Spanish Homemade Churros


 


Churros are a typical Spanish dessert that can be bought and enjoyed all over Spain. If you don’t find them in cafeterias, you’ll find stalls selling them on the streets, during fiestas or in special shops called Churrerías.

Imagine deep fried choux pastry dipped in hot chocolate…mmmm…delicious! Now I have to say that my favorite churros come from small stalls. They are large, thick and filling.

My word of advice – if you ever get to visit Spain, try to find a place where you can buy thick creamy hot chocolate (almost like a pudding) and you’ll be in for a real treat!

By the way, the history of churros is interesting. There are two theories about churros history. If you know which one is the official story, let me know! I am dying to know!

You know, it was pretty difficult to find an authentic Spanish churro recipe. I came across so many different churro recipes that I had actually no idea which one was the authentic one.

Traditional Churros with Chocolate Outdoors PictureSave

So I am bringing you my version of a recipe for homemade churros. They might not be the authentic Spanish churros but they taste pretty close to the ones we tasted on our travels.

And you know what? Making churros from scratch is so easy! Just follow my recipe and you’ll be in for a treat!

Have you ever tasted authentic Spanish churros? If not, put them on your bucket list or make these homemade churros to satisfy your sweet tooth cravings right away!


Course: Dessert

Cuisine: Spanish

Keyword: Churros with Chocolate, Homemade Churros Recipe, How to make Churros

Servings: 60 Churros (3-4inch/8-10cm)

Calories: 29 kcal

Ingredients

⅔ cup All-Purpose Flour (110g)

¼ stick Unsalted Butter

1 cup Water (250ml)

pinch of Salt

2 tsp Sugar

1 Egg

Oil , for frying

Instructions

Place water, butter, sugar & a pinch of salt into a medium size sauce pan. Bring to the boil.

Add the flour and mix vigorously until well blended (the dough will come together in a minute or two).

Remove from the stove and let it cool a bit. Once it is not too hot, add the egg and work the egg into the dough. Try to do it as fast as possible. At the beginning it might look like the churro dough doesn’t wanna bind but take your time it will.

Pour the oil into a large frying pan and heat it up.

Fill a piping bag fitted with star piping tip with half of the dough (it is easier to handle).

Check if the oil is ready for frying by dropping a tiny piece of the dough in. Once the dough turns nice brown, you are ready to pipe the churros in.

Pipe the dough directly into the hot oil (choose any length you like) and cut with a fork (I found fork the best tool for this). Do not pipe too many churros in as they need space for frying. It will take only about 2 minutes for them to get nice golden color and that is a sign they are ready. They should get the color gradually. If you see they are not getting dark evenly, reduce the temperature.

Take them out and place them on a paper kitchen towel to get rid of the excess oil.


When they are still warm, roll each of them in a sugar mixed with ground cinnamon.

Serve warm with thick hot chocolate or chocolate pudding.


Recipe Notes

1. Work the egg fast into the dough it to prevent the egg from cooking. This may be a bit tricky, as the dough is quite hard at this point. If you find it hard to mix with a wooden spoon, use an electric mixer.


2. You can either pipe the churros directly into oil or pipe them onto a sheet of baking parchment first and then place these into hot oil.

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