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Recipes

How To Make Cafe Du Monde Beignets From New Orleans

If you have never seen the movie Chef, starring Jon Favreau and John Leguizamo, get thee to your nearest streaming service, order a few Cubanos, and finish off your meal with some Cafe Du Monde-inspired beignets. With these credentials, you’ll travel throughout the States along with The El Jefe food truck. The New Orleans scene in the movie at Cafe Du Monde leaves me craving beignets every time I see it because it takes me back to when I experienced my first visit to the classic eatery. Say what you will, tourist attraction or not; Cafe Du Monde creates a bit of New Orleans culinary magic that has you nostalgically shouting, “Those are the best!” When you see Jon Favreau engulfing his beignet on screen.

What is a beignet?

A beignet is fried choux pastry, which is a dough mainly made with butter, water, flour, and eggs. Choux pastry has a high moisture content, creating steam while baking or, in this case, frying. The water in the dough evaporates while the pastry is cooking and puffs up the pastry, producing a result that is light and airy. When using yeast, as this recipe does, make sure it is fresh. If the sugar, yeast, and water do not form a foamy layer after about 10 minutes, you will need to repeat this step using new yeast. Typically, beignets are fried in a deep fryer, but if you have a deep skillet or preferably a Dutch oven, you can fry the batter in those. Remember you want to use a vessel with high sides so the bubbling oil does not spill over. It’s also best to fry your beignets in batches, so they have enough room to float around and cook evenly on all sides.

Consider several guidelines when eating beignets. First, prepare to get covered in powdered sugar. This dessert is not for dainty eaters. If beignets are not doused in the equivalent of a powdered sugar blizzard, then beignets are naked. Second, beignets are best eaten hot out of the fryer. They are still delicious once cool, but something about hot beignets blanketed in powdered sugar, with the combination of a steamy inside, makes you immediately want to consume the delightful fritter as quickly as possible. Your sticky, sugar-covered fingers are just an added bonus to suck on after you finish. Last, don’t eat just one. You won’t want to, and you don’t have to, so definitely leave room for two or three. Some would argue that a beignet needs its counterpart, a cup of hot chicory coffee served au lait or black, as is tradition. What a delicious conundrum to have. However you choose to eat beignets, they are always a treat. And if you’re going to make them, why not use a recipe modeled after the iconic mainstay that hasn’t broken tradition since 1862? Enjoy your confections, and as they say in the Big Easy, “laissez les bons temps rouler”-let the good times roll!

Copycat Caf Du Monde Beignets

Difficulty:BeginnerPrep time:3 hours 30 minutesCook time: 30 minutesTotal time:4 hours Servings:18 servings

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Stefanie Trepper

    Combine the yeast, two tablespoons of granulated sugar, and the warm water in a bowl and mix well with a fork. Let the mixture stand until it is foamy, about 5 to 10 minutes. Next, add the milk, egg, melted butter, salt, and the remaining two tablespoons of granulated sugar and mix with a fork to combine. Add the flour in two or three batches and mix until you have a sticky dough. If you have one, you can use a stand mixer with the dough hook attachment at medium speed.

  2. Stefanie Trepper

    Lightly grease a large bowl with vegetable oil. Add the dough and coat it in the oil. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it stand at room temperature for 2 to 3 hours. The dough should be very puffy and doubled in size.

  3. Heat three or four inches of oil, about two quarts, over medium heat to 350° in a heavy pot with high sides, such as a Dutch oven.

  4. Stefanie Trepper

    While the oil is heating, turn out the dough on a lightly floured surface and cut it in half. Working one batch at a time, use a lightly floured rolling pin to roll the dough to about ¼ inch thick. Depending on how big you would like your beignets, cut the dough into 1 to 2-inch squares, set aside on a floured surface, and repeat with the remaining dough.

  5. Stefanie Trepper

    Place the powdered sugar in a medium-sized bowl.In small batches of 2 to 3 beignets, fry the dough until it puffs and is golden on the bottom side, only 1 to 2 minutes per side. Next, flip the beignets and fry until golden on the second side. Transfer the beignets to a baking sheet with a cooling rack placed over it or on a paper towel-lined baking sheet.

  6. Stefanie Trepper

    When the beignets are cool enough to touch, roll them in powdered sugar. Before serving, dust with more confectioners’ sugar and serve warm.

Stefanie Trepper is a freelance contributor to Spoon University in New York City, where she is a recipe tester and developer.

As a culinary student, she focused on developing nutritious, budget-friendly, and adaptable recipes to accommodate various diets and food allergies. She is committed to sourcing healthy, local, and seasonal foods and is a contributor and volunteer at her local organic cooperative community garden. Stefanie studied in Provence, France, where she learned about sustainable farming and cooking practices. During her study in France, Stefanie developed relationships with local farmers and purveyors and utilized seasonal, locally sourced foods. Concurrently, she worked in a restaurant, which earned a green Michelin star for sustainability under a two Michelin-starred chef. Stefanie has previously worked as both an educator and an administrator and used food and cooking to bridge cultural connections. A graduate of Colby College, she is passionate about environmental studies and earned a B.A. in Art History. She also holds a Master's Degree from The Bank Street College of Education and an advanced leadership certificate from Harvard University.

In her free time, Stefanie enjoys traveling, learning the Italian language, entertaining friends for dinner dates, and spending time with her husband and two children. She also enjoys listening to her favorite true crime podcasts and playing with her two rescued cats. Stefanie is a horror movie buff and considers Halloween (1978) one of the best horror movies of all time. A lover of New York City, Stefanie loves exploring new neighborhoods, perusing ethnic markets, and finding new dishes and cuisines to replicate at home.