Coconut donut from General American Donut Co. This is my kryptonite.
Recently, when Rocket 88 Doughnuts opened, I was ready to try something new. For months, I'd been aware of their Kickstarter campaign that raised over $10,000, and there was a steady buzz about them coming to Fountain Square. I was excited and ready. I walked up with my husband one Saturday shortly after they opened. There was a short line--we were served in less than 10 minutes. The place has much more furniture than General American and magazines, and is somewhere I'd actually want to hang out for awhile. General American's furniture is more sparse, and in the summer, it's really hot inside. There's a big fan inside General American to try to cool things down, but it generates gale-force winds. I usually grab my donuts and go because it's not very comfy. And my house is close enough that I can walk or drive in a flash.
Donuts in rows at Rocket 88 Doughnuts.
Plenty of places to sit inside the cozy Rocket 88 Doughnuts.
We picked four donuts and an order of lemon ricotta fritters, and walked home to dig in.
The standout was the vanilla chai donut ($1.50). It was sweet and pleasant in both its scent and taste. This was the only donut I'd want to eat again. It's also the only donut we finished.
The lemon ricotta fritters (2 for $1.00) were okay, if you're expecting really moist. They seemed wet to me. I have an aversion to soggy food, so it was a miss. My husband was pretty ambivalent--he didn't really like, but he didn't dislike.
Lemon ricotta fritters from Rocket 88 Doughtnuts.
The Old Fashioned ($1.50) was pretty standard--slightly crumbly vanilla donut.
The Maple Pecan ($2.50) had that bourbon-scent to the icing that's enticing. But the donut itself was dense and not memorable.
The Orange Sprinkled ($1.50) was the biggest disappointment. I love orange anything, so I was really excited. It smelled nice and orangey, but the outside skin was tough. It was not a tender donut. And compared to General American, I felt like I had been cheated on sprinkles. General American coats their donut in sprinkles. This donut looked sprinkle-anemic by comparison.
Left: General American sprinkle donut (from http://bigcity.littleindiana.com/food-trucks-of-indianapolis-general-american-donut-co/); Right: Rocket 88 orange sprinkle donut.
My soy latte was very nice--the espresso was smoother than the espresso at General American.
Bottom line: I'll probably go back since I'm all for second chances and the coffee is good. It makes me happy to support local business, and most new places need to get the kinks out early on. General American is a prime example of this--I think they've worked out many of the issues I saw in the beginning. But I hope Rocket 88 makes the donut skin more tender, the inside lighter, and don't skimp on the fun part of the donuts--the frosting and toppings. The clear winner of this throwdown is General American Donut Co. While the donuts are about $1.00 more each at General American, the flavors are more creative and they never skimp on the quality ingredients that make their donuts special.
Our sad box of butchered donuts from Rocket 88. The only memorable one was the vanilla chai.
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