19
7d ago
[deleted]
11
u/Big_Z_Beeblebrox 7d ago
When the balls of dough get fried the steam creates a pocket, at least with the Krispy Kreme process. It looks like this little guy got overlooked at the filling station
11
11
u/Confident_Election20 7d ago
I knew it, you just ate the crème so you could make them look bad. Shame on you/j
3
u/ZirePhiinix 6d ago
You can absolutely go back and complain about it, and they'll probably give you a bunch free.
3
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
u/Toxic_Masked_knight_ 6d ago
this isn't a doughnut. where's the hole in the middle? thats just a Berliner but with cream instead of jam.
0
0
u/Imperialjade22 6d ago
This is a crime punishable by death!
1
0
0
0
-1
u/Cold_Ad3896 6d ago
C’mon Krispy Kreme, it’s called a Boston Cream Doughnut. At least get the name right.
1
u/NathnDele 5d ago
I’m pretty sure that’s just a Dunkin thing.
1
u/Cold_Ad3896 5d ago
It’s definitely not. It’s one of the classic doughnut types. Every donut shop has Boston Creams.
-7
62
u/Fujoxas 6d ago
So when the dough fries, pockets of air are produced that makes the donut airy and soft. When filling a pastry like that, no hole or chamber or whatever is scooped out to be filled. A piping tip is inserted and the cream goes in. This pushes at the air pockets and the bread gets compacted to make room for the filling. The donut itself is not cut open or anything to make the space OP is showing. That's why there's just the little hole on the side where the piping tip had been inserted. Otherwise they'd have to seal a broken donut seamlessly which isn't really possible.
TL;DR: OP scooped out the cream to claim they got "no cream" in their donut. If they'd forgotten the cream, there would be no empty pocket where the cream should be, there'd just be a normal whole donut.