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Perfect Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts (Baked, Vegan, and Gluten Free & Sugar Free options)

Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts – the ideal way to get the satisfaction of this classic reat, but baked, vegan, and gluten free!  It tastes just like the original, but extra satisfying because you did it yourself!  

Entenmann’s Donuts, a staple in the sweets arsenal for so many households.  As Seinfeld astutely pointed out years ago, Entenmann’s treats have a “display case at the end of the aisle” in every grocery store, and so I’m sure I’m not the only person who grew up with their donuts and coffee cakes as my ideal dessert goals.  I mostly attribute this to my dad, who ALWAYS had a box of these exact donuts in the freezer, and would sneak one per night after dinner. 

These Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts were an early entry onto my to-do list when I started vegan and gluten free baking.  After many rounds with my taste testers, I have confirmed that these taste exactly like the original, the only difference is they are baked not fried, which to me is just a beautiful excuse to eat more than one.

Also – if you want basically these but with a chocolate filling, head over to my Vegan Thin Mint Donut recipe and you can make them with or without the peppermint flavor!

How To Make Them:

If you have not made baked donuts before, you are in for a treat.  They are SO EASY.  Nothing fancy, nothing that needs prep time. Even including the time it takes for the chocolate coating to set you can make a full batch of these in less than 45 minutes (I know this to be true since while I was taking photos of them for this blog entry, I messed up the first batch, had about an hour of natural light left before the sun was going to go down, and managed to still get in the shoot.) 

So let’s get going! You’re less than an hour away from eating your Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts.

First thing’s first – get yourself a donut pan!!  In fact, get this set of two so you can make a dozen at a time.  Now that you’ve marveled at how adorable these pans are and you’ve wondered just how many things you can bake into donut shapes, let’s get started!

Step one is mixing together the flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar (see the Ingredients Needed section to learn how to make these sugar free!).  I use 1/3 cup of sugar and find it to be perfect, but if you want an extra sweet donut you can do 6 tablespoons of sugar.  Add into the dry ingredients milk, oil, vanilla extra, and soda water. 

Fun tip..

If this is your first time reading one of my recipes that uses soda water, welcome to what I find to be a game-changing ingredient.  I don’t use it a ton, but it is an option for replacing eggs in vegan baking, and one I find works very well for items you want to be lighter and fluffier like certain cakes, the occasional cookie, and baked donuts!  If you don’t have any carbonated water around, you can just use regular water instead and the donut will still bake correctly, it will just be a bit denser than the soda water version.

Time to bake!

Once your batter is fully mixed, it will seem a bit thin. Trust me, this will keep the donuts extra fluffy and moist. I like to pour it into a large measuring cup so it’s easier to transfer to the tin, then pour it evenly into the 6 (well-greased) donut molds and bake for 15 minutes. 

Let the donuts sit in the pan for about 5-10 minutes, then carefully move them onto a cooling rack.  I like to take a small cooling rack (see the photo for reference) and place it over the pan, then flip the whole thing upside-down so the donuts come out smoothly.  While they are cooling, let’s make our chocolate coating!  I have found the best mixture of chocolate to get that exact Entenmann’s chocolate coating flavor is 2/3 semi-sweet chocolate, and 1/3 dark chocolate.  You can use whatever exact chocolate you prefer, but to keep it vegan when I make these I use either these mini-chips or these chunks for the semi-sweet portion, and these chips for the dark portion.  

Chocolate coating:

Melt together your chocolate mixture either on a double boiler or in the microwave, then mix in about a teaspoon of neutral oil to make it a little thinner and smoother to coat the donuts with.  Coat each one generously, you can either use two forks to dunk the donut under the chocolate and flip it around then remove it, or just use your hands if you want to get messy and lick chocolate off your fingers after.  Move each coated donut onto a parchment paper lined pan, and once you’ve coated them all move them to the freezer for 10-15 minutes until the chocolate has hardened into a shell.

And that’s it!  You’ve made the best boxed donut out there BY YOURSELF and baked, vegan, and (optionally) gluten free!! Go eat your Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts and celebrate!!

Nutritional info can be found in the Notes section below the recipe instructions.

Storage:

After the Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts have cooled, seal in an air-tight container and store at room temperature or in the fridge.  At room temperature they will last 3-5 days, fridge will be a few extra days.

Pro Tips & Tools:

Ingredients Needed:

What To Bake Next:

Copycat Entenmann's Donuts - Artistic shot of many frosted donuts, one with a bite taken out
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Perfect Copycat Entenmann’s Donuts (Baked, Vegan, and Gluten Free option)

The ideal way to get the satisfaction of a delicious chocolate covered Entenmann’s donut, but baked, vegan, and gluten free!  It tastes just like the original, but extra satisfying because you did it yourself!
Course Dessert, Lunch Box, Snack
Keyword baked donuts, chocolate, chocolate donuts, copycat, donuts, gluten free, vegan
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Chill Time 10 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 6 donuts

Ingredients

Donut Ingredients

  • 1 cup gluten free flour can sub all-purpose if desired. This links to my favorite store bought gluten free flour blend that works best with all of my recipes, or see "Ingredients Needed" section for further info.
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • 1/3 cup granulated sugar *if you want a sugar free option, this links to my favorite sweetener, you can substitute it 1:1 in place of regular granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup + 3 tbsp non-dairy milk
  • 3 tbsp neutral oil
  • 2 tbsp soda water see notes
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Chocolate Coating Ingredients

  • 2/3 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1/3 cup dark chocolate chips
  • 1 tsp neutral oil

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F, and grease a donut pan.
  • In a large bowl, mix together the flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar.  Then add in the non-dairy milk, neutral oil, soda water, and vanilla extract. Mix until just combined.
  • The batter will seem thin, but trust me it will bake beautifully and keep the donuts fluffy and moist for days. Pour or spoon it evenly into the 6 donut molds in the pan.  Bake for 15 minutes, then let sit in the pan for 5 before moving to a cooling rack.
  • While cooling, melt together the semi-sweet chocolate chips with the dark chocolate chips, then add in the neutral oil to make it smoother and thinner to be able to coat the donuts.  Coat each one generously in chocolate, then move to a parchment paper lined pan. 
  • Let the donuts chill in the freezer for 10-15 minutes until the chocolate shell has hardened.  
  • Eat and enjoy!

Notes

  • I talk more about the soda water in a few places above, but this works as an egg replacer and keeps the donut extra light and airy.  You can replace with regular filtered water if you don’t have any soda water, it will just produce a more dense donut.

NUTRITION INFO

Total amount: 6 donuts
Serving size: 1 donut ** this is a HIGH estimate, as it accounts for the full amount of chocolate coating mixture, and you will likely have a lot leftover.
Per serving amounts:
  • Calories – 400
  • Grams of fat – 22.4
  • Grams of carbs – 47.9
  • Grams of protein – 7.5
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