Cinnamon Raisin Bagels

 
 
 

Bagels are boiled, which most people know. What they may not know is the water isn’t salted, it’s malted. Barley malt (yes, two words which mean the same thing) syrup is added to the water to help the outside get tough.

When I worked at a bakery in Somerville, New Jersey, we made bagels. We made them big, 6 ounces, and they sure did smell good in the morning. This is a modified version of that recipe and I scale them to 4 ounces. Bagels really do benefit from sitting in the cooler overnight. There’s something to getting them to stay together which practice can fix. Key to success is to not overwork the dough as you are scaling it into portions. The more work you give the dough, the more challenging the dough will be when rolling to shape. Gentle is the key.

If you can’t find malt syrup at your store, you can buy some on-line or use molasses. The malt, a product of barley, does enhance the flavor, but not so much that you must get it. The more important element is sugaring the water with syrup and boiling them. Don’t let malt stand in the way of you making bagels.

My bagels and molasses water coming to a boil.

 

 

 

 

 

Cinnamon Raisin Bagels

563 g Bread Flour
11 g Honey
13 g Salt
2+ g Instant yeast
330g Water
5 g Malt Syrup
55 g Hydrated Raisins
29 g Light Brown Sugar
3 g Cinnamon

Pour hot tap or boiling water over the raisins and let them stand 20 minutes. If you plan well, do this the night before. Normally we would use the weight of raisins which have been soaked but I’ve found my audience loves raisins so I add a lot.

Place the water into the bowl. Add the scaled ingredients to the water. Weigh the honey and malt syrup directly into the flour. Add the dry ingredients to the water and place the mixing bowl on the machine. With the dough hook, mix the bagel dough for three minutes. You want to see the dough start to come together. Raise the speed to medium and mix three more minutes. Add the drained soaked raisins, mix. This may take longer than you expect. No worries. When the dough has come back together and is cleaning the bowl, remove the dough to a lightly buttered clean bowl, cover with plastic and rest 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, pick up the dough, pull it a couple of times to stretch it, reshape it into a ball and back in the bowl, covered, for another 30 minutes.

Scale the dough to 4 oz portions. They are folded like little loaves. That dough is then rolled into a long loaf, but is sealed on itself. The gift of YouTube makes this easier to understand.

Golden Brown and Delicious bagels

 

 

 

 

 

At this point, I place them on a sheet pan lined with baking paper or a silicone baking mat which has been lightly dusted with cornmeal. Cover the pan with plastic and let the start to proof. When they have doubled in size, cover the pan and place it in the cooler overnight.

In the morning, remove the bagels from the cooler and place the pan on the counter. Allow them to start getting to room temperature as you bring a gallon of water to a boil with 2 ounces of malt syrup or molasses.

When the water boils, carefully place the bagels into the water. If you have a normal household pan, 4 at a time is good. The bagels should boil about 45 seconds. Remove them with a strainer the handle of a wooden spoon in the hole. Place them in a bowl then transfer them back to the sheetpan they came from.  Here’s a short video to help.

I don’t have a hearth at home so I bake then on the sheet pan with cornmeal underneath. It is in part to help them come off the paper when they are dough, but also, I like the crunch.

Bake 20-25 minutes or until they are nicely golden brown. Remove, cool, slice and enjoy.

We spread a pumpkin cream cheese on ours and it was Yum!

My Momm’s Pecan Rum Ball Cookies

The official cookie of Christmas

Little cookies of deliciousness. That’s about enough for 1 person, nutritional standards exempted.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Liz' Pecan Rum Balls

The confectionary start of Christmas baking at our house, these little gems were prized over all other cookies. Shortbread crumbliness and pecan deliciousness and powdered sugar. What more could a kid want?

Course Cookies
Cuisine American
Keyword Baking, Butter Cookies, Christmas cookies, cookies, pecans
Prep Time 15 minutes
Dough rest time 4 hours
Total Time 4 hours 15 minutes
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Ingredients

  • 200 g All-purpose flour
  • 25 g Pecans, finely chopped
  • 50 g Light brown sugar
  • 4 oz Whole, unsalted, butter
  • 1 t Vanilla extract
  • 1/4 t Salt
  • 1-2 T Milk, as needed
  • Powdered sugar for coating

Instructions

Procedure

  1. Blend all ingredients together like a shortbread. You can do this in a mixer, but go slow. You don’t want to over-mix the dough. Add just enough milk to bring the dough together. The dough may mix an additional 30 seconds before you see the results of what you've added, so be patient and don't over mix. Over mixing will make a tough cookie.

  2. Cool dough for 4 hours. Dish cookies, 1” diameter, roll between hands to form into a ball shape. Place onto Silpat lined pans and bake for 10-12 minutes. The cookies should have a light golden brown color.

    Aim for 1 oz or smaller cookies. They will puff a little bit and increase their size. I scaled them at 25 grams and at that they seemed a bit big for one bite.

  3. Remove to a cooling rack and allow to cool at least 5 minutes before removing them from the pan to a cooling rack or laid out paper grocery sack.

    Allow the cookies to cool completely before coating in the powdered sugar.

  4. Put several cups of powdered sugar in a zip-top bag and add half a dozen or so cookies to that bag. Gently turn the bag over to coat the cookies in sugar. Remove and repeat. Then hide them.

 

That is not a typo, my momm.  Many moons ago I wrote my name with an extra “N”, creating Dann.  She decided to be Momm.  So, it stuck.

These may well be the most favorite Christmas cookie she ever made as judged by how quickly we kids at them no matter how well she hid them.  They are rum-free and I don’t know why they are called that.  But, as is often the case, families do odd things for a variety of reasons and so it is here.

As presented this recipe makes a small amount of dough.  Enjoy them.  Please do remember that they coat in the powdered sugar best when they are completely cooled off.  Not the cooler, just at room temperature.  If you sugar them while they are warm they make a gooey coating of sugar on the outside which is not visually appealing but might fine-tasting.  You decide.

Half sheet pans, just like these from my affiliate link at Amazon, are perfect for all cookie baking.

For the adults, some Pecan Rum Balls and Kahlua is a great treat.  Make your own Kahlua with this recipe.  It takes a few weeks, at least, but the time is well worth the result.