Greggs Yum Yum Recipe UK

Greggs Yum Yum Recipe UK 2026

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Greggs Yum Yum Recipe UK – Homemade Twisted Iced Pastry (Step-by-Step)
🇬🇧 UK Recipe — Updated 2026

Greggs Yum Yum Recipe UK

Literally, I’ve been obsessed with Greggs Yum Yums since I was a teenager. That twisted, golden, sugar-glazed pastry is pure joy. So I spent weeks cracking the recipe at home — and I’m pretty sure I’ve nailed it. Let me walk you through it, step by step.

🕐 2.5 hrs total 👨‍🍳 Makes 8–10 🌡️ Fry at 170–180°C 🛒 7 UK ingredients ✅ Beginner-friendly
Right, let me be honest with you. I’ve tried a LOT of yum yum recipes. Some came out greasy. Some were bread-y and dense. Some just didn’t have that light, pillowy Greggs magic. But this recipe? This one finally cracked it. It uses simple UK ingredients you can grab from any supermarket, and if you follow the steps carefully — especially the oil temperature — you’ll get yum yums that taste absolutely spot-on.
The Classic British Pastry

What Exactly Is a Greggs Yum Yum?

If you’ve somehow never had one — first of all, I’m sorry for your loss. A Greggs Yum Yum is a twisted, deep-fried pastry (essentially a cousin of the doughnut) made from enriched yeasted dough, shaped into a spiral or twist, fried until golden, and immediately coated in a sweet water icing glaze. It’s soft inside, ever so slightly crispy on the outside, and gloriously sticky. It’s been a Greggs staple for decades and is consistently one of their best-selling sweet treats.

🧁
8–10
Yum Yums per batch
⏱️
30m
Prep time
🌡️
175°C
Ideal fry temp
2 min
Each side in oil
🔥
323
Kcal per yum yum
💰
£1.20
Greggs shop price
The Full Recipe

Greggs-Style Yum Yums — Step-by-Step UK Recipe

Soft, twisted, deep-fried pastry with sweet icing glaze. Just like the real thing.

🕐 Prep: 30 min 💤 Rest: 75 min (two proves) 🍳 Cook: 20 min 🍽️ Makes: 8–10 📊 Skill: Easy–Medium
What You’ll Need

Ingredients (All Available from UK Supermarkets)

IngredientAmountNotes / UK BrandsCategory
Strong White Bread Flour500gAllinson, Hovis, or Waitrose own-brandDough
Fast Action Dried Yeast14g (2 sachets)Allinson Easy Bake Yeast, Doves FarmDough
Caster Sugar4 tbspAny supermarket brandDough
Fine Sea Salt1 tspMaldon, Saxa, or own brandDough
Unsalted Butter50g (cold, cubed)Lurpak or Anchor work greatDough
Lukewarm Water~280mlShould feel warm on your wrist, not hotDough
Medium Free-Range Egg1Lightly beatenDough
Vegetable or Sunflower Oil~1–1.5 litresFor deep frying. Crisp or Flora will doFrying
Icing Sugar200gSilver Spoon or Tate & LyleGlaze
Cold Water3–4 tbspFor the icing glaze — add slowlyGlaze

📍 All ingredients above are widely available at Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, Aldi, and Lidl across the UK.

Check out the Greggs Sausage Roll Recipe

Before You Start

Equipment You’ll Need

No fancy kit required here — most of this will already be in your kitchen:

EquipmentWhy You Need ItEssential?
Large mixing bowlFor making and proving the dough✅ Yes
Rolling pinRolling out the dough evenly✅ Yes
Deep, heavy-bottomed saucepanSafe deep frying✅ Yes
Digital cooking thermometerCritical for correct oil temperature✅ Very important
Wire cooling rackDraining oil and applying glaze✅ Yes
Kitchen paper / paper towelsBlotting excess oil after frying✅ Yes
Pastry brushApplying icing glaze generously✅ Yes
Cling filmCovering dough during proving✅ Yes
Lined baking trayResting twisted yum yums before frying✅ Yes
Deep fat fryer (optional)Makes temperature control much easier⭐ Helpful

Check out the Greggs Steak Bake Recipe

The Method

Step-by-Step Instructions

🥄

Mix Dry Ingredients

In your large mixing bowl, combine the strong white bread flour, fast action yeast, caster sugar, and fine sea salt. Give everything a good stir until evenly mixed.

⏱ 2 minutes
🧈

Rub in the Butter

Add the cold cubed butter and gently rub it into the flour mixture with your fingertips. You’re not aiming for breadcrumbs — you want small, chunky pieces of butter still visible. This is what gives the dough its flaky, layered texture.

⏱ 3–4 minutes
🥚

Add Wet Ingredients

Pour the lukewarm water and beaten egg into the bowl. Mix until a rough dough forms, then bring it together with your hands. The dough should be soft but not sticky. Add a splash more water if it feels dry.

⏱ 3 minutes
💤

First Prove — Rest the Dough

Cover the bowl tightly with cling film and leave in a warm spot for 30 minutes. I usually pop mine near the boiler cupboard or on top of the oven (which is switched off). The dough should puff up noticeably.

⏱ 30 minutes rest
📐

Fold and Laminate the Dough

Lightly flour your work surface. Roll the dough out into a long rectangle — roughly 40cm × 20cm. Fold the two short ends into the middle (like folding a letter), then fold in half again. This creates lovely layers. Rotate 90° and repeat the fold once more.

⏱ 5 minutes
✂️

Shape Into Yum Yums

Roll the dough out again to about 1.5cm thick. Cut into strips approximately 12cm × 4cm. Then take each strip, hold it at both ends, and give it 2–3 gentle twists to form that iconic spiral shape. Don’t over-twist or the dough will tear.

⏱ 8 minutes
🛏️

Second Prove — Let Them Puff Up

Place the twisted strips on a lined baking tray, cover loosely with oiled cling film and leave in a warm spot for 45 minutes, or until they’ve nearly doubled in size and look beautifully puffy. Don’t rush this step — it’s the key to that pillowy Greggs texture.

⏱ 45 minutes rest
🍯

Make the Icing Glaze

While you’re waiting, mix the icing sugar with cold water a tablespoon at a time until you get a glossy, pourable (not runny) glaze. It should coat the back of a spoon. Set aside — you’ll want it ready the moment the yum yums come out of the oil.

⏱ 3 minutes
🔥

Heat the Oil — This Bit Is Critical

Pour vegetable oil into your heavy saucepan to a depth of at least 7–8cm. Heat to 170–180°C. Use your cooking thermometer. Do not skip this step. Too cold = greasy, soggy yum yums. Too hot = burnt outside, raw inside.

⏱ 8–10 minutes heating
🍳

Fry in Batches

Carefully lower 2–3 yum yums into the hot oil using a slotted spoon. Fry on a medium heat for 2 minutes on each side, or until they’re a gorgeous deep golden-brown all over. Keep an eye on the oil temperature between batches.

⏱ 4 minutes per batch

Drain, Blot and Glaze Immediately

Lift each yum yum out and place on kitchen paper. Blot briefly to remove excess oil. Then immediately transfer to the wire rack and brush generously with your icing glaze on all sides — top, bottom, and edges. The heat from the yum yum helps the glaze set perfectly. Let it cool for 5 minutes before eating. Try to wait. I dare you.

⏱ 5 minutes per batch

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Visual Step Guide

Key Steps at a Glance

1Mix

Combine Dry Ingredients + Rub in Butter

Flour, yeast, sugar, salt — mix together. Then rub in cold butter until you still have chunky pieces visible. This is the layering secret — don’t go too fine.

Keep butter cold. Room temperature butter makes the dough too soft to work with.
2Prove

First + Second Prove (30 min + 45 min)

The two proving stages are non-negotiable. The first rest after mixing, and the second after shaping. Both creates that airy, fluffy texture that makes Greggs yum yums so irresistible.

Put your dough somewhere genuinely warm — around 25–28°C is ideal. Near a radiator works perfectly.
3Fry

Oil Temperature: 170–180°C — Don’t Guess!

This is the make-or-break step. Under-temperature = greasy and stodgy. Over-temperature = dark outside but raw dough inside. Get yourself a cooking thermometer and check between every batch.

Oil temp will drop when you add cold dough. Let it return to temp before each new batch.
4Glaze

Glaze While Hot — This Is the Greggs Magic

The icing has to go on hot. Straight out of the oil, blot briefly, then brush the glaze all over immediately. The heat melts the icing into the surface and creates that beautiful glossy coat.

Turn the yum yum upside down too — glaze the bottom! Greggs does every side.

Check out the Vegan Sausage Roll Recipe

The Critical Variable

Oil Temperature Guide — Get This Right

The single biggest reason homemade yum yums fail is incorrect oil temperature. Here’s exactly what happens at each temperature range:

🌡️ Oil Temperature & What Happens to Your Yum Yum
Below 160°C ❌ Too Cold

Yum yum absorbs huge amounts of oil. Ends up greasy, heavy, and stodgy. Nothing like Greggs.

170–180°C ✅ Perfect Zone

Golden-brown exterior. Light, fluffy interior. Minimal oil absorption. This is the Greggs sweet spot.

185–195°C ⚠️ Getting Hot

Colours too fast. Risk of dark patches while still raw inside. Lower the heat immediately.

200°C+ 🔥 Way Too Hot

Burns on contact. Dark and bitter outside, completely raw dough inside. Dangerous — don’t fry at this temp.

Check out the Bake-Off Ovens used in Greggs’ Kitchen

Know Your Numbers

Nutritional Information — Homemade vs Greggs

🔥
323
kcal
Calories
🌾
39g
per serving
Carbohydrates
💪
4g
per serving
Protein
🫒
5g
per serving
Total Fat
🍬
15g
per serving
Sugar
🧂
0.4g
per serving
Salt
🍩 How the Greggs Yum Yum Compares to Other Sweet Treats (Calories)
Greggs Yum Yum
323 kcal
Belgian Bun
388 kcal
Jam Doughnut
342 kcal
Vanilla Custard Doughnut
435 kcal
Iced Ring Doughnut
299 kcal
Triple Choc Muffin
465 kcal

📊 Approximate values based on Greggs nutritional guide 2026. Values may vary by batch or region.

Check out the Coffee Machines used at Greggs

Mix It Up

4 Yum Yum Variations to Try at Home

Once you’ve nailed the classic recipe, these twists (pun fully intended) are dead simple to try:

🍬

Classic Iced

The original. Simple icing sugar + water glaze. Glossy, sweet, sticky. The one and only true Greggs Yum Yum experience.

🌿

Cinnamon Sugar Twist

Skip the icing. Instead, toss the hot yum yums in a mixture of caster sugar + 1 tsp ground cinnamon. Crispy, warm, autumnal — absolutely gorgeous.

🍋

Lemon Drizzle Glaze

Add the zest of one lemon and 2 tbsp lemon juice to your icing sugar instead of water. Sharp, zingy, and incredibly refreshing against the rich fried dough.

🍫

Chocolate Glaze

Melt 100g dark chocolate with a tablespoon of butter. Dip the hot yum yums and let the chocolate set on the rack. Rich, indulgent, and absolutely stunning.

Check out the Commercial Refrigeration used at Greggs

When Things Go Wrong

Troubleshooting — Common Yum Yum Problems Fixed

❌ The Problem

Yum yums came out really greasy and heavy

✅ The Fix

Oil was too cold. Always get it to 170°C before adding dough. Check between every batch — the temperature drops when you add cold dough.

❌ The Problem

Dark on the outside but still doughy inside

✅ The Fix

Oil was too hot. Turn down the heat. At the right temperature (170–180°C), 2 minutes per side should cook them all the way through.

❌ The Problem

Dough is too dense and bread-like, not fluffy

✅ The Fix

The dough didn’t prove long enough. Make sure you do both proves in a genuinely warm spot, and don’t rush. The second prove especially needs a full 45 minutes.

❌ The Problem

Icing is sliding off and won’t stick properly

✅ The Fix

You let them cool too long before glazing. The icing must go on while they’re still hot — straight from the oil. The heat is what makes it set correctly.

❌ The Problem

The twists unravel when placed in oil

✅ The Fix

Let the twisted strips prove fully (the second prove). Once properly puffed, the structure holds in the oil. If they unravel, the second prove was cut short.

❌ The Problem

Icing glaze is too thin and watery

✅ The Fix

Add less water. Mix in one tablespoon at a time until the glaze coats the back of a spoon. It should be thick and glossy, not runny like milk.

Check out the Heated Display Cabinets used at Greggs

Making Ahead

Storage & Best-Before Tips

Storage MethodHow LongBest Practice
Room Temperature (covered)Best within 24 hoursStore in an airtight container or cake tin. Yum yums are best eaten fresh on the day of making.
RefrigeratorUp to 3 daysWrap in cling film. Allow to return to room temperature before eating — they firm up in the fridge.
Freezer (unglazed)Up to 1 monthFreeze after frying but before glazing. Reheat in oven at 160°C for 8 minutes, then glaze hot.
Dough (before proving)Overnight in fridgeCover tightly with cling film. The cold proves the dough slowly overnight. Shape and fry the next morning.
Your Questions Answered

FAQs — Greggs Yum Yum Recipe UK

What is a Greggs Yum Yum exactly?

A Greggs Yum Yum is a twisted, deep-fried pastry made from enriched yeasted dough — essentially a cousin of the classic doughnut, but shaped into a spiral and coated in a sweet water-icing glaze. It’s light, pillowy, slightly chewy, and beautifully sticky. It’s been a Greggs bestseller for decades and is one of the most iconic British bakery treats.

What ingredients do I need to make Greggs Yum Yums at home in the UK?

You only need 7 core ingredients, all available from any UK supermarket: strong white bread flour, fast action dried yeast, caster sugar, fine sea salt, unsalted butter, one medium egg, and lukewarm water. For the glaze, you need icing sugar and a little cold water. For frying, use a neutral oil like vegetable or sunflower.

What is the correct oil temperature for frying Yum Yums?

The ideal oil temperature is 170–180°C. This is the most important variable in the whole recipe. Too cold and the yum yums absorb too much oil and become greasy and stodgy. Too hot and they’ll go dark on the outside while remaining raw inside. I strongly recommend using a digital cooking thermometer and checking the temperature before every batch.

How long do I fry Yum Yums for?

Fry each yum yum for 2 minutes on each side at 170–180°C on a medium heat. That’s 4 minutes total per piece. They should be a deep golden-brown all over when done. Fry 2–3 at a time maximum to avoid the oil temperature dropping too sharply.

Why do my homemade Yum Yums come out greasy?

The most common reason is that the oil wasn’t hot enough. If the temperature drops below 160°C, the dough absorbs a lot of oil instead of forming a quick outer crust. Always pre-heat the oil to 175°C and let it return to temperature between batches. Blotting with kitchen paper immediately after frying also helps remove surface oil.

Can I bake Yum Yums instead of frying them?

Technically yes, but honestly — they won’t taste like Greggs. Baking produces a bread roll-like texture rather than the light, golden, slightly crispy exterior you get from frying. If you want that authentic Greggs Yum Yum experience, deep frying is the only way. The good news is that at the right oil temperature, they actually absorb very little oil.

How many calories are in a Greggs Yum Yum?

The official Greggs Yum Yum contains approximately 323 calories, priced at around £1.20 in UK stores. Homemade versions will vary depending on how long you fry them and how much oil is absorbed, but should be in a similar ballpark — around 300–350 kcal each.

Why is the second prove so important in the Yum Yum recipe?

The second prove — after shaping the twists — is where the dough develops its final airy, pillowy structure. If you skip it or rush it, the yum yums will be dense and bread-like rather than light and fluffy. They need to nearly double in size and look beautifully puffy before they go anywhere near the oil. In a warm kitchen, this takes about 45 minutes.

Can I make the dough the night before?

Yes! You can make the dough after the first mix and leave it tightly covered in the fridge overnight. The cold slows the prove right down. The next morning, take it out, let it come to room temperature for 20 minutes, then proceed with the folding, shaping, and second prove as normal. This is actually a great way to have fresh yum yums ready for a weekend morning.

Does Greggs make their Yum Yums fresh every day?

Yes — Greggs bakes (and fries) fresh products daily in-store. Their yum yums are made fresh each morning, which is why they’re best bought early in the day when stock is at its freshest. The in-store yum yum uses a similar enriched dough technique to this recipe, though of course they have commercial equipment and exact proprietary ratios that we can only approximate at home.

Check out Greggs v/s McDonalds

Recipe sources & references: Homemade Yum Yum recipe method adapted from UK home baking community recipes. Nutritional values (323 kcal, macros) based on publicly reported Greggs nutritional data for the Yum Yum (2026). Greggs price (£1.20) from Greggs UK menu pricing 2026. This is an independent editorial article and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Greggs plc. Allergens: this recipe contains wheat, eggs, and dairy. Always check individual ingredient labels for allergen information.

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