A bagel (''also spelled'' beigel) is a bread product, traditionally shaped by hand into the form of a ring from yeasted wheat dough, roughly hand-sized, which is first boiled for a short time in water and then baked. The result is a dense, chewy, doughy interior with a browned and sometimes crisp exterior. Bagels are often topped with seeds baked on the outer crust, with the traditional ones being poppy or sesame seeds. Some also may have salt sprinkled on their surface, and there are also a number of different dough types such as whole-grain or rye.
Bagels have become a popular bread product in the United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom, especially in cities with large Jewish populations, many with different ways of making bagels. Like other bakery products, bagels are available (either fresh or frozen, and often in many flavour varieties) in many major supermarkets in those countries.
The basic roll-with-a-hole design is hundreds of years old and has other practical advantages besides providing for a more even cooking and baking of the dough: the hole could be used to thread string or dowels through groups of bagels, allowing for easier handling and transportation and more appealing seller displays.
History
Contrary to common legend, the bagel was not created in the shape of a stirrup to commemorate the victory of Poland's King Jan III Sobieski over the Ottoman Turks in the Battle of Vienna in 1683. It was actually invented much earlier in Kraków, Poland, as a competitor to the'' bublik'', a lean bread of wheat flour designed for Lent. In the 16th and first half of the 17th centuries, the ''bajgiel'' became a staple of the Polish national diet.
That the name originated from ''beugal'' (old spelling of ''Bügel'', meaning bail/bow or bale) is considered plausible by many, both from the similarities of the word and because traditional handmade bagels are not perfectly circular but rather slightly stirrup-shaped. (This, however, may be due to the way the boiled bagels are pressed together on the baking sheet before baking.) Also, variants of the word ''beugal'' are used in Yiddish and Austrian German to refer to a somewhat similar form of sweet filled pastry (''Mohnbeugel'' (with poppy seeds) and ''Nussbeugel'' (with ground nuts)), or in southern German dialects (where ''beuge'' refers to a pile, e.g., ''holzbeuge'', or ''woodpile''). According to the Merriam-Webster's dictionary, 'bagel' derives from the transliteration of the Yiddish'' 'beygl','' which came from the Middle High German'' 'böugel' ''or ring, which itself came from'' 'bouc' ''(ring) in Old High German, similar to the Old English'' 'bēag' '''(ring), and'' 'būgan' (to bend or bow)''. Similarly another etymology in the Webster's New World College Dictionary says that the Middle High German form was derived from the Austrian German'' 'beugel','' a kind of croissant, and was similar to the German'' 'bügel','' a stirrup or ring.
In the Brick Lane district and surrounding area of London, England, bagels, or as locally spelled'' "beigels" ''have been sold since the middle of the 19th century. They were often displayed in the windows of bakeries on vertical wooden dowels, up to a metre in length, on racks.
Bagels were brought to the United States by immigrant Polish-Jews, with a thriving business developing in New York City that was controlled for decades by Bagel Bakers Local 338, which had contracts with nearly all bagel bakeries in and around the city for its workers, who prepared all the bagels by hand. The bagel came into more general use throughout North America in the last quarter of the 20th century, at least partly due to the efforts of bagel baker Harry Lender and Florence Sender, who pioneered automated production and distribution of frozen bagels in the 1960s.
In modern times, Canadian-born astronaut Gregory Chamitoff is the first person known to have taken a batch of bagels into space on his 2008 Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station. His shipment consisted of 18 sesame seed bagels.
Preparation
At its most basic, traditional bagel dough contains wheat flour (without germ or bran), salt, water, and yeast leavening.
Bread flour or other high
gluten flours are preferred to create the firm and dense but spongy bagel shape and chewy texture. Most bagel recipes call for the addition of a sweetener to the dough, often barley malt (syrup or crystals), honey, sugar, with or without eggs, milk or butter. Leavening can be accomplished using either a
sourdough technique or using commercially produced yeast.
Bagels are traditionally made by:
mixing and kneading the ingredients to form the dough
shaping the dough into the traditional bagel shape, round with a hole in the middle, from a long thin piece of dough
proofing the bagels for at least 12 hours at low temperature (40–50 °F = 4.5–10 °C)
boiling each bagel in water that may or may not contain additives such as lye, baking soda, barley malt syrup, or honey
baking at between 175 °C and 315 °C (about 350–600 °F)
It is this unusual production method which is said to give bagels their distinctive taste, chewy texture, and shiny appearance. In the context of Jewish culture, this process provided an additional advantage in that it could be followed without breaking the no-work rule of the Sabbath. The dough would be prepared on the day before, chilled during the day, and boiled and baked only after the end of the Sabbath, therefore using the Sabbath as a productive time in the bagel-making process (as the dough needs to slowly rise in a chilled environment for a time before cooking).
In recent years, a variant of this process has emerged, producing what is sometimes called the steam bagel. To make a steam bagel, the process of boiling is skipped, and the bagels are instead baked in an oven equipped with a steam injection system. In commercial bagel production, the steam bagel process requires less labor, since bagels need only be directly handled once, at the shaping stage. Thereafter, the bagels need never be removed from their pans as they are refrigerated and then steam-baked. The steam-bagel is not considered to be a genuine bagel by purists, as it results in a fluffier, softer, less chewy product more akin to a finger roll that happens to be shaped like a bagel.
Varieties
The two most prominent styles of traditional bagel in North America are the Montreal-style bagel and the New York-style bagel. The Montreal bagel contains malt and sugar with no salt; it is boiled in honey-sweetened water before baking in a wood-fired oven; and it is predominantly either of the poppy "black" or sesame "white" seeds variety. The New York bagel contains salt and malt and is boiled in water prior to baking in a standard oven. The resulting New York bagel is puffy with a moist crust, while the Montreal bagel is smaller (though with a larger hole), crunchier, and sweeter.
Poppy seeds are sometimes called by their Yiddish name, spelled either ''mun'' or ''mon'' (written מאָן) which is very similar to the German word for poppy, ''Mohn'', as used in ''Mohnbrötchen''. The traditional London bagel (or beigel as it is spelled) is harder and has a coarser texture with air bubbles.
Bagels around the world
Russian ''bubliks'' are very similar to bagels, but are somewhat bigger, have a wider hole, and are drier and chewier. Pretzels, especially the large soft ones, are also similar to bagels, the main exceptions being the shape and the alkaline water bath that makes the surface dark and glossy.
In Russia, Belarus and Ukraine, the ''bublik'' is essentially a much larger bagel. Other ring-shaped breads known among East Slavs are ''baranki'' (smaller and drier) and ''sushki'' (even smaller and drier).
In Lithuania, bagels are called ''riestainiai'', and sometimes by their Slavic name ''baronkos''.
In Finland, ''vesirinkeli'' are small rings of yeast-leavened wheat bread. They are placed in salted boiling water before being baked. They are often eaten for breakfast toasted and buttered. They are available in several different varieties (sweet or savoury) in supermarkets.
The Uyghurs of Xinjiang, China, enjoy a form of bagel known as ''girdeh nan'' (from Persian, meaning round bread), which is one of several types of nan, the bread eaten in Xinjiang. It is uncertain if the Uyghur version of the bagel was developed independently of Europe or was the actual origin of the bagels that appeared in Central Europe.
In Turkey, a salty and fattier form is called ''açma''. The ring-shaped simit is sometimes marketed as a Turkish bagel, and is very similar to the twisted sesame-sprinkled bagels pictured being sold in early 20th century Poland. ''Simit'' are also sold on the street in baskets or carts, like bagels were then.
In some parts of Austria, ring-shaped pastries called ''Beugel'' are sold in the weeks before Easter. Like a bagel, the yeasted wheat dough, usually flavored with caraway, is boiled before baking. However, the ''Beugel'' is crispy and can be stored for weeks. Traditionally it has to be torn apart by two individuals before eating.
The pronunciation and spelling of ''bagel'' varies among communities. In Canada, for instance, people from Toronto and Montreal, pronounce it like ''bay''-gel, (the Yiddish pronunciation) -whereas people from the smaller towns of Northern Ontario and the east coast of Canada tend to pronounce the first syllable as ''bag''-el, as in 'shopping ''bag'''. In addition, some bagel makers in the U.S. (particularly New England producer Zeppy's) spell the word "baigel", while maintaining the typical pronunciation.
In the UK, bagels are popular in London, Brighton, Leeds, Belfast, and Manchester. In Newcastle, the most popular seller of bagels is named Bagel of the North, with reference to the Angel of the North. On Brick Lane in east London, there are two long-established bagel shops in which the item is spelled ''beigel'', with pronunciation (bygl) to match. In Brighton, 'The Bagelman' is a popular chain of bagel takeaway shops that has enjoyed great reception in their 12 years of business, with 3 locations in the city centre and the original shop situated on the University of Sussex Campus. Bagels are sold by many food store chains as Tesco, Morisson and others.
In Romania, bagels are popular topped with poppy, sesame seeds or large salt grains, especially in the central area of the country, and the recipe does not contain any added sweetener. They are named ''covrigi''.
"Bagel" is also a Yeshivish term for sleeping 12 hours straight, e.g., "I slept a bagel last night." There are various opinions as to the origins of this term. It may be a reference to the fact that bagel dough has to "rest" for at least 12 hours between mixing and baking, or simply to the fact that the hour hand on a clock traces a bagel shape over the course of twelve hours.
In Japan, the first kosher bagels were brought by BagelK (ベーグルK) from New York in 1989. BagelK created green tea, chocolate, maple-nuts, and banana-nuts flavors for the market in Japan. There are three million bagels exported from the U.S. annually, and it has a 4%-of-duty classification in Japan. Some Japanese bagels are sweet; the orthodox kosher bagels are the same as in the U.S.
Non-traditional doughs and types
While normally and traditionally made of yeasted wheat, in the late 20th century many variations on the bagel flourished. Nontraditional versions which change the dough recipe include pumpernickel, rye, sourdough, bran, whole wheat, and multigrain. Other variations change the flavor of the dough, often using blueberry, salt, onion, garlic, egg, cinnamon, raisin, chocolate chip, cheese, or some combination of the above. Green bagels are sometimes created for St. Patrick's Day.
Many corporate chains now offer bagels in such flavors as chocolate chip and French toast.
Sandwich bagels have been popularized since the late 1990s by bagel specialty shops such as Bruegger's and Einstein Brothers, and fast food restaurants such as McDonald's.
Breakfast bagels, a softer, sweeter variety usually sold in fruity or sweet flavors (e.g., cherry, strawberry, cheese, blueberry, cinnamon-raisin, chocolate chip, maple syrup, banana and nuts) are commonly sold by large supermarket chains. These are usually sold sliced and are intended to be prepared in a toaster.
A flat bagel, known as a 'Flagel', can be found in a few locations in and around New York City and Toronto. According to a review attributed to New York's Village Voice food critic Robert Seitsema, the Flagel was first created by Brooklyn's ''Tasty Bagels'' deli in the early 1990s.
Though the original bagel has a fairly well defined recipe and method of production, there is no legal standard of identity for bagels in the United States. Bakers are thus free to call any bread torus a bagel, even those that deviate wildly from the original formulation.
In popular culture
''Bagels & Yox'' was a 1951 comedy/variety theater revue that successfully played in New York's
Theatre District at the Holiday Theatre, in addition to running in
Atlantic City and
Miami Beach.
''The Dinner Party'' is a song by composer and musician Steven Lutvak in which he humorously describes his family's long and storied background making bagels for Russian Czars.
Large scale commercial sales
United States supermarket sales
According to the
American Institute of Baking (AIB), Year 2008 supermarket sales (52 week period ending January 27, 2009) of the top eight leading commercial fresh (not frozen) bagel brands in the United States:
totalled to US$430,185,378 based on 142,669,901 package unit sales.
the top eight leading brand names for the above were (by order of sales):
Thomas' (Bimbo USA),
Sara Lee, (private label brands)
Pepperidge Farm, Thomas Mini Squares (Bimbo),
Lender's Bagels (Pinnacle Foods), Weight Watchers and The Alternative Bagel (Western Bagel).
Further, AIB-provided statistics for the 52 week period ending May 18, 2008, for refrigerated/frozen supermarket bagel sales for the top 10 brand names totalled US$50,737,860, based on 36,719,977 unit package sales.
See also
Appetizing store
Baker
Baking
Deli
Doughnut
Ka'ak
Lender's Bagels
Montreal-style bagel
Simit
Bialy
References
Notes
Bibliography
Balinska, Maria (2008). ''The Bagel: The Surprising History of a Modest Bread'' , Yale University Press, November 2008, ISBN 0300112297, ISBN 978-0300112290
External links
The Bagel's History on H2G2
Emeril Lagasse's recipe at foodnetwork.com
A documentary film on two famous factories in Montréal, St Viateur and Fairmount
Step-by-Step How to Make Bagels (with pics)
Einstein, Brothers. The History of Bagels, October 20, 2009
Nathan, Joan. A Short History of Bagels, Slate, November 12, 2008
Weinzweig, Ari. The Secret History of Bagels, The Atlantic, March 26, 2009
Bagels Blog in Spanish
Category:Jewish breads
Category:Polish cuisine
Category:Yeast breads
Category:Breakfast foods
Category:Poppy seeds
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