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TIP:
You can leave your bagels plain or top them with
sesame seeds, poppy seeds, kosher salt, onion
bits or other toppings of your choice.

Note:
Note: I have made the dough with great success
in a bread machine, using 4 1/2 cups flour.
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Makes 1 Dozen
Combine 1/4 cup warm water, 1 tsp. sugar and yeast in a large
bowl. Stir to dissolve, then let stand for about 5 minutes or until
foamy. Stir in remaining 1 1/4 cups warm water, sugar, salt and
about 4 cups of flour and mix until well combined. Mix in enough
of the remaining flour until you have a soft dough.
Turn dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead
until smooth and elastic, about 5-8 minutes. Shape into a ball and
place in a greased bowl. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and let
rise in a warm place for until doubled, about an hour and a half.
Punch down dough and divide into 12 pieces. Cover
with the towel again and let rest for 20 minutes.
 
With floured hands, roll each piece of dough into a rope 12-14
in length. Wrap the rope into a circle and pinch to close. Repeat
with remaining pieces.
Preheat oven to 375° F. Bring a large pot of water, mixed with
the molasses, to a boil.
Drop a couple of bagels into the water at a time, poaching
them for about 20 seconds. Use a slotted spoon to transfer bagels
to an ungreased baking
sheet, (or one that's covered in parchment
paper). Sprinkle with toppings, if desired, and bake for about
20 minutes, or until crusty and browned.

Tak's Professional Bagel Making Secrets
Shaping -- The easiest way for someone that
doesn't have years of training at hand shaping is to make a ball,
stick their finger through it, make the finger and dough do a hula
hoop thing, take it off the finger and shape it to look like a bagel.
Boiling -- Drop the bagels into the near boiling
water before the dough has a chance to rise, insuring that the bagels
will sink. If the bagels are left in the water too long, the bagels
will become gooey in the hole, so skim the the bottom of the pot
to make sure that the bagels aren't sticking, and will surface.
Remove the bagels when they surface and rinse off with cold water,
and put the seeds of choice on your bagel (cinnamon raisin, egg,
or pumpernickel bagels need a separate dough, of course).
Baking -- Here is the most important part.
Bagels are cooked on Bagel boards, but for the home cooked bagel,
you can do this by taking a cooking sheet and putting a wet towel
on half of it, the bagels are placed on the towel( seed side down),
after about 6-7 minutes of baking, use the towel to turn the bagels
on to the side that is baked(so that the bagels are seed side up
on the hot baking sheet, now they won't stick to the baking sheet).
Bagels should not be flat and hard on the bottom, that is the reason
for bagel boards. The main idea is to keep the seeds in tact until
the bottom has raised enough to not stick to the pan.
Storage -- Very important, never refrigerate
a bagel! Freezing is O.K., but refrigeration will make it as hard
as a rock!
Click here
to read Tak's History of the Bagel.
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