Gourdough’s Public House – Austin, Texas (CLOSED)
Donuts could have gone their entire existences fat, dumb and happy with a following–mostly cops, adult men my age (39) and households with annual incomes of less than $10,000–who expected nothing more out of them than we were already getting. Essentially just fried or fruit-filled delivery mechanisms for quadruple our recommended daily allowance of calories, sugar and guilt, donuts have always been predictable, unchanging…reliably there for us. Our expectations for these sweet, ring-shaped fried cakes weren’t exactly very high. Then something changed. Donuts became “gourmet,” experiencing a much-needed make-over. In recent years, several foods have experienced a similar artisinal reinvention, metamorphosing from tasty enough moths into glorious, flavor-packed butterflies. A more demanding public–especially those of us who self-gloss as foodies or gastronomes–didn’t want to leave well enough alone. We wanted to explore possibilities, to actualize the foods we love most. We did it with the most sacrosanct of plebeian foods such as hamburgers, hot dogs, sandwiches and donuts, transforming the prosaic into the inspired with new and different ingredients and preparation methods. No one is under the illusion that these so-called gourmet innovations have supplanted their staid predecessors or converted their loyal sycophants. There will always be consumer base completely…