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PENMART01 18-01-2004 10:58 PM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
(dkra) asks:
>
>Someone here (or maybe rec.arts.comics.strips) mentioned that Dunkin'
>Donuts recently (a few months ago?) discontinued their crullers.
>
>What exactly are crullers, anyhow? How do they differ from a regular
>doughnut?
>
>I've seen several cruller recipes. One of them was a regular doughnut
>recipie but specified a particular shaping of the dough. Another recipe
>specified a raised yeast dough. Still another consists of a choux paste
>(for cream puffs) dough, put through a pastry tube and fried. The first
>two of them have a characteristic shape (strips of dough are twisted, with
>the ends pressed down).
>
>Will the real cruller please stand up?


cruller [KRUHL-uhr]
A doughnut-style dough (usually LEAVENED with baking powder) that's shaped into
a long twist, fried and sprinkled with granulated sugar or brushed with a sweet
glaze. The extremely light Freedom <S> French </S> cruller is made with CHOUX
PASTRY (cream-puff dough). The word "cruller" comes from the Dutch krulle,
meaning "twisted cake."

© Copyright Barron's Educational Services, Inc. 1995
based on THE FOOD LOVER'S COMPANION, 2nd edition, by Sharon Tyler Herbst.


---= BOYCOTT FRENCH--GERMAN (belgium) =---
---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =---
Sheldon
````````````
"Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation."


DP1091 19-01-2004 09:33 PM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
Dunkin" Donuts didn't stop making their crullers, they stopped making their
original "Dunkin' Donut' which was a plain round donut with a little extra
piece ( probably a munchkin) attached to it to use as a "handle" so it could be
"dunked".

Richard Kaszeta 19-01-2004 09:53 PM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
(DP1091) writes:
> Dunkin" Donuts didn't stop making their crullers


Around here (Western NH), the cruller *has* disappeared since November.

It's also been documented in the MA media:

http://www.boston.com/ae/food/articl...a_cruel_twist/

And in "Get Fuzzy":

http://www.unitedmedia.com/comics/ge...-20031220.html
(This link stops working in the next few days)

--
Richard W Kaszeta

http://www.kaszeta.org/rich

sf 20-01-2004 06:51 AM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
On Tue, 20 Jan 2004 04:43:12 GMT, Wayne Boatwright
> wrote:

> alzelt > wrote in
> :
> >>

> > A filthy canard. I spent last week in a car making sales trips
> > throughout New England. Froze my ass but had plenty of crullers in DD.
> >
> > So tell me again, Jack, the appeal of winter in New England.

>
> Heh heh! Staying indoors in front of a fire and watching it snow.


Ahhh, you echoed my thoughts exactly.


Practice safe eating - always use condiments

Denise~* 20-01-2004 07:28 AM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
On Mon, 19 Jan 2004 20:53:26 GMT, sf > wrote:

>1. I've never heard anyone order a cruller. We call them
>"twists" here.


One of my favorite lines in a movie

"This man needs some coffee and cruellers, Stat!"

Can anybody name it?


Denise, Brian & Wyatt (May 31, 02)

How much Healthy Choice ice cream can I eat before it's no longer a healthy choice?

Puester 20-01-2004 03:33 PM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
alzelt wrote:
>
>
> I spent last week in a car making sales trips
> throughout New England. Froze my ass but had plenty of crullers in DD.
>
> So tell me again, Jack, the appeal of winter in New England.
> --
> Alan
>



I'm not Jack but I spent the first half of my life in
New England and from my POV New Englanders are frozen
in their own inertia. I found that in all but the large
cities (i.e. Boston) the attitude pervades that driving
more than five miles to go out for a special dinner is
"way too far". It is a matter of pride to live all your
life in the same town where you were born, and often in
the same house.

Yes, there's upward mobility, but not lateral....

;-)
gloria p

alzelt 21-01-2004 03:35 AM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 


Puester wrote:

> alzelt wrote:
>
>>
>>I spent last week in a car making sales trips
>>throughout New England. Froze my ass but had plenty of crullers in DD.
>>
>>So tell me again, Jack, the appeal of winter in New England.
>>--
>>Alan
>>

>
>
>
> I'm not Jack but I spent the first half of my life in
> New England and from my POV New Englanders are frozen
> in their own inertia. I found that in all but the large
> cities (i.e. Boston) the attitude pervades that driving
> more than five miles to go out for a special dinner is
> "way too far". It is a matter of pride to live all your
> life in the same town where you were born, and often in
> the same house.
>
> Yes, there's upward mobility, but not lateral....
>
> ;-)
> gloria p


You may be correct, but living within five miles of Federal Hill in
Providence is not such a bad experience. So much good Italian food in
such a couple of blocks.

And living near a restaurant serving up great littlenecks on the half
shell, along with fried belly clams is not bad either.
--
Alan

"If you reject the food, ignore the customs, fear the religion, and
avoid the people, you might better stay home."
--James Michener


sf 21-01-2004 07:28 AM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
On Tue, 20 Jan 2004 15:33:57 GMT, Puester
> wrote:

> I'm not Jack but I spent the first half of my life in
> New England and from my POV New Englanders are frozen
> in their own inertia. I found that in all but the large
> cities (i.e. Boston) the attitude pervades that driving
> more than five miles to go out for a special dinner is
> "way too far".


Hey... are you saying I might be excessive when I think that
more than 10 blocks is "out of my neighborhood"?

> It is a matter of pride to live all your
> life in the same town where you were born, and often in
> the same house.


That's bad?
>
> Yes, there's upward mobility, but not lateral....
>

.... lateral is the word of today. If you're driven (and
smart), lucky, or inherit a few bucks... then you can be
upwardly mobile, otherwise - NO.

> ;-)
> gloria p




Practice safe eating - always use condiments

Nancy Young 22-01-2004 04:32 AM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 

Speaking of Dunkin' Donuts (was I?), I went to a small luncheon today
and wound up by happenstance sitting across from someone who owns a
number of Dunkin' Donut shops. DAMN I just thought of it, he said a
few KFCs TOO! and I didn't ask about the herbs and spices. I cannot
believe it. Well, if I remember, I'll probably be seeing them again
over the spring, so I'll try to remember then. Grrrr.

At any rate, he oddly brought up the Dunkin' Donut, you know, the one
with the handle. They don't make them any more. I was sure I saw
that someone else here mentioned that. He says he complained to the
new (?) owner company (whoever bought out the original) to no avail.
I was like BUT they are Dunkin Donuts! That was my favorite. Nothing
he can do, they won't bring it back.

What else ... he said a company from Canada is coming into the market,
(took me a while to understand, he is from India and I was across the
table from him), Tom something. Very good product. A few seconds I
thought, oh, I read about them on rfc, Tim Horton, like that? Yes.

Were they the ones bought out by Wendy's? I forget.

Krispy Kreme, he thinks they have not expanded rapidly enough. That
surprised me. He's the businessman, not me.

nancy (WHY DIDN'T YOU ASK ABOUT THE 11 HERBS AND SPICES?????)

Wayne Boatwright 22-01-2004 04:47 AM

Crullers (Dunkin' Donuts)
 
Nancy Young > wrote in
:

>
> Speaking of Dunkin' Donuts (was I?), I went to a small luncheon today
> and wound up by happenstance sitting across from someone who owns a
> number of Dunkin' Donut shops. DAMN I just thought of it, he said a
> few KFCs TOO! and I didn't ask about the herbs and spices. I cannot
> believe it. Well, if I remember, I'll probably be seeing them again
> over the spring, so I'll try to remember then. Grrrr.
>
> At any rate, he oddly brought up the Dunkin' Donut, you know, the one
> with the handle. They don't make them any more. I was sure I saw
> that someone else here mentioned that. He says he complained to the
> new (?) owner company (whoever bought out the original) to no avail.
> I was like BUT they are Dunkin Donuts! That was my favorite. Nothing
> he can do, they won't bring it back.


The "dunkin'" Dunkin' Donut is still alive and well in Phoenix.

> What else ... he said a company from Canada is coming into the market,
> (took me a while to understand, he is from India and I was across the
> table from him), Tom something. Very good product. A few seconds I
> thought, oh, I read about them on rfc, Tim Horton, like that? Yes.
>
> Were they the ones bought out by Wendy's? I forget.
>
> Krispy Kreme, he thinks they have not expanded rapidly enough. That
> surprised me. He's the businessman, not me.
>
> nancy (WHY DIDN'T YOU ASK ABOUT THE 11 HERBS AND SPICES?????)
>




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