Susan Jung's Hanukkah recipes for latkes and fried doughnuts


When I was growing up in multicultural California, my grammar school teachers taught us how various religious holidays were celebrated. For the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, we learned about dreidels and the lighting of the menorah, as well as songs that really annoy my Jewish husband when I sing them ('I had a little dreidel, I made it out of clay ...'). Hanukkah, or the Festival of Lights, celebrates the 'miracle of the oil', in which a day's worth of holy oil burned for eight days, allowing enough time to purify more. It is traditional to eat fried foods during Hanukkah.
Sufganiyot (fried jam doughnuts)
This recipe is based on one I found on the eGullet website, by a poster named Pam R. Although the proportions were wrong (I had to almost double the amount of flour), I liked the technique of making the dough in the food processor.
I use home-made jam to fill the doughnuts, rather than jelly (which is clear and pulpless), but it needs to be pureed, or the fruit will clog the piping tube.
It is important to fry the doughnuts at the correct temperature; if the oil is too hot, they will burn on the outside before the interior is fully cooked, but if it is too cool, the doughnuts will be greasy.
450 grams plain (all-purpose) flour, plus more for rolling the dough