Why It Works
- Tart Granny Smith apples help offset the sweetness of the glaze.
- Making the glaze with apple cider gives the fritters an even more pomaceous flavor.
My husband and I spent months soliciting food recommendations from people ahead of a trip to Memphis, Tennessee, in June of 2022. We were flooded with BBQ opinions (and left that trip all in on Charlie Vergosâs Rendezvous ribs, for what itâs worth) and Southern food restaurant guidance, and, from friends who actually lived in Memphis, several insistences that we visit one particular donut shop.Â
Reader, I donât have to tell you that was the only recommendation that exceeded my wildest dreams, do I?
We visited Gibsonâs Donuts every morning of that trip, walking away with five donuts and an apple fritter each time. The donuts were delightful, of course, but the apple fritter was superlative. The platonic ideal. Overwhelming in their glory. Each one is the size of a newbornâs head (or so I imagined), covered in the thinnest, prettiest glazed sheen, packed evenly with chewy, tart apple chunks, and craggy at each turn with thick, funnel cakey dough. At the beginning of summer, they ate like your best Strawberry Festival bake sale memory. We returned in August, and they were then a perfect way to prep for fall.Â
When we came back in late October, the people at Gibsonâs knew us. Relatedly: Our first baby was born on that trip. My husband showed up at Gibsonâs at 5 a.m. the day after she was born and announced âI have a daughter,â and, from what I hear, the whole shop went up in cheers. All the L&D nurses, nodding in approval at the Gibsonâs of it all, got donuts, and I got extra apple fritters that morning.Â
The next 72 hours were a blur. But I remember more clearly than anything eating an apple fritter up at 33,000 feet, en route to New York, a 2.5-day-old-baby strapped to my chest, her gorgeous, sweet-smelling head covered in apple fritter crumbs. Wondering if Iâd already failed as a mother. Laughing to my husband: âThis thing is as big as her head.â It was a wild time. But Iâve spent yearsâmore grounded in reality than I was that weekâsearching for other, better apple fritters. They donât exist. This recipe, thoughâit comes close.
Creating the Ideal Apple Fritter Takes Lots and Lots of Tests
I spent a few days in Birmingham this summer, eating through batches of apple fritters created by our test kitchen colleague Liz Mervosh. We talked through what achieving that platonic apple fritter ideal really meant, and it all boiled down to patty thickness-to-fluffy-interior ratio, apple chunk size and texture, and glaze sweetness.Â
The most crucial of these elements was the thickness of the fritter itself. Through multiple rounds of tests, Liz discovered that the ideal fritter batter should be thick and sticky. This not only allows for A+ enveloping of the apple chunks, but it also gives you time to flatten your fritters while theyâre taking their time cooking in the oil. (Liz found a large soup spoon worked best here, as it gave her more control when shaping the dough.) As for the actual patty thickness youâre aiming for? You shouldnât have to extend your jaw to take a bite of the final product, and, if I havenât mentioned, it should be big and round. This also allows for a fritter thatâs more exterior than it is interior. You want this! The opposite yields too much raw chew; this way gives you golden-brown, crispy-crunchy edges in literally every bite. Flatten accordingly.
The Best Apples for Fritters
As for the fruit studded throughout, Liz landed on Granny Smith as her preferred apple. âItâs firm and retains its texture,â Liz writes, âand its naturally tart flavor perfectly contrasts with the sweetness of the glaze.â She tested batches with raw apple chunks and batches with versions of par-cooked apple chunks. Ultimately, we craved more tartness (and less rawness) than plain old Granny Smith apple bits could provide. When Liz added lemon juice to her cooked-apple version, we knew we had it: âThe lemony par-cooked apples meld into the batter so much better than the raw apple pieces,â she notes.
Crafting the Optimal Glaze for an Apple Fritter
Finally, for the glaze, Liz added apple cider to the equation, which took the fritter from âfamiliar thing youâd be perfectly happy to eat wheneverâ to âcompletely and wholly satisfying thing you simply cannot imagine existing on a chilly day without.â Going with a barely-there coating gives the experience a pleasant, glossy stickiness that you realize is on your fingers afterward more than you see it in real-time.
All that to say: Apple fritters can bring as much joy as babies can, if done correctly. Happy frying.
This recipe was developed by Elizabeth Mervosh. The headnote was written by Tess Koman.
The Surprising Trick to Achieving Bakery-Quality Apple Fritters at Home
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For the Apple Fritters:
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42g unsalted butter (1 1/2 ounces; 3 tablespoons)
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226 g granny smith apples
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2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice from 1 medium lemon
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1/2 cup granulated sugar
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1 teaspoon plus a pinch Diamond Crystal kosher salt; for table salt, use half as much by volume
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Canola oil, for frying
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355 g all purpose flour
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2 teaspoons baking powder
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3/4 teaspoons apple pie spice
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2 large eggs, lightly beaten
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1/2 cup whole milk
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1/3 cup sour cream
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1 teaspoon vanilla extract
For the Glaze:
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285 g confectioners sugar
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5 tablespoons apple cider
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1 pinch kosher salt
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For the Apple Fritters: In a large skillet, melt butter over medium heat. Cook, whisking constantly with a wooden spoon, until milk solids sink to the bottom of the skillet and turn light golden brown, 3 to 4 minutes. Add apples and stir to evenly coat in butter. Cook, stirring occasionally, until apples are crisp-tender and still hold their shape, about 5 minutes. Add lemon juice, 2 tablespoons of the sugar, and a pinch of salt. Cook, stirring constantly, until sugar dissolves and apples are glazed in sugar mixture, about 2 minutes. Transfer apples to a large plate and refrigerate until cool, about 20 minutes.
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Set a wire rack inside a 13- by 18-inch rimmed baking sheet; set aside. Fill a large Dutch oven with 1 1/2 inches of canola oil and heat over medium-high until oil is 375ÂșF (190ÂșC).
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In a large bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, apple pie spice, remaining 1/2 cup sugar, and 1 teaspoon salt to combine; set aside. In a medium bowl, whisk eggs, milk, sour cream, and vanilla to combine. Add sour cream mixture and cooked apples to dry ingredients, and, using a flexible spatula, fold together until a thick batter forms.
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Working in batches of 3, carefully drop about 1/2 cup of batter into hot oil and, using the back of a spoon, immediately press fritter until fritter is about 4-inches in diameter. Fry, adjusting heat as needed to maintain temperature, and use a spider skimmer or slotted spoon to flip fritters halfway through. Cook until fritters are browned, puffed, and cooked through, about 5 minutes. Transfer finished fritters to prepared wire rack and repeat with remaining fritters.
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For the Glaze: In a medium bowl, whisk confectionersâ sugar, apple cider, and salt until smooth. Working with one fritter at a time, dip top of fritter into glaze, allowing excess glaze to drip off. Return fritter to wire rack, glaze side up. Repeat with remaining fritters. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Special Equipment
Large skillet, wire rack, 13- by 18-inch rimmed baking sheet, large Dutch oven, spider skimmer or slotted spoon
Notes
If apple pie spice is not available, you can use pumpkin pie spice or 1/2 tsp cinnamon and 1/4 tsp nutmeg in the fritter batter instead.
Make-Ahead and Storage
Apple fritters are best served immediately, but in a pinch (…or if you’re taking them on an airplane), you can store them in a paper bag at room temperature for up to a day.
2025-01-10 16:00:00
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