly cooled)
- Large eggs (2)
- Vanilla extract (2 teaspoons)
- Fine salt (3/4 teaspoon)
- Neutral oil for frying (vegetable, canola, or peanut oil)
- Powdered sugar (3 cups)
- Light corn syrup (1 tablespoon; for shine, optional but recommended)
- Water or milk for glaze (about 6–8 tablespoons, as needed)
Instructions
- Warm the milk: Heat the milk until warm to the touch, about 105–110°F. It should feel cozy, not hot. This helps the yeast activate without killing it.
- Make the dough: In a large bowl, whisk the flour (start with 3 1/2 cups), cornstarch, sugar, yeast, and salt. Add warm milk, melted butter, eggs, and vanilla. Stir until a shaggy dough forms.
- Knead until smooth: Knead by hand 7–9 minutes or in a mixer with a dough hook for about 5–6 minutes. The dough should be soft, slightly tacky, and elastic. If very sticky, add flour 1 tablespoon at a time. Avoid over-flouring; a soft dough makes lighter donuts.
- First rise: Place dough in a lightly greased bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm spot until doubled, 60–90 minutes. A slow, steady rise builds flavor and tenderness.
- Roll and cut: Turn dough onto a lightly floured surface. Roll to about 1/2-inch thick. Cut 3-inch rounds, then cut 1-inch holes in the centers. Gather scraps and re-roll once for best texture.
- Second rise: Place donuts and holes on parchment-lined sheets. Cover lightly and let rise until puffy, 30–45 minutes. They should look airy and slightly jiggly when you nudge the tray.
- Heat the oil: In a heavy pot, heat 2 inches of oil to 350–360°F. Keep a thermometer clipped to the side. Stable oil temperature is the difference between greasy and perfect.
- Fry the donuts: Fry 2–3 at a time, about 45–60 seconds per side, until light golden. The donuts should puff and float. Use a slotted spoon to transfer to a wire rack set over a sheet pan. Fry donut holes for 30–45 seconds total.
- Make the glaze: Whisk powdered sugar, corn syrup, vanilla (1 teaspoon), and 6 tablespoons water or milk until smooth. Add liquid 1 teaspoon at a time until the glaze is pourable but not watery. Thin glaze = classic melt-in texture.
- Glaze while warm: Dip each warm donut entirely in the glaze, flip to coat, and let excess drip off. Place back on the rack. For extra shine and that signature sweetness, double-dip after 2–3 minutes.
- Let set and enjoy: Give the glaze 10–15 minutes to set. The donuts will still be soft and warm inside with a delicate, crackly finish outside.
These donuts get their airy crumb from a rich brioche-like dough, plus just the right amount of milk and butter. A touch of cornstarch in the dough lightens the texture without making it cakey.
The glaze stays glossy and thin, soaking into the donut instead of sitting heavy on top. And instead of complicated steps, you’ll use a straightforward double rise that keeps the donuts tender and easy to handle.
The secret trio: warm milk, instant yeast, and a soft, enriched dough. The bonus: a quick, gentle fry at the right temperature for donuts that puff and float. One roll through a simple vanilla glaze, and you’ve got that classic, not-too-sweet finish.
Shopping List
- All-purpose flour (about 3 1/2 to 4 cups)
- Cornstarch (2 tablespoons)
- Granulated sugar (1/3 cup)
- Instant or rapid-rise yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons, one packet)
- Whole milk (1 cup, warm)
- Unsalted butter (1/4 cup, melted and slightly cooled)
- Large eggs (2)
- Vanilla extract (2 teaspoons)
- Fine salt (3/4 teaspoon)
- Neutral oil for frying (vegetable, canola, or peanut oil)
- Powdered sugar (3 cups)
- Light corn syrup (1 tablespoon; for shine, optional but recommended)
- Water or milk for glaze (about 6–8 tablespoons, as needed)
Instructions
- Warm the milk: Heat the milk until warm to the touch, about 105–110°F.
It should feel cozy, not hot. This helps the yeast activate without killing it.
- Make the dough: In a large bowl, whisk the flour (start with 3 1/2 cups), cornstarch, sugar, yeast, and salt. Add warm milk, melted butter, eggs, and vanilla.
Stir until a shaggy dough forms.
- Knead until smooth: Knead by hand 7–9 minutes or in a mixer with a dough hook for about 5–6 minutes. The dough should be soft, slightly tacky, and elastic. If very sticky, add flour 1 tablespoon at a time.
Avoid over-flouring; a soft dough makes lighter donuts.
- First rise: Place dough in a lightly greased bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm spot until doubled, 60–90 minutes. A slow, steady rise builds flavor and tenderness.
- Roll and cut: Turn dough onto a lightly floured surface. Roll to about 1/2-inch thick.
Cut 3-inch rounds, then cut 1-inch holes in the centers. Gather scraps and re-roll once for best texture.
- Second rise: Place donuts and holes on parchment-lined sheets. Cover lightly and let rise until puffy, 30–45 minutes.
They should look airy and slightly jiggly when you nudge the tray.
- Heat the oil: In a heavy pot, heat 2 inches of oil to 350–360°F. Keep a thermometer clipped to the side. Stable oil temperature is the difference between greasy and perfect.
- Fry the donuts: Fry 2–3 at a time, about 45–60 seconds per side, until light golden.
The donuts should puff and float. Use a slotted spoon to transfer to a wire rack set over a sheet pan. Fry donut holes for 30–45 seconds total.
- Make the glaze: Whisk powdered sugar, corn syrup, vanilla (1 teaspoon), and 6 tablespoons water or milk until smooth.
Add liquid 1 teaspoon at a time until the glaze is pourable but not watery. Thin glaze = classic melt-in texture.
- Glaze while warm: Dip each warm donut entirely in the glaze, flip to coat, and let excess drip off. Place back on the rack. For extra shine and that signature sweetness, double-dip after 2–3 minutes.
- Let set and enjoy: Give the glaze 10–15 minutes to set.
The donuts will still be soft and warm inside with a delicate, crackly finish outside.
Keeping It Fresh
These donuts are best the day you make them, ideally within a few hours. To keep them soft overnight, store at room temperature in an airtight container with a small piece of bread or a slightly damp (not wet) paper towel under the lid. Avoid the fridge, which dries them out.
To refresh day-old donuts, warm them in the microwave for 8–10 seconds.
If you want to plan ahead, freeze the cut, un-fried donuts after the second rise on a tray, then bag them airtight. Thaw at room temp for 30–45 minutes, then fry as directed.
Benefits of This Recipe
- Light, melt-in texture: Cornstarch and a soft dough deliver that airy bite.
- Reliable rise: Instant yeast streamlines the process without complicated starters.
- Simple glaze, big payoff: Corn syrup keeps the glaze shiny and smooth.
- Custom-friendly: Add fillings, swap flavors, or try different toppings without changing the base dough.
- Better than store-bought: Fresh, warm, and tailored to your taste.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Overheating the milk: Hot milk kills yeast. Keep it warm, not hot.
- Adding too much flour: A stiff dough fries up dense.
Slight tackiness is good.
- Skipping the second rise: That last proof gives donuts their signature lift.
- Wrong oil temperature: Too cool equals greasy; too hot browns the outside before the center cooks. Aim for 350–360°F and adjust the heat as needed.
- Glazing cold donuts: The glaze won’t cling or soak in. Dip while they’re warm.
Alternatives
- Baked version: Not the same, but you can bake at 375°F for 8–10 minutes, then brush with melted butter and glaze.
Expect a softer, breadier texture.
- Air fryer: Air fry at 350°F for 4–6 minutes until lightly golden. Brush with butter and glaze. Texture is lighter than baked, still not identical to fried.
- Flavors: Add 1/2 teaspoon almond or maple extract to the glaze.
For chocolate, whisk in 2–3 tablespoons cocoa powder and a splash more milk.
- Fillings: Skip the center hole, fry as rings or rounds, cool slightly, then pipe with vanilla custard, lemon curd, or jam. Dust with powdered sugar or dip in glaze.
- Toppings: Try cinnamon sugar (toss warm donuts in a 1:1 mix of sugar and cinnamon) or a thin maple glaze with crumbled bacon for a sweet-savory twist.
Can I Use Active Dry Yeast Instead of Instant?
Yes. Use the same amount, but proof it first: stir it into the warm milk with a pinch of sugar and let it sit 5–10 minutes until foamy.
Then proceed with the recipe as written.
How Do I Know When the Dough Is Kneaded Enough?
It should feel smooth, stretchy, and only slightly tacky. If you gently stretch a bit, it should form a thin window without tearing quickly. If it’s tearing right away, knead another minute and check again.
What Oil Is Best for Frying?
Use a neutral, high-smoke-point oil like vegetable, canola, or peanut oil.
They stay stable at 350–360°F and won’t add unwanted flavor.
Why Are My Donuts Greasy?
Greasy donuts usually mean the oil was too cool or the dough was under-proofed. Keep a thermometer in the pot and let the cut donuts rise until puffy before frying.
How Do I Keep the Glaze Smooth?
Sift the powdered sugar and whisk thoroughly. Add liquids gradually until it runs off the spoon in a thin ribbon.
A little corn syrup keeps it glossy and prevents crusty spots.
Final Thoughts
These copycat donuts bring that bakery-style softness home with a recipe you can trust. Keep the dough soft, the oil steady, and the glaze thin for the best texture. Once you taste that warm, delicate crumb with a faint crackle of glaze, you’ll see why homemade wins every time.
Make a batch for brunch, share a few, and watch them disappear fast.