Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate

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 Before leaving for Aruba, I did what any normal person would do.

I made donuts.

Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate

I had a countertop full of ripe peaches and nectarines and although I thought about making jam with them, that was even a bit much for me.

So I did the next best thing with them.

Four Nectarines

Make donuts, of course.

And they were looking a little naked so I splattered them jazzed them up with creamy melted white chocolate. Peaches and cream go together, after all.

Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate

And no baking project would be complete without spilling a jar of sprinkles.

In this case, I managed to get them on the donuts. Most of them, anyway.

Bottle of rainbow sprinkles

They turned out light, airy, and delicate.

If love density in my brownies and banana bread, but in homemade donuts, I prefer them lighter. Unless it’s a Krispy Kreme but that’s a whole different animal and one cannot compare baked to fried donuts.

Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate

I made them using a pineapple upside-down-cake approach. I diced one peach and one nectarine into small cubes (didn’t even bother peeling them), sprayed the wells of the donut pan very well, placed cubes in the bottom of the wells and prayed that when the time came for the donuts to release, that they would.

I poured batter over the top of the fruit and baked while I waited with fingers crossed, hoping that the fruit underneath the batter wasn’t going to stick, burn, or prevent the donuts from setting up.

Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts uncooked in pan

I had just a little bit of extra batter, too much to throw out but not enough for another donut, so I took a big pinch of diced fruit, placed it in a muffin liner, and poured the batter over it and baked one lone little muffin-ish thingy.

It had Skylar’s name written all over it.

Baked Peach and Nectarine Donut in muffin form

After they came out of the oven, I let the donuts cool for about 15 minutes in the donut pan, I loosed them with a spatula rather than a knife so I wouldn’t scratch up my pan, and they popped right out. Whew.

I melted some white chocolate, got the sprinkles out, and went to town.

Scott loved these, and he’s not that into peaches, so that’s saying something. He kept raving about the texture. I was just happy to use up some spare fruit before the trip.

Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate

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Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate Drizzle and Sprinkles (Inspired by Baked Vanilla Donuts with Vanilla Glaze and Baked Orange Banana Coconut Donuts)

Makes 6 to 7 donuts in this Wilton doughtnut pan or 6 donuts + 1 small muffin

3/4 cup fresh peaches or nectarines, diced (I used half of one peach and half of one nectarine, each with the skin kept on)

3/4 cup all-purpose flour

1/4 cup granulated sugar

2 tablespoons light brown sugar, packed

1 teaspoon baking powder

pinch salt, optional

1 tablespoon butter, melted

1 egg

1/4 cup cream and 1 tablespoon cream or milk, plus additional if necessary

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/3 cup white chocolate chips, for drizzle

1 tablespoon vegetable shortening, optional

1/4 cup sprinkles, for garnishing

Preheat oven to 325F degrees, spray a 6-count donut pan very well with cooking spray; set aside.

Dice the peaches and/or nectarines into small cubes and evenly distribute and place the fruit in the bottom of each donut cavity.

In a large bowl, add flour, sugars, baking powder, salt, and stir to combine; set aside.

In a small microwave-safe bowl, melt the butter on high power, about 1 minute. Wait for the butter to cool for 1 minute (so you don’t scramble the egg). Add the egg, cream, vanilla, and whisk to combine. Pour wet mixture over dry, folding until just combined; do not overmix or donuts will be tough. Batter should be thick, but not as thick as cookie dough. Add a splash of cream or milk if necessary to thin batter slightly.

Fill each donut pan cavities with batter, divided evenly; fill each about 3/4 of the way full. If there is a small amount of excess batter, either discard it or make 1 muffin, or make 1 additional donut in another pan.

Bake for 10 to 13 minutes, or until doughnuts have risen, the tops have turned slightly golden, and are springy when touched. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean. Allow donuts to cool in the pan for at least 10 minutes before removing them. If they are a bit stuck, rather than using a knife and scratching your pan, use a spatula to gently dislodge them.

Combine the white chocolate and shortening in a small microwave-safe bowl and heat on high power in 20 to 30 second bursts to melt, stopping after each burst to stir until chocolate can be stirred smooth. White chocolate can be stubborn to melt and it scorches easily; using shortening helps it to become and stay smoother. Drizzle melted chocolate over each donut, divided equally. Before chocolate sets up, garnish each donut with sprinkles, divided evenly.

To make gluten-free, use your favorite gluten free flour blend. To make vegan, use a flax egg, melted margarine, and use a confectioners’ sugar-based glaze rather than the white chocolate glaze.

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Baked Peach and Nectarine Donuts with White Chocolate

Related Recipes:

Ironically, in the two days before we went to Aruba the last time, right before Christmas 2011, I made Baked Eggnog Donuts with Vanilla Rum Glaze with leftover eggnog I had. From eggnog to peaches, crazy how I put my leftovers and extras to use in the form of donuts, two trips in a row.

Baked Eggnog Donuts with Vanilla Rum Glaze

Baked Vanilla Donuts with Vanilla Glaze – If you fried these, they would taste just like a Krispy Kreme. As it stands, they’re baked and pretty darn close.

Baked Vanilla Donuts with Vanilla Glaze

Baked Cinnamon Bun Donuts with Vanilla Cream Cheese Glaze – I love Cinnabon cinnamon rolls, which inspired these donuts

Baked Cinnamon Bun Donuts with Vanilla Cream Cheese Glaze

Baked Orange Banana Coconut Donuts with Orange Coconut Vanilla Cream Cheese Glaze – fresh, light, and use up ripe bananas

Baked Orange Banana Coconut Donuts with Orange Coconut Vanilla Cream Cheese Glaze

Apricot Butterscotch White Chocolate Peanut Butter-Filled Sandwich Cookies  – Something about the peach and nectarine chunks in the donuts reminds me of these cookies with chunky apricots

Apricot Butterscotch White Chocolate Peanut Butter-Filled Sandwich Cookies

Have you ever made donuts?

Feel free to link up your favorite recipes.

I never knew how easy donuts were to make until I tried about a year and a half ago.  Quicker than muffins and just as easy.

For ten bucks, pick up a donut pan and get creative. Between the donuts themselves, and frostings and glazes, there are infinite possibilities. Sort of like cupcakes or muffins, the flavors and combinations are endless.

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Comments

  1. These look killer! I love peaches and donuts and white chocolate. I smiled as soon as I saw the post title and couldn’t wait to read about them.

  2. Too funny! I was faced with the same problem (too many ripe peaches) and decided to make a cake out of them yesterday. I might have to recreate that scenario now so I can try out your approach. Doughnuts really do beat all!

  3. These are beyond unique Averie! I love baked donuts but sometimes I feel pretty bored with the same ‘ol recipe. Adding fresh fruit is brilliant!!

    1. and normally I only use white sugar and buttermilk; for these I added a little brown and used cream not buttermilk – gotta keep things interesting!

  4. But of course. Normal people make donuts when they’re about to travel – it’s the only way to make the traveling do-able.

    I was SO thrilled when I saw these donuts on The Kitchn’s delicious links – these donuts are the PERFECT summer treat! Congrats on the mention and thanks for the recipe, A.!!

    1. thanks for being the bearer of great news – I didn’t see that until you told me, so thanks!!! :)

  5. Could these be any prettier or more luscious looking?? Ah I love the summery flavors!!

  6. These look delicious, and what a great way to use peaches. I’m up to my eyeballs in them and we’re tired of peach crisp!

    1. and LOL that I havent made any crisp yet – we ate them or smoothie’ed them or donut’ed them :)

  7. oh my gosh those look delish!! i love the combo of peach and nectarines! two of my fav summer fruits!

  8. A peach and nectarine donut with sprinkles on top!!?? What else can scream more summer, beach and Aruba than these amazing flavors together!! Please ship me one to NJ, I will refund you the shipping cost!

  9. Making donuts… should be the answer to all of life’s problems, no? Although a nectarine/peach jam would be outstanding, I don’t think you went wrong with donuts including some of my favorites. Those sprinkles? GORGEOUS. They make everything pretty. :)

    I like this donut recipe! It’s a new one for you… less flour and including brown sugar… which, if my memory serves me correctly, you didn’t add to the vanilla donuts. I can just *see* how moist these are.

    And lucky Skylar! That chopped fruit/batter ratio is how I prefer things. I like a ton of fruit chunks in my muffins.. more than the normal person, actually! I’m thinking peaches would be a yummy addition to the cinnamon bun donuts. With white chocolate frosting and sprinkles of course ;)

    1. I used brown sugar b/c I didn’t use buttermilk and since buttermilk adds moisture and heaviness to the batter, I thought maybe brown sugar would do that, in a way, too…and also b/c you know I just love it.

      And donuts tend to get dry unless they’re fried so I figured the extra moisture from the brown sugar couldn’t hurt. Plus it just went with that whole peaches ‘n cream/cobbler in a donut vibe I was trying to create. I thought of you when I was shooting these b/c of the white choc & sprinkles!

  10. girl those are gorgeous!
    like works of art!
    so so pretty!!
    “almost” too pretty to eat. lol

  11. Ooh I love these Averie! You sure have made some yummy looking donuts in the past too. I think it’s time to get me a donut pan!!

    1. For all you cook and bake and are baking your way thru the Tosi book even, a donut pan is pretty much mandatory for a baker like you!