|  |     My recipe is slightly different.  I use a little egg (or Eggbeater
    egg substitute), and less yeast, and I make a sponge with the yeast
    first.  Basically, when you make a sponge with yeast, a little
    flour, sugar, and water, you are letting the yeast multiply and
    so you can get away with using less yeast.  It used to be a frugality
    measure, before yeast was as cheap as it is today.  I use it as
    a REAL indication of whether or not the yeast is alive.  Since I
    have not used much flour, I'm not throwing away much if the yeast
    fails to form a sponge.
    These directions are very thorough, but they should be as easy as
    the ones in .0.  
    Wheat and white bagels   makes 12 - 120 calories each
    
    4 1/4 to 4 1/2 cups flour, half whole wheat and half unbleached white.
    1 teaspoon yeast (NOT a typo!)
    1 1/2 cups hot tap water - as per prior comments, about 110 deg F
    2-3 Tablespoons sugar, brown or white
    1 Tablespoon salt
    1/4 cup Eggbeater, or one egg
    [optional - a few tablespoons of gluten flour, if you have it]
        
    1)  Put hot water in mixer bowl.  Stir in yeast, sugar, and 2 Cups
    white flour.  Mix well.  Set bowl in a warm place to rise for
    1 to 1 1/2 hours, until spongy.
    
    2)  With a strong mixer (not hand held!), blend in egg, salt and
    as much wheat flour as it'll take. 
    
    3) Knead on a floured wooden board about 10 minutes, adding flour
    as needed up to 5 cups maximum total.  Really work the dough - get
    out your frustrations!  It should end up smooth and springy.
    
    4) Shape dough into 12 bagels.  Divide dough into 12 pieces and
    roll each piece out.  Pinch ends together to form a ring.  Pinch
    firmly, or the ring will fall apart when you boil the bagels.
    
    5) Place bagels on a greased cookie sheet.  Cover with a kitchen
    towel.  Place in a warm place and let rise 1/2 to 1 hour.
    
    6) Heat water with 1 Tablespoon sugar stirred into it.  I use 
    my huge cast iron skillet for this - you're looking for a pot or
    pan that's at least 12 inches in diameter and 3 inches deep.
    The skillet is easier than a deep pot, since you don't have
    to boil as much water, so it doesn't take as long.  Cover the water
    until it boils, so it's faster.  
    
    7) Preheat oven to 375.
    
    8)Cook bagels in water, uncovered, about 6 minutes, turning once.
    Drain on rack.  I cook 4 at a time in my skillet, and I put the
    rack over 1/2 of the double sink.  Don't let them cook longer
    than 7 min max in the water, or they won't turn out right.
    
    9) Put bagels back on that cookie sheet.  Bake at 375 deg F for
    30 minutes.  Spray  or brush with water twice during the last 10
    minutes for crustier bagels.
    ADDITIONS:  My favorite - stir in poppy or sesame seeds when you're
    		   adding the whole wheat flour.  Since the seeds are
    		   inside, they don't fall off.   MMMMMM.
    
    		Onion - fry a chopped up onion or two in a few tablespoons
    		    of butter.  Stir in when you add the whole wheat flour.
 | 
|  | Article: 12164
From: Bewildered <[email protected]>
Newsgroups: rec.food.recipes
Subject: Authentic Jewish Bgels
Date: 23 Apr 1995 06:42:31 -0600
Organization: ucs.indiana.edu
Sender: [email protected]
 
This is a recipe by my friend Johanne Blank.  She has a wonderful array of 
foolproof recipes, of which this is one of the greatest ever.
 
                    Johanne's Foolproof Recipes presents
 
                   Real, honest, Jewish (Lower East Side)
                       P U R I S T ' S   B A G E L S
 
 
        Gentle reader, it is assumed that you know from bagels.  The bagel, in 
its peripateic history, has moved from the shtetls of Eastern Europe to the 
delis of the United States, survived the onslaught of many a foreign 
formulation and flavoring, and also has managed to remain relatively dignified 
in the face of mass-production, freezing and other procedural adulterations and 
bastardizations.  In the United States, however, most people's idea of a bagel 
seems to be of a vaguely squishy unsweetened doughnut, possibly with some sort 
of godawful flavoring mixed into it (with the "blueberry bagel" being perhaps 
the most offensive), generally purchased in lots of six in some supermarket... 
possibly even frozen.  These are not those bagels.
        These bagels are the genuine article.  These are the bagels that have 
sustained generations of Eastern European Jewish peasants, the bagels that 
babies can teethe upon (folk wisdom has it that the hard, chewy crust 
encourages strong teeth), the bagels about which writer and humorist Alice Kahn 
has so aptly written that bagels are "Jewish courage."
        This recipe makes approximately fifteen large bagels,  The bagels are 
made without eggs, milk or any type of shortening or oil, which makes them 
pareve according to Kosher law.  These bagels are plain, but I will provide 
suggestions as to how you may customize them to your tastes while retaining 
their Pristine and Ineffable Nature.  May you bake them and eat them in good 
health.
 
                                INGREDIENTS:
 
6-8 cups bread (high-gluten) flour
4 tablespoons dry baking yeast
6 tablespoons granulated white sugar or light honey (clover honey is good)
2 teaspoons salt
3 cups hot water
a bit of vegetable oil
1 gallon water
3-5 tablespoons malt syrup or sugar
a few handfuls of cornmeal
 
                                EQUIPMENT:
 
large mixing bowl
wire whisk
measuring cups and spoons
wooden mixing spoon
butter knife or baker's dough blade
clean, dry surface for kneading
3 clean, dry kitchen towels
warm, but not hot, place to set dough to rise
large stockpot
slotted spoon
2 baking sheets
 
HOW YOU DO IT:
 
        First, pour three cups of hot water into the mixing bowl.  The water 
should be hot, but not so hot that you can't bear to put your fingers in it for 
several seconds at a time.  Add the sugar or honey and stir it with your fingers
(a good way to make sure the water is not too hot) or with a wire whisk to 
dissolve.  Sprinkle the yeast over the surface of the water, and stir to 
dissolve.
        Wait about ten minutes for the yeast to begin to revive and grow.  This 
is known as "proofing" the yeast, which simply means that you're checking to 
make sure your yeast is viable.  Skipping this step could result in your trying 
to make bagels with dead yeast, which results in bagels so hard and potentially 
dangerous that they are banned under the terms of the Geneva Convention.  You 
will know that the yeast is okay if it begins to foam and exude a sweetish, 
slightly beery smell.
        At this point, add about three cups of flour as well as the 2 tsp of 
salt to the water and yeast and begin mixing it in.  Some people subscribe to
the theory that it is easier to tell what's going on with the dough if you use 
your hands rather than a spoon to mix things into the dough, but others prefer 
the less physically direct spoon.  As an advocate of the bare-knuckles school 
of baking, I proffer the following advice: clip your fingernails, take off your 
rings and wristwatch, and wash your hands thoroughly to the elbows, like a 
surgeon.  Then you may dive into the dough with impunity.  I generally use my 
right hand to mix, so that my left is free to add flour and other ingredients 
and to hold the bowl steady.  Left-handed people might find that the reverse 
works better for them.  Having one hand clean and free to perform various tasks 
works best.
        When you have incorporated the first three cups of lour, the dough 
should begin to become thick-ish.  Add more flour, a half-cup or so at a time, 
and mix each addition thoroughly before adding more flour.  As the dough gets 
thicker, add less and less flour at a time.  Soon you will begin to knead it by 
hand (if you're using your hands to mix the dough in the first place, this 
segue is hardly noticeable).  If you have a big enough and shallow enough bowl, 
use it as the kneading bowl, otherwise use that clean, dry, flat countertop or 
tabletop mentioned in the "Equipment" list above.  Sprinkle your work surface 
or bowl with a handful of flour, put your dough on top, and start kneading.  
Add bits of flour if necessary to keep the dough from sticking (to your hands, 
to the bowl or countertop, etc....).  Soon you should have a nice stiff dough.  
It will be quite elastic, but heavy and stiffer than a normal bread dough.  Do 
not make it too dry, however... it should still give easily and stretch easily 
without tearing.
        Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, and cover with one of your 
clean kitchen towels, dampened somewhat by getting it wet and then wringing it 
out thoroughly.  If you swish the dough around in the bowl, you can get the 
whole ball of dough covered with a very thin film of oil, which will keep it 
from drying out.
        Place the bowl with the dough in it in a dry, warm (but not hot) place, 
free from drafts.  Allow it to rise until doubled in volume.  Some people try 
to accelerate rising by putting the dough in the oven, where the pilot lights 
keep the temperature slightly elevated.  If it's cold in your kitchen, you can 
try this, but remember to leave the oven door open or it may become too hot and 
begin to kill the yeast and cook the dough.  An ambient temperature of about 80 
degrees Farenheit (25 centigrades) is ideal for rising dough.  
        While the dough is rising, fill your stockpot with about a gallon of 
water and set it on the fire to boil.  When it reaches a boil, add the malt 
syrup or sugar and reduce the heat so that the water just barely simmers; the 
surface of the water should hardly move.
        Once the dough has risen, turn it onto your work surface, punch it 
down, and divide immediately into as many hunks as you want to make bagels.  
For this recipe, you will probably end up with about 15 bagels, so you will 
divide the dough into 15 roughly even-sized hunks.  Begin forming the bagels.  
There are two schools of thought on this.  One method of bagel formation 
involves shaping the dough into a rough sphere, then poking a hole through the 
middle with a finger and then pulling at the dough around the hole to make the 
bagel.  This is the hole-centric method.  The dough-centric method involves 
making a long cylindrical "snake" of dough and wrapping it around your hand 
into a loop and mashing the ends together.  Whatever you like to do is fine.  
DO NOT, however, give in to the temptation of using a doughnut or cookie cutter 
to shape your bagels.  This will pusht them out of the realm of Jewish Bagel 
Authenticity and give them a distinctly Protestant air.  The bagels will not be 
perfectly shaped.  They will not be symmetrical.  This is normal.  This is 
okay.  Enjoy the diversity.  Just like snowflakes, no two genuine bagels are 
exactly alike.
        Begin to preheat the oven to 400 degrees Farenheit.
        Once the bagels are formed, let them sit for about 10 minutes.  They 
will begin to rise slightly.  Ideally, they will rise by about one-fourth 
volume... a technique called "half-proofing" the dough.  At the end of the 
half-proofing, drop the bagels into the simmering water one by one.  You don't 
want to crowd them, and so there should only be two or three bagels simmering 
at any given time.  The bagels should sink first, then gracefully float to the 
top of the simmering water.  If they float, it's not a big deal, but it does 
mean that you'll have a somewhat more bready (and less bagely) texture.  Let 
the bagel simmer for about three minutes, then turn them over with a skimmer or 
a slotted spoon.  Simmer another three minutes, and then lift the bagels out of 
the water and set them on a clean kitchen towel that has been spread on the 
countertop for this purpose.  The bagels should be pretty and shiny, thanks to 
the malt syrup or sugar in the boiling water.  
        Once all the bagels have been boiled, prepare your baking sheets by 
sprinkling them with cornmeal.  Then arrange the bagels on the prepared baking 
sheets and put them in the oven.  Let them bake for about 25 mintues, then 
remove from the oven, turn them over and put them back in the oven to finish 
baking for about ten minutes more.  This will help to prevent flat-bottomed 
bagels.
        Remove from the oven and cool on wire racks, or on a dry clean towels 
if you have no racks.  Do not attempt to cut them until they are cool... hot 
bagels slice abominably and you'll end up with a wadded mass of bagel pulp.  
Don't do it.  
        Serve with good cream cheese.
 
TO CUSTOMIZE BAGELS: After boiling but before baking, brush the bagels with a 
wash made of 1 egg white and 3 tablespoons ice water beaten together.  Sprinkle 
with the topping of your choice: poppy, sesame, or caraway seeds, toasted onion 
or raw garlic bits, salt or whatever you like.  Just remember that bagels are 
essentially a savory baked good, not a sweet one, and so things like fruit and 
sweet spices are really rather out of place.  
 
                        END OF RECIPE
 
I hope you can understand this recipe.  I am in the process of making a batch 
right now.  They are delicious and very authentic.  I lived in New York (Bagel 
heaven, Hell for everything else except opera) and I must say that now that I 
have Johanne's recipe, I have no reason to go back there...
Enjoy.
                                                        -Carolina
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Carolina Rodriguez                                      VOICE: (812) 339-4023
Indiana University
[email protected]
 
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