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Bagel

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A plain bagel

The bagel (or sometimes beigel) is a bread product traditionally made of yeasted wheat dough in the form of a roughly hand-sized ring which is boiled in water and then baked. The result is a dense, chewy, doughy interior with a browned and sometimes crisp exterior.

The dough may also be flavored to produce many varieties: salt, onion, garlic, egg, pumpernickel, rye, sourdough, whole wheat, multigrain, cinnamon-raisin, cheese, caraway, blueberry, and muesli among others. Bagels may be topped with seeds such as poppy or sesame, which are baked onto the outer crust.

A related bread product is a bialy, which has no hole, is often onion or garlic-flavored, and is less crispy on the outside.

Though often made with sugar, malt syrup, or honey, bagels should not be confused with doughnuts (donuts).

History

The bagel originated in Central Europe, probably in Poland. A 1610 document from Krakow mentions "beygls" given as a gift to women in childbirth. This is often cited as the earliest known reference to the bagel, but the document is not clear what a "beygl" is. It may be what is now known as a bagel, it may be something related to the word for stirrup (beugal), or it may refer to something else whose meaning is lost.

An often repeated story says that the bagel originated in 1683, when a Jewish baker from Vienna created them as a gift for King Jan Sobieski of Poland to commemorate the King's victory over the Turks that year. The baked good was fashioned in the form of a stirrup to commemorate the victorious cavalry charge. That the name bagel originated from beugal (stirrup) is considered plausible by many, both from the similarities of the word and due to the fact that traditional handmade bagels are not perfectly circular but rather slightly stirrup-shaped. (This fact, however, may be due to the way the boiled bagels are pressed together on the baking sheet before baking.) More prosaically, the name bagel may simply originate from the Yiddish and German word "bügel" , meaning bale or bow, sometimes used to refer to a round loaf of bread (see Gugelhupf for a German cake with a similar ring shape).

Ashkenazi immigrants in the 1880s brought the bagel to the Lower East Side New York City, where it continues to flourish as a local cuisine popular not only with one ethnic group but as an icon of the city. Until the 1920s, bagels were rare in other parts of the United States other than a few cities with large Eastern European Jewish populations. The bagel came into more general use throughout North America in the last quarter of the 20th century.

Bagel types

The two most prominent styles of traditional bagel in North America are the Montreal bagel and the New York-style bagel. The Montreal bagel contains malt and egg but no salt; it is boiled in honey-sweetened water before baking in a wood oven; and it is predominantly either of the noir/"black seed" (poppy) or blanc/"white seed" (sesame) variety. The New York bagel contains salt and malt and is also boiled prior to baking in a standard oven. The resulting New York bagel is puffy with a noticeable crust, while the Montreal bagel is smaller (though with a larger hole) chewier, and sweeter.

In addition to the plain bagel, variants feature seasoning on the outside, including sesame, garlic, poppy seed, onion, rye and the "everything" bagel, a mixture of all of the above. Other versions which change the dough recipe include cinnamon, raisin, blueberry, pumpernickel, egg and sourdough. Green bagels are sometimes created for St. Patrick's Day. Many chains now offer bagels in flavors such as chocolate chip, french toast, asiago cheese, olive and bacon.

In the late 20th century, many variations on the bagel flourished, including those made with different types of doughs, and with new, non-traditional foods and seasonings added to the dough. Breakfast bagels, a softer, sweeter variety usually sold in fruity or sweet flavors (e.g. cherry, strawberry, blueberry, cinnamon-raisin, chocolate chip) are commonly sold by large supermarket chains; these are usually sold pre-sliced and are intended to be prepared in a toaster.

Bagel crisps (also known as bagel chips) are a snack food variant on the bagel. They come in flavors such as plain, garlic, sea salt, cinnamon rasin, everything and sesame.

Bagel sandwiches

A salt beef with mustard bagel, bought on Brick Lane
Bagel half spread with cream cheese.

Today bagel sandwiches are quite common—a sliced bagel substitutes for the two slices of bread. Traditionally, bagel sandwiches filled with cream cheese, lox, tomato, and onion have been a popular meal among Jews for some time.

As a breakfast sandwich, plain or onion-flavored bagels are filled with eggs, cheese, ham, and other fillings. McDonald's created a line of bagel sandwiches for its breakfast menu, but have since scaled back the varieties available; key ingredients are some form of egg, cheese, and meat combination sandwiched between the bagel slices.

Another interesting and popular bagel dish is the pizza bagel. The bagel is sliced, topped with tomato sauce and cheese and then toasted or re-baked.

Sliced bagels are often toasted. Spreads (traditionally known among Jews as schmeer) might include cream cheese (which may be flavored) , butter, peanut butter, jam, apple butter, hummus, or other foods.

Keeping bagels fresh

Bagels taste best fresh out of the oven. In order to preserve the freshness and taste of the bagel for consumption within the next five to seven days, allow them to cool in a paper bag and then store them in a refrigerator in a closed paper bag which is wrapped tightly inside a larger, plastic bag.

To revive a refrigerated bagel to near fresh-baked status, slice the bagel in half and lightly moisten, or 'banetz' (Yiddish term for 'moisten') the surfaces with a small amount of cold water. Toast or bake the bagel until it is hot throughout and slightly crispy on the surfaces. Reheating in a microwave oven will not produce the same result as a regular oven or toaster as microwaves tend to make bread soft and mushy.

Alternatively, bagels can be frozen whole or in halves and reheated in a toaster or oven. Place the room-temperature bagel in an airtight freezer bag and freeze. To thaw, moisten lightly (see above) with cool water and toast or bake. Bagels freeze well for up to six months.

Bagels around the world

In Russia, the bublik has become so mainstream that most Russians aren't aware that it was originally a Polish bread.

The Uighurs of Xinjiang, China enjoy a form of bagel known as girde nan, which is one of several types of nan, the bread eaten in Xinjiang (Allen, March 1996, p. 36-37). It is uncertain if the Uighur 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; though narrower and larger, simit is very similar to sesame seed bagels.

References

  • Allen, Thomas B. (March 1996). Xinjiang. National Geographic Magazine, p. 36-37.