Ingredients
Quince and apple filling
Method
Main
1.Stir yeast and warm milk in a bowl until yeast dissolves and stand until foamy (5-7 minutes).
2.Place sugar, eggs, butter, half the flour, vanilla, yeast mixture and 1 tsp fine sea salt in an electric mixer fitted with a dough hook and knead on low speed to combine, then add remaining flour and knead until a sticky dough forms (4-5 minutes; dough will be quite wet). Turn out onto a lightly floured surface, dust top with a little extra flour, form into a ball, transfer to a lightly buttered bowl, cover with plastic wrap and set aside in a warm place until doubled in size (1-1½ hours).
3.Meanwhile, for apple and quince filling, combine cider, sugar, cinnamon, lemon juice and rind and 250ml water in a saucepan, add quince, reduce heat to low and simmer until quince is tender (50-55 minutes). Strain and cool. Heat butter in a frying pan, add apple and brown sugar, and cook, stirring, until caramelised (12-15 minutes). Add quince, toss to combine and cool.
4.Roll out dough on a floured surface to 24cm x 40cm. Scatter with half the filling, fold in thirds to enclose, turn so shortest side faces you and roll again to about a 24cm x 40cm rectangle. Scatter with remaining filling, fold in thirds again and roll to a 24cm x 40cm rectangle. Cut into 4cm squares, gather corners and pinch to enclose (if a little filling comes out just press back into dough).
5.Heat oil to 170C in a large saucepan. Deep-fry fritters in batches (be careful, hot oil will spit), turning once, until golden and cooked through (3-4 minutes). Drain on paper towels and repeat with remaining fritters.
6.Combine icing sugar and lemon juice in a bowl, then dip fritters in icing, shake off excess, set aside until set (12-15 minutes), then serve.
Drink Suggestion: Medium-sweet French cider. Drink suggestion by Max Allen
Notes