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Get 'em while they're hot -- and free

Posted Jun 05 2008, 09:54 PM by Karen Datko
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Around here we think of every day as doughnut day, but those with more self-restraint know the real thing comes the first Friday in June – today, in fact.

The celebration was launched in 1938, in the depths of the Great Depression, as a Salvation Army fund-raiser honoring the volunteer “lassies” who served coffee and fresh doughnuts by the thousands to homesick soldiers in France during World War I.
 
To mark the occasion, doughnut purveyor Krispy Kreme is offering a free calorie bomb. No doubt you can find your nearest store in your sleep, but here's a way to find one if for some reason you've awakened in a strange part of town. Wait for the “hot light” if you want one of their notorious melt-in-your-mouth glazed, but you can choose one (1) of any of their varieties at participating stores. Here’s a peek at their lineup.

No Krispy Kremes in your neck of the woods? Dunkin Donuts hasn’t ponied up any freebies that we know, but that’s no reason not to drop a couple of bucks on a cruller and a cuppa joe and think about Doughboys, doughnuts and the women who served ‘em up hot.

If you want to get all gourmet on us, Serious Eats offers a look at what makes a great doughnut and a honor roll of the shops that fry them.

And if you're in Chicago, you can swing by the real Donut Day, which aims to raise money to fight hunger in the Windy City. As long as you're being authentic, you might try the original Salvation Army recipe, too:

7-1/2 cups sugar
3/4 cup lard
8 eggs
3 large cans evaporated milk
3 large cans water
18 cups flour
18 teaspoons baking powder
7-1/2 teaspoons salt
8 teaspoons nutmeg

Cream sugar and lard together, beat eggs, add evaporated milk and water. Add liquid to creamed mixture. Mix flour, baking powder, salt and nutmeg in large sieve and sift into other mixture. Add enough flour to make e stiff dough. Roll and cut. Five pounds of lard are required to fry the doughnuts. Yield: approximately 250 doughnuts.

Related reading:

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Comments

 

Lard is just  another term for grease (Crisco,etc.)  You eat it everytime you pop a pieceof breadin your mouth...DUH!!!!!!!!

Yeah its true ya'll. I went to Krispy Creme this morning and thought the lady made a mistake when she gave me 2 for 1. So everyone enjoy!!!

Lard was widely used and made everything taste incredible - especially pie crust.  And the obesity problem we now see, with rotund, unhealthy people everywhere, was a fraction then of what it is now.  I'd love to try the Salvation Army recipe, but not in that quantity!  Made divide the recipe into 1/3 or 1/4 of what it's asking for...

The above reciipe has 18  cups of flour, so the 3/4/ cups of lard would equal to a drop or two in each doughnut.  You could substitute butter or smartbalance for the lard.

Mmmmm....GOOD!

NATIONAL DOUGHNUT DAY......WHERE ARE ALL THE HOSPITAL DRUG REPS WHEN YOU NEED THEM :-)

It's my birthday and also D-DAY. This is the first I have heard of today being Doughnut Day. See you at Krispy Kreme :)

To the person who said "3/4 cup lard? Discusting . . . " Look again, that 3/4 cup is for approximately 250 doughnuts!!!

I don't know for sure about WWII, but in the Korean war but the Red Cross charged the soldiers for the donuts and coffee.  Hard to believe isn't it?  I will never donate a penny to the Red Cross.  The Savation Army gets my donations!

ewwwwww...lard=pig fat....ewwwwww. I just lost my appetite

WoW!  national donut day...who knew?  It brings back memories...when i was a child my grandmother worked in a store that sold fresh homemade glazed donuts and we'd go there and our mouth would water cause we wanted some and we knew didn't have any money to buy them so on some saturdays she make a large batch for us and because yeast donuts make such a large quanity she would let us eat at many as we wanted...there's nothing much better than warm glazed donuts make from scratch by your grandmother with a glass of milk...thanks for the  memories big mama.  Maybe I'll start the memory for my grandkids. I know they'd love it.  I know i did.

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