this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2024
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For those that haven't tried them, and don't fancy going to NYC or Montreal for the "authentic bagel experience", try making your own and you'll see the huge difference between what you get in supermarkets (even good ones with good bakeries like Lidl) and a proper bagel. While there's a few steps, it's not hard to make.
But for the yanks, you should absolutely try German bakeries. I can understand why even good bagels aren't a priority for them...
I recently, as a lifelong montrealer, spent a few days in Manhattan and tried the bagels. Montreal bagels have this kind of faint aroma you get from the honey in the dough that I just didn't find in New York bagels, the flavor of the new York bagels was much closer to bread but the texture was great. Also, maybe a New Yorker could answer this, but were they always so big with almost no hole or is that a development from them being used for sandwiches?
I read they use a malt syrup in NY instead of honey when they boil them, I've always wanted to try making them that way.
Ah! That goes to show how our local experience shapes our definition of things. Is the malt syrup or honey more traditional (I'm guessing honey but you never know)?