Category: Bagels

  • Bagels for Breakfast!

    Back in the day, my mother was a nurse in Miami, Florida. My dad would fly down there periodically for a visit and on his return trip, he’d sometimes bring me a couple dozen very good bagels. I remember one time in particular, he not quite understanding the allure of a well made bagel (or any other kind), and with his suitcase nearly full, he managed to flatten two dozen bagels to the point where they looked like frisbees. But we enjoyed them anyway.

    At that time, before the Internet and the plethora of exellect baking books available, I thought making a bagel at home was impossible. There must be some magic to it, or why wouldn’t everyone do it?

    Which brings us up to this morning. I had these bagels already formed and in the refrigerator for an overnight ferment. I took them out and put them on the kitchen table around 3 AM so they’d be at the right temperature for the boiling phase. And then I overslept.

    I came downstairs to find the bagels were so overproofed, that I couldn’t even pick them up. There was nothing else to do except roll it all back together again, divide, and reshape. By this time, I already had the water at full boil and the oven was up to temperature. I had no idea how these would come out, if at all.

    This once again illustrates that even when you make a few mistakes (adding too much salt, not being one of them…), home baking results in a product that is very difficult to find at the grocery store. Here in Kansas City, and in many other large communities, it is quite possible to find a decent bagel. But even with the mistakes I made this morning, I really think these are better than anything around here.

    The malt syrup used in this recipe is available at Whole Foods. I used a pretty standard hydration and the formulation and methods (well, sort of…) from Peter Reinhart’s, Artisan Breads Every Day.

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  • Today’s Bagel is Brought to You By the Letter C

    Baking is so much different than cooking. With cooking, you can pretty much throw anything into a pot, let it simmer, taste it now and again, maybe with a glass of wine or two, and adjust the seasoning as you go along. With baking, you really need to focus on technique, and precise measurements.

    Yesterday I made the dough for baking some bagels this morning. Reinhart suggests the following steps:

    • Mix the dough
    • Let rise
    • Shape into bagels
    • Proof
    • Retard in the refrigerator
    • Just before baking, bring them up to room temperature
    • Boil
    • Bake

    Sounds pretty simple. However, I did it differently. Given that I needed to get out of bed at 3:30 to get them baked in time for work, I elected to leave the dough at a cool room temperature (about 65 degrees) for the night. So, basically, I’ve let the dough proof quite a bit before shaping them into bagels early this morning.

    First off, the bagels are cinnamon raisin with walnuts. My sister likes walnuts in her bagels. (She isn’t anywhere around here, so what difference that makes, I’m not sure…) As a result of the overnight proof, the dough was quite soft. My attempt to roll the dough into a “snake” was an issue because the walnuts and raisins created holes and cavities in the dough. As a result, I basically squeezed them into shape. The wrap-around-the-hand-and-roll-together step wouldn’t work. So, again, the ends sort of got squeezed together.

    During the boiling and baking process, half of the bagels separated at the seam, forming the letter C as a result.

    I’m reasonably confident they will taste OK. But next time, I might actually follow the directions.