How to make your best bagels (from someone who's made hundreds) (2024)

How to make your best bagels (from someone who's made hundreds) (1)While developing King Arthur’s 2022 Recipe of the Year, Ultimate Sandwich Bagels, Senior Recipe Tester Molly Marzalek-Kelly estimates she made at least 100 batches of bagels.

“I mean, that sounds insane,” she laughs. But in addition to an overabundance of carbohydrates on her kitchen counter, the experience left her with something else: extensive firsthand insight into how to make your very best bagels at home.

While the written recipe is already extremely detailed, it still doesn’t capture everything Molly knows about bagels. Here are some additional tips and tricks for bagel success— whether you’re making the Ultimate Sandwich Bagels or just about any other recipe.

1) A tight preshape = wrinkle-free bagels

One of the biggest issues bakers run into is a wrinkly bagel, and Molly says the best way to prevent this is to pay attention to your preshaping. As directed in steps 6 through 8 of the Ultimate Sandwich Bagels recipe, you’ll shape the dough into balls, which are then stretched into a bagel shape. Molly says, “The tighter the ball you can preshape, the easier the bagel-shaping will be, and the more likely you’ll have a beautiful final bagel without wrinkles.”

2) Level up your shaping method

While Ultimate Sandwich Bagels call for the “poke-and-stretch” method to shape bagels, Molly advises trying out the “rope-shaping” method if you feel comfortable. This method is closer to how professionals shape bagels, and some people say it yields a chewier result (possibly because the gluten all goes in one direction). To see how it’s done, check out our blog post: How to shape bagels.

3) When in doubt, cut your proof short

The thing that differentiates bagels from other breads is the lack of fluff and air — you want them dense and chewy. To achievethat, don’t let your dough get too puffy while proofing. According to Molly, “If the bagels proof too much, they’ll deflate in the water bath.” If you’re keeping an eye on your dough, she advises pulling it a little too early rather than a little too late (and definitely before they double in size), as it’s better to be underproofed. And if you’re baking in a hot environment or during the warmer summer months, you may need to decrease your rise time. The dough will ferment quicker, and thus can overproof if you don’t keep an eye on it.

How to make your best bagels (from someone who's made hundreds) (3)

Kristin Teig

4) Use whichever sweetener you want (within reason, of course!)

Our recipe calls for either barley malt syrup or brown sugar to sweeten the bagel dough, and barley malt syrup or honey to sweeten the boiling water. That said, “You can use whatever you want,” says Molly. “Experiment with the flavors you like best. If you like things a little sweeter, use honey. If all you have is molasses, use molasses.” Since there’s such a small amount in the boiling water, there won’t be a very noticeable difference in bagel color among different sweetener options.Be smart, of course— almost any liquid sweetener will suffice, but no confectioners’ sugar in the water bath, please!

How to make your best bagels (from someone who's made hundreds) (4)

Kristin Teig

5) When it comes to boiling, the gentler the better

To get her bagels into the pot to boil, Molly uses her hands to lay them down gently (being careful not to touch the boiling water!), which she says helps prevent them from deflating. (This is another reason to let them rise a few minutes less— they’re easier to pick up and put in the water, while over-proofed bagels will be more delicate.) To flip, she uses a slotted spoon to ensure gentle handling, and says a dough whisk will also work.

6) For the bagel you want, tweak your boil time

If you want a thinner crust and airier texture in your bagels, shorten the boiling time slightly (around 45 seconds, instead of the 60 seconds called for in the recipe). The shorter boil means the crust has less opportunity to preset, which allows more rising, and thus a “fluffier” bagel. If you want a chewier bagel, both internally and externally, boil the bagels a little longer (90 seconds each side).

How to make your best bagels (from someone who's made hundreds) (5)

Rick Holbrook

7) Banish burned toppings with aluminum foil

Bagels can bake at high temperatures (Ultimate Sandwich Bagels bake at 450°F) which can potentially burn toppings, especially if your oven runs hot. To prevent this, Molly recommends tenting your bagels with foil toward the end of baking. She says, "When you rotate the pan halfway through the bake time, that's a perfect opportunity to quickly tent your bagels."

Put Molly’s tips to the test and whip up a batch of Ultimate Sandwich Bagels: A recipe so good, we crowned it our 2022 Recipe of the Year.

Cover photo by Rick Holbrook.

How to make your best bagels (from someone who's made hundreds) (2024)

FAQs

What makes the best bagel? ›

The 5 elements of great bagels
  • Hydration (the amount of water the dough contains)
  • Flour protein content (this dictates the amount of gluten in the dough)
  • Shaping (determines how structured that gluten is)
  • Fermentation time (affects both flavor and texture)
  • Boiling (creates a shiny crust and adds flavor)
Jun 29, 2021

How to get a smooth bagel? ›

Mixing: Low and slow is the way to go.

To achieve that smooth, stretchy texture necessary for your bagel shaping, mix your dough using an electric mixer with a hook attachment at low speed. Think: 3 and 3. Three minutes of mixing on the lowest speed then three minutes on the second-to-lowest speed.

What should a good bagel taste like? ›

The ideal bagel, of course, is fresh out of the oven, with a crust that crackles, an interior with serious chew, and toastiness in every bite.

What kind of flour is best for bagels? ›

Bread flour – Because of its high protein content, bread flour makes these homemade bagels delightfully chewy. This recipe also works with all-purpose flour, they're just a bit less chewy than bagels made with bread flour. Maple syrup – It activates the yeast and gives the bagels a hint of sweetness.

Why are my bagels not fluffy? ›

Over proofed dough will lose its strength too early and cause the bagels to deflate either during the second rise or while cooking. To correct this, try to find a warm, — not hot — spot to rise your dough.

What makes bagels chewy? ›

Bread flour is the essential ingredient to creating that distinct chewy bite we all crave in a bagel. Its high protein content creates a stiff dough that holds its shape while baking and develops more gluten for more chew.

Why do you put a hole in a bagel? ›

Ever wondered why bagels have holes in the middle? The basic shape is hundreds of years old and serves lots of practical advantages besides an even cooking and baking of the dough. The hole also allowed them to be threaded or piled high on a dowel which made them easier to transport and display.

Why do you put bagels in water before baking? ›

What you're trying to do, by boiling or steaming bagels before baking, is to kill the yeast, so the bagels won't rise in the oven and become puffy, rather than staying rather dense and chewy. You're also adding a very thin coating of sugar—malt, in this case—which gives bagels their distinctive shiny crust. Eureka!

Should you punch down bagel dough? ›

Since bagels are meant to be chewy and denser than other breads, punching down the dough helps to deflate it and remove air bubbles so you can easily divide and form the dough into bagel shapes, using your preferred method. Punch down dough; divide into 12 (about 4 oz.) pieces.

Why are my homemade bagels so dense? ›

Moreira: Usually if you get dense bagels, it's because they were underproofed. But it could also be that your yeast is bad. When you're at home using dry yeast—especially if you don't use it that often—you should always bloom the yeast in a little bit of sugar and water to make sure it's active.

What is the best bagel texture? ›

The ideal bakery-fresh bagel will have a dark, blistered, and crackly crust and a chewy, not bready, texture.

Are bagels difficult to make? ›

As I mentioned before, bagel-making isn't hard, it's just time-consuming! If you'd prefer to make the dough the day before and boil and bake them the following morning, you absolutely can: Shape the dough into balls, place on a baking sheet, and spray the tops with cooking spray.

Should bagels be dense or fluffy? ›

The thing that differentiates bagels from other breads is the lack of fluff and air — you want them dense and chewy. To achieve that, don't let your dough get too puffy while proofing.

What makes New York bagels so much better? ›

NYC bagel purists will claim the main difference between a New York bagel vs. a regular bagel is the water you boil them in. Much like a specific vineyard terroir is used to make a wine, certain minerals in New York City tap water are attributed to creating the best bagels.

Why do everything bagels taste so good? ›

Everything bagels are bagels topped with a seasoning blend that includes a mix of poppy seeds, sesame seeds, garlic and onion flakes, sunflower seeds, pretzel salt and black pepper.

What makes a bagel a real bagel? ›

But what sets it apart from other bread is its unique texture and flavor, which comes from its special preparation process. Bagels are first boiled in water (sometimes with malt syrup or honey added) before being baked, resulting in a crisp and shiny crust that encases a dense and chewy interior.

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