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  • Taryn Varricchio: Fresh dough cut into perfect rounds.

  • Dozens fried in piping hot oil, a minute on each side,

  • only flipped when golden brown and lightly crisp.

  • Stacked up on a long rod

  • and drenched in a think honey glaze.

  • Hung up on two metal hooks

  • to let the excess glaze drip down,

  • so that each doughnut is evenly coated and perfectly sweet.

  • It's the special way that this simple dough

  • is fried and glazed that make Peter Pan's Donuts

  • a legend in Brooklyn and beyond.

  • Hours before customers fill the stools

  • at the U-shaped countertop,

  • bakers at Peter Pan are busy making doughnuts.

  • Customer: This is definitely a Greenpoint staple.

  • People wait here for 45 minutes,

  • an hour, just to get a doughnut.

  • Customer: I got a doughnut!

  • It's no line! It's no line!

  • Taryn: Bakers come to work at midnight

  • to make dough from scratch.

  • They start with the shop's popular yeast doughnuts,

  • since those take the longest to make.

  • Bakers measure out flour and sugar with a scale

  • before dumping each ingredient

  • into an industrial steel mixer.

  • The mixer blends flour, sugar, milk, butter, and eggs.

  • On a typical day, bakers go through

  • about 40 pounds of flour to make 1,000 doughnuts.

  • Donna Siafakas: The only machine back there is to mix it,

  • but everything is done by hand.

  • You saw it. He was hand cutting every doughnut

  • and hand glazing them, and it makes a difference.

  • Taryn: Bakers roll the dough about an inch thick.

  • Any thinner, and the doughnuts

  • will shrink too much when they fry.

  • Then they cut the doughnut into perfect rounds,

  • some with holes and others without,

  • depending on whether the doughnut has a filling.

  • Now the doughnuts head into the proofing cabinet to rise.

  • Typically yeast doughnuts need about three hours to rise,

  • which is why bakers start their shift overnight.

  • But the timing can change based on a few factors,

  • like the weather that day.

  • In the winter, Peter Pan's Donuts can take

  • up to 4 1/2 hours to rise,

  • but when it's hot or humid, it's much less than that.

  • Donna: Summertime, with the humidity,

  • I mean, you don't even have to put them in the proof box.

  • You know, as you're cutting them

  • and leaving them on the rack, they're proofing.

  • Taryn: About 35 doughnuts fry until they turn golden brown,

  • about a minute on each side.

  • Yeast doughnuts head directly to the glazing station,

  • but cake doughnuts need to cool for a few minutes.

  • Otherwise, they'll break apart.

  • Bakers line up 10 doughnuts on a long rod

  • and submerge them into a thick honey glaze.

  • They hang the rod on two metal hooks because...

  • Donna: If you just leave it flat,

  • it sort of sits on the top and it's too sweet.

  • This way it really runs off the whole doughnut.

  • Taryn: There's blueberry buttermilk,

  • sourdough, and the shop's best sellers,

  • honey-dipped and red velvet cake flavors.

  • I don't think you can come here

  • and not get a glazed doughnut.

  • It's just, like, your classic, go-to doughnut,

  • not too much going on,

  • simple, airy, but yet filling,

  • and glazed, like, just as well as all the others.

  • That glaze is everything.

  • That's the best part of this doughnut. To be real.

  • To be honest. The red velvet's good.

  • I love red velvet flavoring.

  • But the glaze is, like, such an even coat, and thin.

  • It looks like they're soaking the glaze onto each doughnut,

  • but it's actually just, like, a thin coating

  • that dries perfectly on top,

  • and it spreads so well throughout.

  • Both the classics and the new varieties

  • have drawn in tourists, celebrity customers,

  • and movie crews over the last 70 years,

  • but it's the faithful locals that keep the shop so busy.

  • Customer: I've been in the neighborhood for eight years.

  • I have breakfast here three times a week at least.

  • Customer: This doughnut is just so good.

  • It is not just for the police.

  • It's for the mail lady.

  • Taryn: Thank you guys for watching "Legendary Eats."

  • We have more great episodes coming,

  • so please subscribe,

  • and if there's any places that you would like us to cover,

  • then let us know.

  • That's a wrap.

Taryn Varricchio: Fresh dough cut into perfect rounds.

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