It is 100% possible to make excellent bagels at home without any unusual equipment or ingredients! Follow the step-by-step guide below; wake up to homemade bagels tomorrow 🥯🥯🥯🥯

A sheet pan filled with freshly baked bagels.

My bagel-making experiments began earlier this summer in, of all places, the modestly equipped kitchen of a rental cabin at Lake George. We had just tasted the first good summer tomatoes, found at a farm stand in Bolton Landing, and all at once, all I wanted to eat was a good, toasted bagel, smeared with cream cheese, topped with a beefy tomato slice, sprinkled with sea salt.

I’ve longed to find/adapt/create an easy or easy-ish bagel recipe, but past summers have escaped without more than the odd experiment. It was time to take a deep or deep-ish dive.

Having had success using the peasant bread dough to make many various bread forms, I hoped it might take to the bagel format, too, but I quickly learned it would not: the peasant bread dough is way too wet (high hydration*) and my first experiments yielded flat, dense disks, edible but not acceptable.

I’ll spare you all the details, but after many experiments, I’ve learned that the process of making bagels is a real departure from the one I’m so used to. Bagels require kneading, shaping, boiling, and egg washing. But they can, I think, be easy-ish. I find these to be just that, kind of fun to make, very tasty, and perfect for my ideal breakfast this time of year. Good enough for me. I hope you approve.

How to Make Homemade Bagels

• To get that characteristic chewiness—in other words, to ensure bagels don’t simply taste like bread shaped like bagels—the dough needs to be kneaded. After reading a Stella Park’s article, I decided to do this in the food processor, which takes 90 seconds.

• As always, a digitial scale is essential for consistent results, but it’s even more essential here—lower hydration* doughs are less forgiving. I never weigh the water for peasant bread recipes, but I do here, and I also weigh the salt, which, in this humidity, has been feeling lighter in the measuring spoons than usual.

• To prevent the shaped dough rings from turning into pancakes upon being boiled, the dough hydration* needs to be relatively low. In other words, the dough should be relatively stiff.

• If you have the time, an overnight rise in the fridge is best.

• To get that nice, golden sheen during the baking, an egg wash is essential. Commercial bakers often boil their bagels in a lye solution, which promotes browning and gives the bagel crust a crispness. As lye is something I am unwilling to experiment with—remember, I’ve embarked on a deep-ish dive—an egg wash is a fine substitute. It does not help with crispness, but it gives the bagels the look.

• An optional but nice ingredients to use in your homemade bagels is barley malt syrup, which can be ordered online or found in specialty shops or, as one commenter shared, in beer making supply stores. Stella Parks says that in addition to providing flavor, barley malt syrup promotes “a more delicate texture in the crust, one that’s chewy and crisp rather than crunchy and hard.” I’ve had a jar on hand since reading her article, and I’ve been happy with the texture of my homemade bagels as a result, but know that you can create very good bagels at home without it. I recently learned that the chef, David Wurth, of Cross Roads in Hillsdale, who makes exceptional bagels, uses maple syrup in his boiling solution, so if you don’t feel like hunting down barley malt syrup, you don’t have to.

PS: Foolproof Homemade Bialys: A Step by Step Guide

* Hydration is not something I ever talk about here or in my book, because typically I find the concept confuses and intimidates people rather than helps. Hydration is the percentage of liquid in a dough. I mention it today only because I think the most significant difference—more than kneading, boiling, shaping—between bagels and the peasant bread (and so many breads I love) is the hydration. Bagels are low hydration; peasant bread is high. Bagels are not light and airy; they are chewy and dense. These bagels are 69% hydration (calculated by dividing the weight of the water by the weight of the flour), whereas the peasant bread dough is about 94% hydration. 

How to Make Homemade Bagels: A Step-by-Step Guide

Gather your ingredients and equipment. A digital scale and a food processor or stand mixer make this recipe nearly foolproof:

A counter with bagel-making ingredients.

Whisk together the water and barley malt syrup:

A jar of barley malt syrup.

Add the liquid ingredients to the flour, salt, and instant yeast, and knead for 90 seconds:

Bagel-making ingredients in the food processor.
Bagel dough in food processor.

Use greased hands to transfer it to a bowl. Coat it with a little bit of olive or grapeseed oil. On the left: just-mixed dough. On the right: dough after a night in the fridge.

Two bowls filled with rising bagel dough.
Bowls of bagel dough covered with bowl covers.

After 12 hours (or more or less) in the fridge, turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface.

Bagel dough on counter.

Portion the dough into 12 pieces:

Bagel dough portioned into 12 pieces.

Ball them up:

Bagel dough portions balled up.

Shape them into rings, by using your thumb to poke a hole in the center of the round, then both hands to stretch the dough out and under—don’t be afraid to be aggressive.

A board with shaped bagels.

Prepare the water bath by boiling water with barley malt syrup or maple syrup.

A jar of barley malt syrup aside resting, shaped bagels.

Get ready to boil:

Bagels ready to be boiled.

Boil 30 seconds a side:

Boiled bagels.

Transfer boiled bagels to a tea towel-lined sheet pan.

Boiled bagels on sheet pan, drying.

Brush bagels with an egg wash:

Bagels brushed with egg wash.

Dip in desired seasonings:

Bagels coated in seeds.

Bake until golden.

Just-baked bagels.
Just baked bagels all together.
Just-baked bagels on board.
Halved bagels on board.

Invite some friends over for brunch. Find yourself some good tomatoes; enter summer-morning breakfast nirvana.

Bagels + cream cheese + tomatoes + salt on a plate.
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A sheet pan filled with freshly baked bagels.

Foolproof Homemade Bagels Recipe


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Description

Equipment Notes:

As noted above, I find a scale to be imperative here: I use it to weigh not only the flour but also the water, salt, and yeast.

A large sheet pan is so handy — it fits all 12 bagels at once. If you don’t have a large one, use two standard sheet pans, and bake 6 on each. 

You’ll need a spider or a slotted spoon to remove the bagels from the boiling water to a sheet pan.

A food processor or stand mixer will allow you to knead the dough quickly and powerfully.  I love my 14-cup Cuisinart.

Note: Watch your food processor closely! If you make the larger amount (12 bagels), it’s a lot of dough for even a large food processor. You’ll only run the machine for 90 seconds, but it will work hard during those 90 seconds and may jump around a bit — at any sign of the blade jamming, stop the machine and remove the dough. Also, after you add the liquids to the food processor, begin the kneading immediately to prevent the liquid from escaping through the center hole.

If you don’t have a food processor or a stand mixer, knead the dough by hand briefly, using as little additional flour as possible.

Ingredient Notes:

Many bread authorities swear by using high-gluten flour. This is something I have yet to try, but I imagine it would only improve the chewiness. But if you don’t feel like picking up another product, don’t hesitate to use all-purpose flour, which is what I typically use in all of the breads I bake.

Barley malt syrup is hard to find. Shops like Whole Foods Market typically sell it. I order it online. Also, as one commenter noted, beer making supply stores carry barley malt syrup.

For homemade everything bagel seasoning, combine:

  • 1/4 cup sesame seeds
  • 1/4 cup poppy seeds
  • 3 tablespoons dried onion flakes
  • 3 tablespoons dried garlic flakes
  • 2 tablespoons flaky sea salt

Ingredients

For 8 bagels:

  • 4 cups (512 g) all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  • 2 teaspoons (13 g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • 1 tsp (4 g) instant yeast
  • 1 1/4 cups (350 g) lukewarm water
  • 1 teaspoon barley malt syrup, maple syrup, or honey + more for boiling
  • grapeseed or olive or other neutral oil

For 12 bagels:

  • 6 cups (768 g) all-purpose flour
  • 3 teaspoons (20 g) kosher salt, I use Diamond Crystal
  • 1.5 tsp (6 g) instant yeast
  • 2 cups + 2 tablespoon (530 g) lukewarm water
  • 1  heaping teaspoon barley malt syrup, maple syrup, or honey + more for boiling
  • grapeseed or olive or other neutral oil

For baking:

  • 1 egg whisked with 1 tablespoon water
  • various toppings: everything bagel seasoning, sesame seeds, dukkah, etc.

Instructions

  1. In the bowl of a food processor fitted with the blade attachment (or in a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook), pulse together the flour, salt and yeast (or, if using a stand mixer, stir on low). In a medium bowl, whisk together the water and the barley malt syrup. Add it to the food processor (or stand mixer) and immediately (see notes above for why) blend for 60-90 seconds, standing nearby the entire time — at any sign of the blade jamming, stop the machine. (If using a stand mixer, knead on medium speed for 90 seconds.)
  2. With oiled hands, transfer the dough from the food processor to the bowl. The dough will feel warm and sticky. With oiled hands stretch the dough up, then down toward the center several times to form a ball. (See video for guidance.) Lightly rub some oil over the dough to coat — this will prevent a crust from forming on the dough. Cover with a tea towel, cloth bowl cover or plastic wrap. Transfer bowl to the fridge for 12 hours or longer.
  3. Place a large pot of water on to boil. When it simmers, add a big glug (about ¼ cup) barley malt syrup. Preheat an oven to 425ºF. Line two sheet pans or one large pan one with parchment paper (see notes above). Prepare the egg wash if you haven’t already. Place toppings of choice in shallow bowls.
  4. Remove bowl with dough from fridge. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. For perfectly even bagels, use your scale to portion the dough into 8 or 12 pieces, depending on the quantity of dough you made—if you weighed your ingredients, each dough ball should weigh about 105  to 110 g. Form each portion into a ball, using the pinky edges of your fingers to create tension. After all of the balls have been formed, dust your hands with flour and use your thumb to poke a hole into the center of each dough ball. Use your hands to stretch the dough into a donut-shape—don’t be afraid to really tug outward and under, almost as if you were going to turn the dough inside out but stop before you do. Note: If you don’t pull out and under, the bagels will puff into cone-liked shapes upon baking. Truly: Be aggressive with the shaping. Video guidance here.
  5. Line a sheet pan with a tea towel. Have a stopwatch (or your phone or a clock) nearby. Drop 4 of the dough rings into the boiling water at one time. Boil 30 seconds on each side. Use a spider or slotted spoon to transfer the boiled rings to the towel-lined pan. Repeat until all of the rings have been boiled.
  6. Brush each ring with the egg wash. If you are using any toppings, dip the egg-washed bagels into the topping-filled bowls, then transfer to the parchment-lined sheet pan. If you an extra large sheet pan (see notes), you can bake all 12 at once. If you have a smaller pan, bake 6 to 8 at one time.
  7. Transfer pan or pans to the oven and bake for 20 to 25 minutes or until bagels are evenly golden all around. If you are using two pans, rotate the pans halfway through. Let bagels cool on sheet pans.
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 30 minutes
  • Category: Bread
  • Method: Boil & Bake
  • Cuisine: American