Sourdough bagels are savory, chewy, crusty, and deliciously tangy. These are an amazing way to start your morning or to enjoy for a yummy brunch.
Sourdough may be one of my favorite ways to start the morning, whether it be breakfast strata, pancakes, English muffins, crepes, or these delicious bagels.
Itโs a delicious, easy, and filling way to start our busy days, fueled up.
Bagels may seem intimidating, but I promise that they really arenโt that difficult. It’s much like making any baked sourdough recipe, with the added step of cooking it in boiling water for a few minutes before baking.
These sourdough bagels have a yummy and tangy flavor, pairing really well with sweet or savory dishes. Theyโre a wonderful comfort food.
I love slathering cream cheese or homemade butter all over them.
Below, I share a few different variations and a bunch of bagel sandwich ideas.
Sourdough Bagel FAQ
Are all bagels sourdough?
No. They are typically leavened with either sourdough or commercial yeast. Unless they are specifically labeled as sourdough, you can expect bagels to be made with commercial yeast.
Why is there a hole in a bagel?
There is a hole for more even cooking throughout. This also helps with crust development.
Are bagels bad for you?
While they tend to be higher in calories, these simple sourdough bagels are made with wholesome ingredients and healthy fermented grains.
What do you eat bagels with?
There are so many ways to eat bagels. Most commonly, they are served with cream cheese. See below for sandwich recommendations.
Why are bagels boiled at first?
You boil bagels first to set the crust, which allows them to hold their shape in the oven. The longer you boil them, the thicker the crust. Boiling for 60 seconds on each side yields the perfect result. Although this step may seem silly, donโt skip it – it is one of the most important.
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Tips:
- Use a slotted spoon or โspiderโ strainer to flip and pull the bagels out of the boiling water.
- If you donโt have a sourdough starter, you can check out this post, where I show you exactly how to make a starter from scratch.
- Cook 2-4 bagels in the baking soda water at a time. Donโt overcrowd your pot.
- You can knead the dough by hand or use a stand mixer. A stand mixer is much easier and less time consuming.
Tools you may need:
Measuring cups and spoons
Large pot or dutch oven
Parchment paper
Topping ideas
- Shredded cheddar cheese
- Sesame seeds
- Dried onion/dried garlic flakes
- Poppy seeds
- Everything But The Bagel seasoning
- Cinnamon sugar topping
Additional Bagel Add-Ins:
Mix in these extras into the dough right before forming into bagels:
Blueberries – add fresh blueberries
Cinnamon and raisins
Chocolate chips
How To Make Sourdough Bagels From Scratch
Add sourdough starter, water, honey, salt, and two cups of flour to a stand mixer.
Mix until it comes together, about 10 minutes on low speed. The dough will be really stiff and difficult to incorporate.
Add remaining flour, half a cup at a time. Use a dough hook and knead until it is smooth and pliable. You could also knead by hand, but the stand mixer makes this process much easier.
Cover dough with wet tea towel, plastic wrap, or beeswax wrap; allow to ferment for 8 to 12 hours. Donโt just cover with a dry towel, because it will create a hard skin on the top of your dough, which you donโt want.
After the dough has fermented, divide into 8 equal pieces.
Roll the dough into balls, flatten them down a bit, and poke a hole in the middle with your finger. Stretch the hole a bit to widen.
Cover with a tea towel and allow the dough to rise in a warm spot for two hours or until puffy. The time will depend on how warm your house is. It could take 1 to 4 hours.
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add the baking soda and sugar.
Using a slotted spoon, gently add bagels to the water and boil for one minute, flip, then boil for another minute.
Shake off excess water and dip into desired toppings (optional).
Place boiled bagels on parchment-lined baking sheet.
Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until golden on top.
Sourdough Bagel Sandwich Ideas
Truly, a sourdough bagel is a vessel for the yummy toppings you want to add.
- Breakfast sandwich – add a fried egg, bacon or sausage, cheese, and some lettuce for a yummy way to start your morning.
- Cream cheese and veggie. Spread cream cheese on bagel, add slices of tomato, cucumber, avocado (optional). Sprinkle with salt and enjoy.
- Avocado… bagel. Rather than toast. Add sliced avocado and sprinkle with salt.
- Locks – cream cheese and smoked salmon (locks) make a really delicious sandwich any time of day.
- Turkey club. Really any of your favorite lunch meat will do; top with slices of cheese, tomato, avocado, and an egg.
- Ham and cheese. Top with ham and a slice of Swiss or cheddar cheese. Bake it in the oven until the cheese starts to melt. Honey mustard takes this up a notch.
- Add chicken salad
Find More Sourdough Recipes:
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars!
Sourdough Bagels
Ingredients
- ยฝ cup sourdough starter, bubbly and active
- 1 cup water
- 2 tablespoons honey
- 2 teaspoons salt
- 4 cups unbleached all purpose flour
For boiling the bagels
- 2 quarts water
- 1 tablespoon baking soda
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar
Instructions
- Add sourdough starter, water, honey, salt, and two cups flour to a stand mixer.
- Mix until it comes together, about 10 minutes on low speed. The dough will be really stiff and difficult to incorporate.
- Add remaining flour, half a cup at a time. Use a dough hook and knead until it is smooth and pliable.
- Cover dough with wet tea towel, plastic wrap, or beeswax wrap and allow to ferment for 8 to 12 hours.
- After fermentation, divide into 8 equal pieces.
- Roll the dough into balls, flatten them down a bit, and poke a hole in the middle with your finger. Stretch the hole a bit to widen.
- Cover with a tea towel and allow the dough to rise in a warm spot for 1-4 hours or until puffy.
- Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add the baking soda and sugar.
- Using a slotted spoon, gently add bagels to the water and boil for one minute, flip, then boil for another minute.
- Shake off excess water and dip into desired toppings (optional).
- Place boiled bagels on parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until golden on top.
Notes
- Use a slotted spoon or โspiderโ strainer to flip and to pull the bagels out of the boiling water.
- Cook 2-4 bagels in the baking soda water at a time. Donโt overcrowd your pot.
- You can knead the dough by hand or use a stand mixer. A stand mixer is much easier and less time consuming.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
May of tweaks your recipe
I added a cup of starter to the recipe and the dough was a lot better to work with
And a lot more better texture for the bagels
I realized too late that your metric conversions are inaccurate. It asks me to add 1/2 cup of flour extra. It should be 500 grams, not 560. My dough is quite hard, hopefully it will turn out okay!
UGH I noticed too late as well. Steph, did they turn out ok? Of course I made a triple batch so this is frustrating.
They were okay but kind of hard. I’m trying them again today with less flour, fingers crossed!
All my bagels stuck to the parchment paper out of the oven. Definitely ruined the look of them but they still tasted great.
Oh no!
What happen to your recipe, you use to list the grams and they are gone now?
They are still there! Below the ingredients, you will see a toggle switch from volume to weighted!
Hello Lisa. I live in a very humid environment and I always have to adjust the hydration in all recipes. I’ve tried a couple other recipes and the bagels all come out flat after baking. When they looked puffy before boiling and after and then the oven 3 out of the 8 will be puffy the rest not. What amount of water do you think I should use for your recipe? How much should I adjust and what do you think I’m doing wrong as to why they flatten out??? I always love all your content and recipes and appreciate you so much. Please help my bagel flops
I have made this recipe several times and love it but forgot to made salt what should I do?! I just mixed all the ingredients together
Iโm concerned about my bagels! I added everything the way you said to but my mixer was having a hard time (like you said, the dough was stiff and flour was difficult to incorporate!). But you said it would be, so I pressed on. However, while kneading the last 1/2 cup of flour, my mixer started smoking, so I turned it off. The dough was smooth, but pliable? Maybeโฆ how pliable is pliable? Soft and stretchy like bread dough it was not. It is now half way through the fermentation process. Should I knead some more? Will it rise much? How dense should it be? The bagels are for dinner with my mother in law tomorrow and Iโd rather it not be a big flop! I donโt know if I can fix them if theyโre messed up, but I donโt know if I should try! Itโs my first time making bagels so I donโt know what the dough should look like at all! Any help is much appreciated!
I would let it rest and you can try kneading it by hand. It will probably be good to go!
Thank you for the bagel recipe. Now if I could get NY water. Thatโs why NY bagelโs are always the best. Will make in the next few days.โค๏ธ๐ฅฏ
Hi! These bagels are DELICIOUS!! I have been adding jalapenos and cheddar cheese to these, and they are a favorite of ours! Normally I wait until the morning when I’m about to shape the dough to add in jalapenos and cheddar cheese. I am wondering if I choose to add jalapenos and cheddar cheese into the dough when I am mixing it, is it still okay for it to sit on the counter overnight? I am not sure what the rules are on letting cheese sit out for 8-12 hours after it has been mixed into dough…
I would continue to wait until the morning to add in your cheese and jalapenos.
I love this recipe, but is there a way to make them a chocolate bagel?
Yes, you could either add chocolate chips or a bit of cocoa powder.