Put the warm water into a large bowl, then sprinkle in the yeast and a couple teaspoons of the sugar and stir until thoroughly dissolved.
Let proof for 10 minutes.
Add the rest of the sugar, salt, eggs, and evaporated milk.
Gradually stir in 4 cups of the flour and beat with a wooden spoon until smooth and thoroughly blended. I used my Kitchen Aid
Beat in the shortening, then add the remaining flour, about 1/3 cup at a time, beating it in with a spoon until it becomes too stiff to stir, then working in the rest with your hands.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight in a greased bowl. (I didn't refrigerate)
Roll the dough out onto a floured board or marble pastry surface to a thickness of 1/8 inch, then cut it into rectangles 2 1/2 inches by 3 1/2 inches with a sharp knife.
Heat the oil in a deep fryer to 360 degrees F.
Fry the beignets about 3 or 4 at a time until they are puffed out and golden brown on both sides, about 2-3 minutes per batch.
Turn them over in the oil with tongs once or twice to get them evenly brown, since they rise to the surface of the oil as soon as they begin to puff out.
After removing from oil put into a brown paper bag full of powdered sugar and shake to coat.
Eat warm and fresh.
Dough can be refrigerated for several days.
Video
Notes
Recipe from the NYT.
When possible, refrigerate overnight – prep the dough the night before, then roll and fry in the morning for a no-stress breakfast. I have also cooked the dough up right after making and it worked fine. Dough will last for a few days in fridge.
Freezer trick – cut dough squares, freeze on a baking sheet, then transfer to a bag. Fry from frozen, just adding an extra minute of cooking time.
Don't skimp on the powdered sugar– the classic look is a generous snowfall of powdered sugar. Dust them while they’re still warm so it sticks.
Serve immediately – beignets are best eaten hot, fresh out of the fryer. They lose their magic as they cool.