Sweet Potato Rice Donuts
Rice donuts made with sweet potatoes and glutenous sweet rice flour. These Korean style sweet potato rice donuts are easy to make with just a few ingredients and yields soft and chewy texture. You can make them gluten-free donuts if you omit the wheat flour in the recipe.
I recently decided to venture into making Korean-style sweet potato rice donuts, which I don’t do very often. Let me tell you, these little rice donut treats turned out to be pure chewy, doughy bliss.
All it took was a mixture of sweet potatoes and rice flour, some frying action until they turned a beautiful golden hue, and a generous dusting of cinnamon sugar.
As I savored each bite, I couldn’t help but pair them with a cup of warm Korean barley tea for the perfect afternoon indulgence. Along with Korean twisted donut (kkwabaegi), these rice donut is another popular Korean desserts.
And guess what? When my son came home from school and took his first bite, his enthusiastic thumbs-up gesture said it all – these donuts were a hit!
Notes on Key Ingredients
- Korean Sweet Potatoes: These purple skinned sweet potatoes infuse the donuts with their natural sweetness and adding a touch of earthy flavor. Not only do they provide a vibrant orange hue, but they also contribute essential nutrients, making these donuts a guilt-free indulgence.
- Rice flour: This is the key to the donut’s signature chewy bite. Unlike wheat flour, rice flour creates a tender, mochi-like texture that makes Korean sweet potato donuts unique.
- Optional all-purpose flour: Adding a small amount of wheat flour lightens the dough, giving the donuts a softer, fluffier bite alongside the chewiness from rice flour. If you prefer a gluten-free version, simply leave it out — the donuts will turn out chewier, with a mochi-like texture that’s equally delicious.
- Milk: Feel free to use regular cow’s milk or explore alternatives like almond milk, soy milk, or oat milk to suit your dietary needs. While the taste may be subtly influenced, rest assured that these variations will still result in delicious rice donuts.
How to make Sweet Potato Rice Donuts
Cook sweet potatoes
Cook the sweet potatoes using any method you prefer: boiling, steaming, microwaving, or baking in the oven.
Peel the potatoes and mash them without mercy.
Prepare Rice donut dough
In a large bowl combine rice flour, 1/3 cup of wheat four, sugar, baking powder and salt. Omit wheat flour if making gluten-free rice donuts.
Add the mashed sweet potatoes to the rice flour, and start rubbing them together with your hand.
You will soon see them forming fine crumbs.
Add the scalding hot milk, about 3/4 cup first. The amount of milk varies depends on the moisture level of your sweet potatoes.
Mix with a spoon. Add more milk, if needed, and start kneading by hand.
Knead the dough until it forms a bread dough-like consistency, about 1 minutes. Rice doesn’t have any gluten so you don’t need to knead them long.
Roll them into 1 to 1 -1/4 inch size balls.
Deep-fry the rice donuts
Heat oil but not overly hot. You want to fry these balls a little lower temperature than usual deep frying recipes. If the oil is too hot, it will burn the outside while the inside is still raw.
You need to roll them around in oil with a metal utensil so they can be browned evenly.
Pro Tip: When deep frying, you can tilt your stir-fry pan to one side, creating a deeper oil space. This nifty trick allows you to use less oil while still ensuring adequate pan coverage. It’s a simple technique that helps save oil without compromising on the frying process.
Keep rolling in oil, about 5 minutes, until they form a brown crust outside.
Done! Your rice donuts are fried to perfection. Lift them out carefully and place them on a paper towel–lined plate to drain any excess oil.
Here’s a neat fact: rice flour absorbs noticeably less oil than wheat flour when deep-fried. That’s why rice donuts feel lighter and less greasy while still crisp on the outside. It’s one of the reasons I love making them — you get all the indulgence without the heaviness.
Cinnamon sugar coating
When the donuts are still hot, roll them in a generous amount of cinnamon sugar, ensuring they are evenly coated all over.
Serving Suggestions
While they can be enjoyed immediately, I personally prefer to let them cool to room temperature. As they cool, the chewiness of the donuts develops even more, creating a delightful texture that is simply irresistible.

Sweet Potato Rice Donuts
Ingredients
- 3/4 lb (340 g) sweet potato, cooked and peeled
- 2 cup (250 g) sweet rice flour (chapssal-garu), glutenous rice flour
- 1/3 cup (40 g) all-purpose flour, can omit for gluten-free
- 1/3 cup (65 g) sugar
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1-1 1/3 cup (240-320 ml) hot milk, almond milk, soy milk, or oat milk
- oil , for deep-frying
For the cinnamon sugar
- 1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar
- 1 tsp cinnamon
Equipment
Instructions
- Combine flours, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Mash sweet potato and add to the flour mixture and rub together until the flours become fine crumbs.
- Slowly add hot milk (1/4 cup of milk each time) to the mixture and mix together with a spoon first, then using hand bring the dough together to form a ball shape. The amount of milk depends on the moisture level of your potatoes. It should resemble the bread dough consistency.
- Make them into 1-inch balls with the dough. Set aside and cover with a towel.
- Heat oil in a wok or fryer over medium low temperature. Drop a few dough balls and start rolling with a metal utensil to brown them evenly, about 5 minutes. Make sure your oil is not too hot. About 145ºC is ideal temperature.
- Transfer the donuts to a plate lined with paper towel to remove extra oil on the surface. Roll the donuts in cinnamon sugar and coat evenly. Serve warm or at room temperature.





















What a lovely posting. Your reminiscing about Phyllis made me think of both of my Grandmothers … one a feisty Scots-woman, the other a warm, loving Irish-woman – both a big part of my heart and life growing up.
I look forward to trying these donuts (I’m GF) … and am looking for a recipe on Korean GF rice buns. I don’t suppose you have heard of them? I buy them often at T&T – the large Asian market in our city. They are unbelievably delic with butter!
hi holly, i just want to ask how to make homemade glutinous rice flour and its procedures.i really want to try this recipe of yours but there is no glutinous rice flour in our market.pls help..
Well, in order to turn rice into flour, you will need a grain mill to grind rice into fine powder-like rice flour. I never made myself so I don’t know how to to help you. I would suggest to search online Asian grocery stores to find it. Glutenous rice flour is very common grocery item for Asian food, so I bet you will find it easily. Sorry that I couldn’t help you much with this 🙁
ok..just one question, was your glutinous rice flour wet or dry? for this recipe. and how do you store your rice flour? i wanted to make my own since there’s no asian grocery stores here in our area.
It is dry long grain glutenous rice flour. You can use mochiko flour which is from short grain rice but will need more liquid to moisten. I just store my flour in an air tight container inside the cupboard. You can store in the fridge if you live in hot and humid area.
Hello, Holly!
You have an awesome website, and thank you for sharing these recipes with us!
I’m anxious to try this one as it is, but I also am not very fond of sweet potatoes, and my grandmother reminded me that I have some canned pumpkin, so would this be an okay substitute? Would I need to warm up the potato? I look forward to the recipe either way, and thanks for everything!
Take care~.
Hi Martina
Yes, you can use canned pumpkin instead. Adjust the amount of milk as you mix together to get the right consistency of the dough. You will provably need less milk since pumpkin is looser than sweet potato. The dough should not be so sticky. However Rice flour dough is very forgiving to work with and it is very easy and quick to form balls.
There is no need to warm up the potatoes as long as you can mash them down.
I would love to hear how they turn out. Thanks!
Ahhh, I’m so glad you threw the note in about being able to leave out the wheat flour for gluten free donuts! I must try making these! I love sweet potatoes, and I haven’t eaten anything vaguely donut like for the past five years because I need to eat gluten free. If it goes well, I know what I’ll be making next year for the fried donut things at Hanukkah! Thank you for the recipe and the lovely story about your grandmother in law, she sounds like she was lovely. 🙂
I am making this recipe tomorrow morning, Dec 14. The recipe, as it’s written, calls for 3/4 pound of sweet potatoes however, 3/4 pound sounds like sweet potato in its raw, uncooked state.
The recipe is unclear.
Is sounds like 3/4 pound of sweet potato, uncooked. How much of the “cooked”, mashed sweet potato do you need for this particular recipe? 2 cups, 3 cups????
Hi Cheryl
The 3/4 lb of sweet potato in this recipe is starting with raw sweet potato, then cooked and mashed. It will be about 1 1/2 cup or so (more or less) when mashed. The amount doesn’t have to be exact. When you pour the milk to mix the dough, pour little by little to pull the dough together to make bread dough consistency. Depends on the moisture level of sweet potato you use, the amount of milk will differ. Hope this helps.
hello, I’m Indonesian. i found your blog accidently when i look for korean cuisines’s recipe. i really like your blog. thanks to you i learn so much. thank you. 😀
oh yea, i made this sweet potato donuts. and i make my own creation with fill the donuts with red beans paste, and it delicious! i gave some of donuts to my housemate and an aunty in front of my dormitory, and she said it’s delicious. i really happy to hear that.
well, actually i have a photo of it, but i don’t know how to upload it for you.
How wonderful Riska! These donuts with red bean filling is wonderful combination. I am sure it made you feel very happy when everyone enjoyed what you created. That is a pure joy!
So I adore your blog. I am always looking for new cuisines to develop my cooking skills in, and as I’ve started working on my Korean dishes, your blog has been a treasure. I don’t often have time to read blogs, but when I do I be sure to catch on every delicious post and beautiful story you share. I want to thank you for writing!
These look positively scrumptious. I have one quick question – do you know if this recipe would work if soymilk were substituted for real milk?
Hi Shelle, You can use soy milk instead of cow’s milk. Thank for your comments. I do appreciate all my readers for their encouraging words for what I am doing. Hope you get to find many more Korean recipes for you to try.
Thank you! That means it can be made vegan – which is lovely; I have a vegan friend who’d love to make these with me!
There’s a 焼き芋 (baked sweet potato) stand near my work, and I’ve been tempted to just buy baked sweet potato there and take ’em home to mash up into something (because I cannot eat a whole bag in one sitting)- I may turn them into your donuts!
hello !!! i live in Africa i don’t know if this reason explains the following THERE IS NO RICE FLOUR HERE ahhh i feel bad for my stomach because it seems all the yummy foods are made of rice flour ! i would like to know if there are some desserts that could possibly be made of plain flour THANK YOU ^^
Hello cristinaronalda! Rice flour will bring different texture to the desserts. There are plenty of desserts made with plain flour. Just look under my recipes on the Navi bar and you will find “Baking” tab. There should be some recipes you are looking for.
Ha! Another person that mixes with gloves on. I’m not alone! :p
Just made these this weekend. They were so easy and delicious-not too sweet. I love that they take on the color of the potato. I made lots of people happy on Sunday. Thanks for the recipe.
Just came across your website via foodgawker and I love it.
New favourite recipe site? I think so!
These donuts are so cute, and if they really are chewy, they’d be just the snack for me.
Can I please make one suggestion, though, Holly? Would you be able to put the korean name of your dishes, in addition to the english names, on the original post, rather than in the comments? I like knowing the proper native names of dishes, more than their anglicized counterparts. Not sure if anyone else feels the same.
I always try to put the Korean name of the dish in the post but I guess I miss out sometimes. Thanks for the reminder. It is important to know the original name of the dish. I will keep in mind.
once the cake is delicious
I love all things sweet potato, i use it in my soups, roast, dessert, and now i must try making this. Perfect for a snack. You are right, it would go down so well with a warm cup of citroen tea. This reminds me of those banana puffs being sold at the malay staffs, but heaps better!
i just love your site so much. everything i’ve made from here has been exceptional and your photos and words are inspiring. this is such a touching post, and even though i’m not wild about donuts i just might have to make these to eat with some tea on a thoughtful afternoon.
Thank you Nico for your kind words. Readers like you make my day happy.
Oh I love this! Beautiful recipe! I hope to make this for my mother and father, I simply love recipes like this!
Lovely recipe — and lovely doily! I think you’ve done Phyllis proud. I’m still a little scared of deep frying, but I appreciate your tip about tilting the pan to create a deeper well of oil.
Oh my goodness! These look perfect! how lovely! thank you for this recipe!
These look amazing!! I can’t wait to make them!
These are super cute looking donuts. Can’t believe they are made out of sweet potatoes. I’d love to make them if it’s not very labor-intensive.
They are not that labor intensive recipe. You can easily make them with only a few ingredients. Hope you get to give them a try. Thanks.
Phyllis sounds like a wonderful woman. And those donuts – amazing! I love Korean sweet potato!
I got to make this one day. I simply just loves sweet potato and I know it is super delicious!
i LOVE goguma. o man…we are home in california in 2 weeks and i am going to eat korean food for one month straight. I NEED kimchi like NOW!! and these delicious little treats too…and you know what one of my favorite treats is?!?!? Soon-deh. my mom laughs that this is something i love….
Oh, Leah, Out of all the Korean food that I eat, I am so sorry to say this but, Soondeh is NOT my love. I just never liked it. Many Koreans love it though. I do get picky for what I eat sometimes…
yes i think there are koreans who love it and those who hate it…not in-between!!
Such a nice tribute to your grandmother! Very well written. Old stuff can be good. My parents are elderly and are beginning to downsize, so I just inherited some gorgeous crystal glasses that were once my great-grandmother’s – so nice to have them. It’d also be nice to drink something from it as I ate these donuts! Really excellent recipe, and I agree they look gorgeous on the blue plate with the doily. Thumbs up!
Hi Holly! Thanks for another awesome recipe. You are my most trusted source of Korean cooking knowledge! 🙂 Can I ask if there’s a Korean name for these donuts? (My husband always asks!) Oh, and can I suggest a non-Korean dish that I’d love you to make for the blog? Ma Po Tofu. I’ve tried making it twice now and it’s not quite right. Do you know how to make it? 🙂
Hi Tiffany
The Korean name for these donuts are called “goguma chapssal donuts (고구마 찹쌀 도너츠)”. I love Ma Po tofu and make it at home sometimes. It is on the list of recipe I need to make soon. Thanks.