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Sourdough Bagel Guide
Sourdough bagels have a chewy crust and tangy flavour. This guide covers boiling, hydration, fermentation timing, and how to form the classic ring shape. Use our sourdough bagel calculator to get exact ingredient weights.
What makes sourdough bagels different
Sourdough bagels use wild fermentation instead of commercial yeast. The long fermentation develops deeper flavour and a chewier texture. Yeast bagels rise quickly; sourdough bagels benefit from overnight cold fermentation for the best results.
Boiling
Boiling bagels before baking creates the characteristic chewy crust. Boil 30–60 seconds per side in water, or add baking soda for a golden sheen, or malt syrup for a shiny, slightly sweet crust. The boiling sets the surface and gives bagels their distinctive texture.
Hydration
Bagels use low hydration—around 56%—for a dense, chewy crumb. The dough should be stiff and easy to shape. High hydration would make the dough too slack and the bagels would lose their shape during boiling.
Fermentation
Bulk ferment 4–8 hours at room temp, then shape and cold proof overnight (12–24 hours) in the fridge. Cold fermentation develops flavour and makes the dough easier to handle. Let the bagels come to room temperature for 30–60 minutes before boiling.
Forming
Roll each piece into a ball, then poke a hole through the centre with your thumb. Stretch the hole to about one-third the diameter of the bagel. Alternatively, roll into a rope and join the ends. The hole will shrink during proofing and baking—make it larger than you think.
Frequently Asked Questions
Boiling sets the starch on the surface, creating a chewy, glossy crust. It also helps the bagels hold their shape and gives the classic dense texture.
Around 56%. Low hydration keeps the dough stiff and shapeable. Higher hydration would make the dough too slack for boiling.
Yes. A tablespoon or two of baking soda per litre of water gives bagels a golden, slightly shiny crust. It's a classic technique.
12–24 hours in the fridge is typical. Longer develops more flavour. Let them warm up 30–60 minutes before boiling and baking.
Bread flour works well. High-gluten flour gives the chewiest result—closest to traditional NYC bagels. All-purpose gives a softer bagel.
The hole shrinks during proofing and baking. Make it larger when shaping—about one-third the diameter of the bagel. If the dough is overproofed, it can collapse and close the hole.
Sourdough bagels are dense by design — low hydration, high gluten flour, a brief boil, then a hot bake. Below: the questions readers ask after their first batch.
Sourdough bagel FAQ
55–60 % on high-gluten or strong bread flour. Higher hydration gives a softer, breadier bagel; lower (down to 50 %) gives a chewier New York style.
Barley malt syrup feeds the yeast, deepens the crust color (Maillard browning), and gives that classic bagel sweetness. Honey is a workable substitute; sugar is a distant third.
30–60 seconds per side at a rolling boil. Longer gives a chewier crust; shorter gives a thinner skin and more rise in the oven.
Yes — shape the bagels, place on a parchment-lined sheet, cover, and refrigerate 8–24 hours. Boil and bake straight from the fridge.
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Disclaimer: Baking results vary based on flour type, ambient temperature, starter health, and technique. Use this guide and our sourdough hydration calculator as a starting point, then adjust to your conditions.