Open & Shut: Family doughnut shop moves to Eagle River, and Anchorage gets a new shabu shabu-sushi spot plus a Korean corn dog franchise

Jul. 15—Open & Shut is an ongoing series looking at the comings and goings of businesses in Southcentral Alaska. If you know of a business opening or closing in the area, send a note to reporter Alex DeMarban at alex@adn.com with "Open & Shut" in the subject line.

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Jason's Donuts: A family of four — Jason Carlson, Andreea Koski and their now-adult children Ucinia and Kyrin Carlson — began this business selling doughnuts from their former Fairbanks home doorstep in 2016 after Carlson was laid off from his job as a contractor.

Six years later, they closed their beloved Fairbanks-area shop, and reopened the fully family-run doughnut business in late June in Eagle River.

Carlson's hand-cut, New York-style doughnuts are fluffy and big — much larger than many store-bought pastries. That's the aspect customers comment on the most, said his wife, Koski, adding that they're also hooked on the flavor and texture.

Some of their specialties include a chocolate cake doughnut; apple fritters with fresh Granny Smith apples; the Danish cheese, which is filled with cheesecake; giant maple-glazed cinnamon rolls topped with bacon; and blueberry-glazed doughnuts topped with pieces of Pop-Tarts, among other varieties.

Then there's the special-order-only Denali doughnut. At 3 1/2 pounds, it feeds up to 12 people and is customized with filling, glaze and toppings "however you want," Ucinia said.

Carlson first learned to make doughnuts working at a shop in Buffalo, New York, where he'd started in a janitorial position, Koski said. He'd always loved to cook and bake, and it snowballed from there, she said.

"He treats this like an art," Koski said. "There's a lot of love that goes into these doughnuts. A lot of love and passion."

Each afternoon at 4 p.m., Carlson begins making 100-plus pounds of dough for the next morning's batch. He puts a level of energy into the doughnuts that's challenging to match for other bakers they'd previously hired, Ucinia said.

"When Jason does it, nothing's really timed," Koski said. "Measure with your heart," Ucinia interjected.

"It's all based on, you know, visual, touching the dough. Is it firm enough to start rolling out? There's a lot of different factors," Koski said.

Carlson's son typically arrives later in the day, making glazes from scratch and hand-glazing the doughnuts. Then, at 4 a.m., they hand the shop over to Koski and daughter Ucinia, who open it for business at 5 a.m.