Crackery Potato Bugnes
- 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup Hungry Jack potato flakes
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, softened
- 1/2 teaspoon sea salt (or 3/4 teaspoon fleur de sel)
- 1 large egg, at room temperature
- Olive oil, for frying
- Fleur de sel or sea salt, for sprinkling
- Whisk together the flour, potato flakes and baking powder in a small bowl.
- In another bowl, whisk the butter and salt together until smooth.
- Add the egg and whisk until the egg is beaten.
- (The mixture will look curdled, almost like egg-drop soup, but thats fine.)
- Add the dry ingredients and whisk to moisten as much of the mixture as you can.
- The dough will have lumps and clumps and a few flakes.
- Pour 3 tablespoons hot water over the dough and whisk (or mix with a rubber spatula) until the dough comes together.
- If it looks dry, add a little more water drop by drop (3 tablespoons is usually enough).
- You should have a soft, moist dough.
- Knead the dough a couple of times, divide it in half, pat it into a rectangular shape and wrap each half well.
- Chill the dough for at least 1 hour or for as long as overnight.
- Line a baking sheet with wax paper.
- Working with one piece of dough at a time, place it on a well-floured surface, flour the top of the dough and roll it out, turning it over so that youre rolling on both sides, until youve got a rectangle thats paper thin.
- Dont worry about rolling the dough into a perfectly even shape; you just want it to be very thin.
- If you flour it well enough, it will be easy to get that thinness.
- Using a ruler and a pastry wheel (one with a zigzag edge is nice for this job) or pizza cutter, cut long strips 1 to 1 1/2 inches wide, then cut the strips at 2-inch intervals.
- (Again, size isnt really important and the shape is flexible you can make long strips, triangles or squares.)
- Using the tip of a paring knife, cut a lengthwise slit about 3/4 inch long in the center of each piece.
- Lift the pieces onto the baking sheet.
- When youve filled the sheet, just cover the dough with another piece of wax paper and keep going.
- Roll and cut the other half of the dough and place these pieces on the baking sheet as well, separating the layers with wax paper.
- You should have about 60 bugnes.
- Chill for at least 1 hour or for as long as overnight.
- (When the dough is firm, you can pack the pieces airtight and freeze them for up to 2 months; they can be cooked without defrosting.)
- When youre ready to fry the bugnes, line a baking sheet with a double layer of paper towels.
- Pour 1 to 1 1/2 inches of olive oil into a deep saute pan or a Dutch oven set over medium-high heat.
- When the oil is hot it should measure 300 degrees on a deep-fat-frying or candy thermometer drop a few pieces of dough into the pot.
- Dont crowd the pot; you want the oil to bubble around each piece of dough.
- Fry until the bugnes are lightly browned around the edges and golden in the center, about 2 minutes, then turn and brown the other side, about 1 minute more.
- Lift out of the oil with a slotted spoon, allowing the excess oil to drip back into the pot, and transfer them to the lined baking sheet.
- Pat off the excess oil, sprinkle with salt and continue frying the remaining pieces.
- Serve the bugnes just warm or at room temperature, solo or with a little creme fraiche (or sour cream) and salmon roe or caviar.
flour, potato flakes, baking powder, unsalted butter, salt, egg, olive oil, salt
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1013278 (may not work)