


Used Brian Lagerstrom’s NY bagel recipe.
I did about a 14 hour cold fermentation overnight.
Recipe below;
Ingredients:
▪530 grams (2 1/4 cups) warm water (86°F/30°C)
▪3 grams (1t) instant yeast
▪940 grams (7c bread flour)
▪10 grams (1T) diastatic malt powder (or 10 grams sugar as a substitute)
▪20 grams (1T+ 1/4t) salt
▪3-4 liters (1 gallon) water for boiling
▪50 grams (2 1/2 T) molasses
Instructions:
1. In a medium bowl, combine water and yeast. Stir to dissolve the yeast.
2. bread flour, malt powder (or sugar), and 20 grams of salt to the bowl.
3. Mix the ingredients with a sturdy spoon until a shaggy dough forms and you can no longer stir with the spoon.
4. Switch to a soaking wet hand and continue mixing the dough by squeezing and folding until the dough is well combined.
5. Transfer the dough to a work surface and knead for 10-12 minutes until smooth and elastic. When adequately kneaded, you should be able to tug on a piece of dough without it tearing.
6. Place the kneaded dough into a bowl, cover with a lid, and let it bulk ferment at room temperature for 1 hour.
7. After 1 hour, the dough should have risen by about 50%. Cut the dough into 12 pieces, each weighing approximately 120 grams.
8. Shape each piece of dough by pressing it out into a rectangle then, starting with the edge furthest from you, roll the dough back onto it into itself, pressing into the work surface with each roll until you have a cigar shape, then roll the dough until it’s roughly 10”/25cm long.
9. Wrap the dough log around your fingers, overlapping by about 3 inches, and squeeze firmly to seal each end of the dough together.
10. With the dough still wrapped around your hand, roll the dough back and forth on the seam side to fully integrate and shape it into a bagel.
11. Place the shaped bagels onto two parchment-lined sheet trays lightly sprayed with pan spray. Cover with plastic wrap or half sheet tray covers.
12. Move the trays to the refrigerator and cold ferment for at least 4 hours, preferably 24 hours.
13. Preheat your oven to 475°F and soak bagel boards (cedar planks with burlap stapled to them) in water.
14. Bring 3-4 liters of water to a boil in a large pot and add molasses.
15. Cut the parchment around each bagel to make handling easier.
16. Carefully drop 3 bagels into the boiling water, top side down, and boil for 30 seconds.
17. Flip the bagels and boil for another 30 seconds on the other side.
18. Transfer the boiled bagels to a baking sheet with the bottom side down.
19. Repeat steps 16, 17, & 18 for remaining bagels
20. Place the boiled bagels onto the soaked bagel boards, top side down.
21. Bake in the preheated oven for 5 minutes on the bagel boards. I like to place mine directly on top of my pizza stone/steel.
22. After 5 minutes, flip the bagels over so the top side is up, and continue baking for 12-15 minutes on a pizza stone/steel until golden brown and blistered.
23. Remove the bagels from the oven and transfer to a wire rack to cool.
by _Veni_Vidi_Vici__

9 Comments
Omg. Your first time looking like my 10th time. Those look fantastic. Were you happy with them?
I have no suggestions, but maybe someone else can give you some fine pointers.
These look pretty solid to me. If you really followed the shaping directions then I’m super impressed. I’ve never had good luck with that so I just make a tight dough ball and poke a hole in the middle and stretch.
I like a little more chew to my crust so I boil at least one minute per side.
I’m not saying I don’t already have way too many bread specific tools in my kitchen and I wouldn’t mind a set of [bagel boards](https://breadtopia.com/store/bagel-boards/) since I make them so often but I’m just not convinced the end result would be so dramatically different that it would we worth the extra steps.
order some NY tap water hehe
new yorker here, they do look good !
wonder what they taste like, bet they are good.
Yes, try strawberry cream cheese
Those look pretty great for the first time
Any pointers? Haha, dude, if you just want to brag that’s fine, skip the false modesty. These look amazing. I love Lagerstrom’s recipes, they always turn out great for me.
Uh no…. They look perfect! You need to give all of us pointers
Terrible! Send them to me ad I will dispose them properly 😃
They look great to me! No notes. I struggle a little with shaping and end up making English muffins a lot more because they’re more forgiving. Congrats on a great job right as you start baking.