Recipes & Lore • Shore Dinner Canon

Doughboys, the Shore Way

A doughboy is fried dough, and fried dough exists everywhere — but Rhode Island's version has rules. It's palm-sized, thin, chewy-edged, and buried in sugar — not the plate-sized state-fair slab drowned in toppings, and not a filled Italian zeppola either. It's eaten by the paper-bagful, hot enough to make you juggle it, usually within a few feet of the fryer that made it and a case of clam cakes. A shore dinner without a doughboy at the end is a shore dinner that ended early.

A Rhode Island doughboy under a heavy dusting of powdered sugar.
Photo: Roger Williams University

You need

Method

  1. Let the dough sit at room temperature about 30 minutes so it stretches without fighting back.
  2. Heat 2–3 inches of oil to 350°F in a heavy pot.
  3. Cut the dough into 12 pieces. With oiled hands, stretch each into a thin, ragged, palm-sized round — thin in the middle, slightly thicker at the rim. Ragged is correct; a perfect circle looks store-bought.
  4. Fry in batches, 1–2 minutes per side, until puffed, golden, and blistered. Flip once. Pale doughboys are doughy doughboys.
  5. Drain for a moment, then dust heavily with powdered sugar while hot — or toss in granulated, if that's your counter order. Serve immediately, in a paper bag if you're doing it right.
The lore: Doughboys belong to the same vanished world as the clam cake — the shore dinner halls and beach midways of Narragansett Bay, where they were the sweet finish to a day of chowder and fritters. Their modern capital is Oakland Beach in Warwick, where Iggy's Doughboys & Chowder House has anchored the seawall since 1989 — founded by Gaetano and Sally Gravino after Gaetano, a hairstylist by trade, took part-time work at a doughboy shack and ended up leasing the business. The name comes from Gaetano's license plate, "IG-6," which earned him the nickname "Iggy" from his son. On a summer night the line stretches down the seawall, everyone leaves with a grease-spotted bag, and everyone's shirt ends up dusted with sugar. That's the dish.

Sources & further reading

Send the taste of the seawall

A doughboy has a shelf life of about four minutes, so we can't box one — but the Rhode Island flavors that survive the mail are packed in the Rhode Island Survival Kit, field guide included.

Shop the Boxes