Questions & Answers

  • Toppings include classics like cinnamon sugar, powdered sugar and apple cider sugar. We also offer themed frostings, drizzles, and sprinkles in every shape, color and flavor, customized for the seasons, holidays or your special celebration. From glitter, gemstones, rainbow, corporate, team or school colors, and everything in between, Sweet Mini’s has you (and your donuts) covered!

  • Of course! Let your imagination run wild. We’ll do the rest!

  • Whether you’re a fan of sweet, fruity pops like Strawberry Mango and Cotton Candy, or dairy options including Creamsicle and Mexican Chocolate, there’s a favorite flavor for everyone. Just one bite will transport you to a warm Sarasota beach, even in the middle of a chilly Buffalo winter.

  • Sweet Minis adds a delicious burst of fun and flavor to corporate events, community carnivals, fall festivals, farmer’s markets, school celebrations, block parties, weddings, birthdays and anniversaries, community fairs and fundraising events. Don’t see your specific event listed? Reach out and let’s talk about your options!

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  • Not at this time.

  • Not at this time.

  • We tip our sprinkles to Hanson Gregory, a New England trader who, in 1847 at age 16, invented the ring-shaped donut while aboard a merchant ship. Hanson had help from his mother Elizabeth, who called the deep-fried dough with walnuts in the center that she made for her son’s sustenance, dough nuts. According to history, Hanson skewered a donut on the ship’s wheel so he could steer with both hands, and the uniquely shaped donut was born.

  • Accidents often lead to inventions. In 1905, 11-year-old Frank Epperson left a cup of powdered soda, water and a stick outside on a winter night in San Francisco. The next morning he discovered the frozen mixture and more than 18 years later, patented his invention, calling it the Epsicle. By then he was a father and his children renamed the frozen ice treat a “Pop”sicle.

  • Both are correct! Historians point to The Display Doughnut Machine Corporation that abbreviated the word to make it more pronounceable. Doughnut is the older, original spelling but dictionaries like Merriam-Webster have since changed to donut as the newer spelling is more popular. The new spelling also grew in popularity when companies like Krispy Kreme—a company that uses doughnuts in their logo but donuts on their menus—decided to follow suit. Whichever spelling you prefer, America’s favorite treat continues to grow in popularity. Americans consume more than 10 billion donuts annually. That’s at least 63 donuts for every one of us!