Seasoned Advice Asked on October 12, 2020
I made this bagel recipe, and here is the result:
As you can see, the tops are beautiful, but the bottoms have stuck to the wire rack they were baked on, and have torn upon removal. The recipe does not mention greasing the rack (in either its written or video form), but should I be doing that anyway? Or is there some other way that I’m supposed to keep these bagels from sticking?
Those look like great bagels, as a native New Yorker living abroad in a place with no bagels I both salute and envy your results! I have also been baking my own to get my fix.
Baking bread on a wire rack is generally a bad idea, and a very bad idea with bagels. Bagels are very sticky because you boil them, this gelatinizes the outer layer of the dough, making it very soft so it will mold around any shape. They will sink onto any shape you put them on no matter what you coat them with and then bake onto that shape, so you need to bake them on a flat surface. They will also stick like glue to a flat surface, and there's one or two ways to counteract that:
I usually do both just to make sure.
Correct answer by GdD on October 12, 2020
I usually bake mine on a parchment paper lined sheet pan...no sticking. I could see how they might stick to a wire rack. If you insist on using the rack, perhaps a mist of cooking spray would help, before you place the bagels on. Once baked, you can remove them to the rack for cooking. They will not stick at that point.
Answered by moscafj on October 12, 2020
In my experience bagels stick to almost anything. My theory is that the main reason they are traditionally coated with seeds is to counteract this.
When I prove bread in a banneton I layer the bottom with seeds to reduce the chance of the loaf sticking, and means when I turn it out the seeds are on top and well attached to the loaf, which makes a more successful topping than just sprinkling seeds on before baking. On the same principle I positively dredge bagels in seeds both for their own sake and to keep the tack dough from making contact with baking surfaces.
Answered by Spagirl on October 12, 2020
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