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Apple Donuts, a year-round favorite, is especially popular as the temperatures cool and summer gives way to fall. With a soft, pillowy inside and a sweet, crunchy outside, these delicious Cinnamon Sugar Baked Apple Donuts are made with applesauce and pair perfectly with your morning cup of coffee or fresh out of the oven with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Stack of four Cinnamon Sugar Baked Apple Donuts on a small cutting board.

Homemade Apple Donuts

Simple, homemade, delicious apple donuts. To be honest with you guys, which I am, I can think of few things better. It’s funny; donuts are one of those delicious treats that are so easily forgotten, at least for me. This makes no sense since donuts, especially these baked apple donuts, are definitely not forgettable. Take one bite of these soft, fluffy, apply pillows, and you’ll be hooked. With nothing artificial, they’re nothing like store-bought donuts.

The hardest part will be eating just one!

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Ingredients in these Apple Donuts

  • Flour – We’re using regular all-purpose flour. For a gluten-free version, swap regular flour for a gluten-free all-purpose flour.
  • Baking Powder and Baking Soda
  • Ground Cinnamon and nutmeg– This recipe doesn’t require more than a little ground cinnamon and nutmeg to have yummy fall flavors. Of course, feel free to swap the ground cinnamon for apple pie spice or pumpkin pie spice if preferred.
  • Butter – Butter helps make these donuts moist and cake-like. The butter also adds a delicious buttery flavor.
  • Eggs – Eggs keep the donuts together, preventing them from crumbling apart.
  • Granulated Sugar – For sweetness!
  • Buttermilk – Buttermilk helps keep baked goods moist and flavorful.
  • Applesauce and Grated Apple – For yummy apple flavor!
Cinnamon Sugar Baked Apple Donuts on a platter surrounded by whole cinnamon sticks and a whole apple cut in half.

Tools to Make Apple Donuts

Now, there are a few things that are pretty important when making these delicious, fantastic, fall-flavored donuts.

  1. Donut Baking Pan– This is the donut pan that I use, and it works great. You can also try using a silicone donut baking pan for easier removal.
  2. Cheese grater – If it works for cheese, it will work for the apples.
  3. Large zip-lock bag – The batter is quite thick and sticky, so it’s much easier to get the apple batter into the donut mold by squeezing it through a small slit in a zip-lock bag.
Close up image of an apple donut with crunchy cinnamon sugar outside

How to Make Apple Donuts

  1. Preheat oven, grease donut pan, and grate apple. Set everything aside.
  2. Prepare the batter.
  3. Transfer the batter for the apple donuts to a large ziplock bag and seal, removing all air. Snip off a small corner of the bag.
  4. Gently squeeze batter into the cavities of the donut hole pan.
  5. Bake for 12-14 minutes.
  6. As the donuts bake, melt the butter in one bowl and mix together the cinnamon and the sugar in another.
  7. Remove the donuts from the pan, brush with melted butter, and coat with the cinnamon sugar mixture.

One important thing to note about these donuts (and all donuts) is that they taste best when eaten just after baking. Ideally, when they’re still warm, but definitely within the first 12-24 hours.

Overhead close-up of baked apple donut

Frequently Asked Questions

Are baked apple donuts healthy?

No, not necessarily. However, they are baked rather than fried, so they are healthier than regular fried donuts.

Can I make baked apple donuts into muffins?

Absolutely! Instead of using a donut pan, lightly grease a mini muffin pan and bake in a preheated 400℉ oven for 8-12 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. You can also bake them in a regular muffin pan. Start at 400℉ for 8 minutes, then 350℉ for another 6-8 minutes.

How to store leftover apple donuts?

Donuts taste best when eaten just after baking. Ideally, when they’re still warm, but definitely within the first 12-24 hours. If you don’t expect to finish all 18 donuts on the same day, my advice is to keep the batter stored in the refrigerator and bake the remaining donuts the next day. If you do bake them all in one go, store any leftovers in a sealed, airtight container for maximum freshness!

More Apple Recipes,

If you try making this Apple Cinnamon Baked Apple Donuts Recipe, please leave me a comment and let me know! I always love to hear your thoughts.

Two apple doughnuts on a white plate, one with a bite taken out of it.
A close up of baked apple doughnuts
4.85 from 107 votes

Cinnamon Sugar Baked Apple Donuts Recipe


Close up photo of Chef Jessica Randhawa of The Forked Spoon in a blue spotted dress, in the sunlightJessica Randhawa
Apple Donuts, a year-round favorite, is especially popular as the temperatures cool and summer gives way to fall. With a soft, pillowy inside and a sweet, crunchy outside, these delicious Cinnamon Sugar Baked Apple Donuts are made with applesauce and pair perfectly with your morning cup of coffee or fresh out of the oven with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 14 minutes
Total: 29 minutes
Servings: 18 donuts
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Ingredients 

For the Apple Doughnuts

For the Cinnamon Sugar Coating

Instructions 

  • Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
  • In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt, baking soda, and ground cinnamon. Set aside these dry ingredients.
  • In a separate, larger bowl, whisk together the butter, eggs, granulated sugar, buttermilk, nutmeg, and applesauce. Mix until just combined.
  • Stir in the grated apples, then stir in the dry ingredients from step 2, and transfer the batter to a large ziplock bag. Squeeze out all of the air and snip one corner, creating a small hole. Spray the donut hole pan with a light layer of non-stick cooking spray.
  • Squeeze batter into the cavities of the donut hole pan and transfer to the oven to bake for 12-14 minutes.
  • As the donuts are baking, combine the sugar with the ground cinnamon and melt approximately 4 tablespoons of butter in a small dish.
  • When the donuts have finished baking, remove them from the oven and transfer to a wire rack to cool for 5-10 minutes. Brush with the melted butter and coat in the cinnamon sugar topping. Enjoy!

Video

Notes

  • Store any leftover donuts in a zip-lock bag or container with a tight-fitting lid. Best when enjoyed within 24 hours.

Nutrition

Calories: 251kcal | Carbohydrates: 45g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Cholesterol: 37mg | Sodium: 292mg | Potassium: 187mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 22g | Vitamin A: 210IU | Vitamin C: 0.6mg | Calcium: 81mg | Iron: 1.7mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Did you make this? Leave a comment below!
Close up photo of Chef Jessica Randhawa of The Forked Spoon in a blue spotted dress, in the sunlight

Jessica Randhawa

Chef | Food Photographer

I’m Chef Jessica Randhawa, bringing over 14 years of experience in creating and publishing over 1200 mouthwatering recipes, coupled with invaluable kitchen tips and professional guidance, to transform your daily cooking into a truly enriching culinary adventure.

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Recipe Rating




4.85 from 107 votes (98 ratings without comment)

37 Comments

  1. The Gardner Family says:

    5 stars
    Every member of the family loved these light flavorful donuts.

  2. Laura says:

    Can you make these as muffins?? Having a hard time finding a donut pan, and the foil option I see online (to create your own) has terrible reviews. Your recipe sounds A-Mazing. Thanks!

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Laura,

      I have not tried to make these as muffins before, but they might be dense. If you are in the US, here is the pan I use which is available on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2O9nJyY

  3. Augustine says:

    5 stars
    This turned out great!

  4. Steve Goldstein says:

    I I refilled the donut pans and tops are not brown.
    I ended up spooning because I suck with the piping bag.
    I guess it takes some time to learn.

    They taste good though.

  5. Talia says:

    I’ve never been enticed to make a baked doughnut recipe before, but these look amazing!!

  6. Cathy says:

    It likes like you used a donut pan not a donut “hole” pan. Will this make a difference in the baking time

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Cathy,

      For a donut hole pan, I am guessing maybe a minute or two less… but I have not tried it before.

  7. Shauna says:

    Hi! I’m thinking about making these this weekend. I didn’t see when to add the dry ingredients? Maybe I missed it?

    Thanks!

    Shauna

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Shauna,

      Good catch! I added more details to the recipe to reflect the dry ingredients mixing with wet ingredients!

  8. Emma says:

    So did you add the nutmeg or not and if you did when did you add it?

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Emma,

      Thanks for catching that – I updated the recipe to show adding the nutmeg in step 3 with the granulated sugar.

  9. Lois says:

    5 stars
    These were very good. Like most donuts they will keep in the freezer if individually wrapped in foil & stored in a ziplock bag. Just set a couple out on the counter to thaw overnight. (still wrapped in foil). The recipe needs to be corrected. It lists nutmeg in the ingredients but the instructions never tell you to add it.

  10. Molly says:

    5 stars
    This was soooo good!