Best 3 How To Make Bagels Breadtopia Vermont Sourdough Bagels Recipes

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Embark on a culinary adventure to create the perfect bagels, inspired by the renowned Breadtopia Vermont Sourdough Bagels. Immerse yourself in the artistry of bread making as you learn the techniques and secrets behind these authentic, mouthwatering bagels. With careful attention to detail and a blend of traditional methods and modern innovation, you'll discover the secrets of achieving that crispy crust, chewy interior, and tantalizing tang that sets these bagels apart. Prepare to indulge in the joy of baking as you embark on this delightful journey.

Let's cook with our recipes!

WHOLE GRAIN SOURDOUGH BAGELS



Whole Grain Sourdough Bagels image

These whole grain sourdough bagels hit what I think is the most important characteristic of bagels. They're chewy. The inside has just the right density and texture, and the "skin" is thick and malty. On top of that, the bagels are full of the fiber, flavor, and nutrients of whole grain heritage wheat flours, and the leavening is sourdough without a very long process. Give them a try and you'll be hooked.

Provided by Melissa Johnson

Categories     Recipes

Time 1h48m

Yield 12

Number Of Ingredients 9

450g whole grain rouge de bordeaux flour (3 1/2 cups)
390g whole grain turkey red wheat flour (3 cups)
520-550g water (2 1/5 - 2 1/3 cups)
200g ripe sourdough starter (~1 cup)
17g salt (3 tsp)
15g vital wheat gluten (1 1/2 Tbsp)
Optional 5.6g diastatic barley malt powder (2 tsp)
For the boiling water, 2-3 heaping tablespoons barley malt syrup (non-diastatic) or baked baking soda as in this pretzel recipe
For topping the bagels, as desired: sesame seeds, poppy seeds, everything bagel seasoning, minced garlic, minced onion...etc.

Steps:

  • Early Morning Day 1: Starter Prep
  • Feed 40g sourdough starter with 80g whole grain flour and 80g water. Let it ripen in a warm spot until at least doubled. This should take 4-6 hours. If you don't have a warm spot, do a 70:70:70 feed; and if you prefer to prep the starter the night before, use cool water and a higher feeding ratio, for example 20:90:90.
  • Midday Day 1: Mixing and Fermenting
  • Combine all the ingredients in the bowl of a stand mixer with a dough hook. Mix for about 5 minutes at low speed. The dough should be stiffer than pizza dough but not as dry as pasta dough. If you don't have a stand mixer, after combining the ingredients, knead the dough by hand for about 5 minutes.
  • Lightly oil your bowl or bucket, place the dough inside, cover and let it rise until it has expanded by 75-100% (see the photo below). My dough took 5 hours in a warm lit-oven, but at cooler kitchen temps, your dough may need 8-10 hours. In the case of a cold environment, prepping the starter the night before and mixing in the morning may work best.
  • Evening Day 1: Shaping (see the video above)
  • Prep a large baking sheet with parchment paper and a dusting of flour.
  • Scrape your dough out of its bowl or bucket onto a lightly oiled work surface. Fold the dough into a thick tube and roll it to about 24 inches in length.
  • Cut the dough tube into 12 pieces.
  • Roll each piece into a ball, and then roll all the balls into tubes, de-gassing the dough as much as possible.
  • Wrap each tube around your palm and roll the seams on your work surface to seal and even out the bagel diameter.
  • Lay the bagels on your baking sheet and cover with plastic wrap.
  • Day 1 into Day 2 Overnight: Final Proof
  • Unlike yeast-leavened dough, some room temperature proofing is needed before refrigerating the this sourdough bagel dough. Let the shaped bagels rise at room temperature for about 1 hour and then refrigerate the baking sheet overnight. In a warm kitchen, 40 minutes at room temperature before retarding might be sufficient. If you prefer to boil and bake the bagels on Day 1, plan for a room temperature final proof of 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
  • Day 2: Stove and Oven Prep
  • Preheat your oven to 500F with a baking stone or steel on the middle shelf for at least 30 minutes.
  • Set 3 to 4 quarts of water to boil in a large pot.
  • Soak your bagel boards for at least 10 minutes by laying them inside a rimmed baking sheet and filling it with water.
  • Prepare dishes with seeds or any other bagel toppings you'd like to use.
  • When the water is boiling and the preheat is complete, add the barley malt syrup to the water and stir.
  • Remove the bagel dough from the refrigerator and remove the bagel boards from the water. Place the boards near your topping dishes, burlap-side up.
  • Place a bowl of ice water near your toppings to quickly dunk the bagels in between the boiling and the topping. You can skip this step if your hands are relatively impervious to high temperatures and you adequately drain water off each bagel.
  • Day 2: Boiling and Baking
  • Transfer three bagels to the boiling water and boil for 1 minute on each side, using your bagel scoop to flip them.
  • Remove the bagels from the boiling water and place them in the ice water.
  • Lay a drained bagel on the topping of your choice, and then carefully transfer it to a bagel board, topping side down.
  • Repeat this until you have six prepped bagels divided between two bagel boards.
  • Load the bagel boards into your oven and bake for 4 minutes.
  • Carefully turn the bagels over by lifting and flipping the boards so the bagels are now topping side up and baking directly onto the hot stone.
  • Continue baking for 14 minutes more.
  • Re-soak the boards and begin boiling and topping the next six bagels during this time so that when you remove the first batch from the oven, the next batch is ready to load.
  • Cooling and Storage
  • Let the bagels cool on a rack about 30 minutes before serving.
  • The bagels can be stored in beeswax, paper, or plastic bags.
  • After a couple of days, it's best to freeze the bagels. I like to pre-cut them in half and defrost directly in the toaster.

HOW TO MAKE BAGELS (BREADTOPIA VERMONT SOURDOUGH BAGELS)



How To Make Bagels (Breadtopia Vermont Sourdough Bagels) image

This recipe is best started in the afternoon or evening where a couple hours of prep work is needed (including an hour when the dough rests). The bagels are then refrigerated overnight and baked in the morning.

Provided by Eric Rusch

Categories     Recipes

Yield 12 or 18 bagels

Number Of Ingredients 14

For 12 Bagels:
838 g bread flour (can be up to 50% bolted whole wheat flour)
486 g water
17 g salt
5 g (~1 1/2 tsp)SAF instant yeast or 6 g Red Star organic yeast
5 g (~1 1/2 tsp)diastatic barley malt powder
2-3 heaping tablespoons non diastatic barley malt syrup (goes in boiling water)
For 18 Bagels:
1256 g bread flour (can be up to 50% bolted whole wheat flour)
728 g water
25 g salt
8 g (~2 1/4 tsp)SAF instant yeast or 9 g (one packet) Red Star organic yeast
7 g (~2 1/4 tsp)diastatic barley malt powder
2-3 heaping tablespoons non diastatic barley malt syrup (goes in boiling water)

Steps:

  • Combine all dry ingredients. In the video I demonstrate both an all white flour version (Addendum video) and a half white, half bolted flour flour version (Part 1). If you opt for the half and half version, bolted flour can be purchased here or you can pass whole grain flour once or twice through a 40 mesh screen. Turkey Red flour is used in the video, but common Hard Red Spring wheat would also work very well.
  • Add dry ingredients to water. If using a power mixer, first add water to the bowl of the mixer then gradually mix in dry ingredients until incorporated. Mix on lower setter for about 6 minutes. If hand kneading, add water to a large mixing bowl, gradually add dry ingredients to water until incorporated. Then turn out onto counter for 10-15 minutes of vigorous kneading. For the sourdough version: follow the video tutorial found at approximately the 5 minute mark of Part 1. (It is super easy to see visually).
  • Initial Proofing: Place the kneaded dough into a covered bowl to ferment for an hour.
  • Shaping: Divide the dough into 12 or 18 equal pieces (about 113 g each) and shape into bagels as demonstrated at the 10 1/2 minute mark of the Part 1 video. Place the bagels on dusted cookie sheets, cover with plastic and refrigerate overnight.
  • Final Proofing (if necessary), Boiling, Topping and Baking: How you proceed at this stage depends a lot on the type of flour and yeast you used, and possibly your room temperature. Since a picture (or video in this case) is worth 1,000 words, I am going to save you the reading and instead force you to watch the videos Parts 2 and the Addendum to get the gist of this part. It is nothing extraordinarily complex so please do not fret.
  • Basically, an all white flour bagel leavened with common commercial instant yeast will be ready to go into the boiling pot of water straight from the fridge. Whereas a sourdough and/or Bioreal yeast leavened bagel may need up to a few hours at room temperature to rise some before being ready to boil. Whichever path you take, the bagels will be ready to boil when they have risen a bit and are somewhat (not much) spongy to the touch.
  • Baking Time & Temperature: Preheat your oven and baking stone to 500ºF. Bake topping side down on the bagel boards for 4 minutes then flip over onto the stone for an additional approximately 14-16 minutes. Just go by site on when they're done baking. Not all ovens bake the same. When the bagels have turned a light golden brown, they're likely done.

SOURDOUGH BAGELS



Sourdough Bagels image

Make and share this Sourdough Bagels recipe from Food.com.

Provided by Chef.Jules

Categories     Sourdough Breads

Time 15h35m

Yield 12 bagels, 12 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 7

2 tablespoons sourdough starter
1 1/2 cups warm water
1 1/2 cups flour
1 1/2 ounces sugar
1/2 ounce salt
2 cups additional flour
1 egg white

Steps:

  • Mix sourdough starter, warm water, and flour in a bowl. Cover and let sit overnight; the mixture should look bubbly and "spongy" in the morning.
  • Add sugar, salt and additional flour. Mix well.
  • Knead on a floured surface for 10 minutes, adding additional flour as needed. The dough should be firm. Place dough in a greased bowl, cover, and let rise until double (sour dough takes longer to rise than traditional yeast breads).
  • After punching down, divide dough into 12 balls. Make a hole in the middle of each ball with your thumb, and shape into a bagel shape, with a 2" hole in the middle.
  • Meanwhile, bring 2 quarts of water to boil on your stove-top. Drop 2 or 3 bagels at a time into the water; boil for 30 seconds, flip bagels over, and boil for an additional 30 seconds. Drain with slotted spoon and place on baking sheet.
  • Brush tops with egg white and add additional toppings if desired (poppy seeds, dried onions, etc.).
  • Bake at 350 for 35 minutes, turning once for even browning. Bagels are done when they are golden and shiny.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 147.8, Fat 0.4, SaturatedFat 0.1, Sodium 467.6, Carbohydrate 31.4, Fiber 1, Sugar 3.6, Protein 4.1

Tips:

  • Use the best ingredients. This means using high-quality flour, water, salt, and yeast. You can also add other ingredients, such as malt syrup or honey, to enhance the flavor of your bagels.
  • Follow the recipe carefully. Bagel making is a precise process, so it's important to follow the recipe carefully. If you don't, you may end up with bagels that are too dense, too chewy, or not cooked all the way through.
  • Use the right equipment. You'll need a few basic pieces of equipment to make bagels, including a large bowl, a rolling pin, a baking sheet, and a Dutch oven. If you don't have a Dutch oven, you can use a large pot with a lid.
  • Be patient. Bagel making takes time. You'll need to allow the dough to rise for several hours, and then you'll need to boil the bagels before baking them. But the end result is worth the wait!

Conclusion:

Bagel making is a fun and rewarding experience. With a little practice, you'll be able to make delicious bagels that your family and friends will love. So what are you waiting for? Give it a try today!

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