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Homemade Soft Pretzels
October 1, 2005 |
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| I've always loved the big soft pretzels they sell at ball parks and carnivals. I decided to try making some myself, and it's not too hard. I made a dozen small ones here, but next time I do it I think I'll make 6 bigger ones. There's pictures of each step, enjoy! |
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Ingredients:
1 cup warm Water
1 package Dry Active Yeast
2 3/4 cups All Purpose Flour
2 tbsp olive oil (or vegetable oil)
½ tsp ordinary table Salt
2 tbsp Baking Soda
2 tsp coarse Salt (I used Sea Salt) |
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Cost to Make ($1.81, about 15¢ each)
40¢ All Purpose Flour
73¢ Dry Active Yeast (3 packs for $2.19)
46¢ Olive Oil
2¢ Table Salt
10¢ Baking Soda
10¢ Coarse Salt |
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Basic Instructions:
- Disolve dry active yeast in warm (100° - 110°) water and set aside for 10 minutes until foamy.
- Add 2 tbsp of oil and ½ tsp of salt and mix together.
- Add first 1 ½ cups of all purpose flour and mix in.
- Add remaining 1 ¼ cups of all purpose flour and begin kneading dough.
- Knead by hand for about 15 minutes.
- Place dough ball into lightly oiled bowl, cover, and set aside to rise for 60 - 75 minutes.
- Divide dough into 12 even pieces, roll into balls, cover, and let rest for 15 minutes.
- Roll out each piece until 18 inches long, then shape into pretzel shapes.
- Cover pretzels and let rise for another 30 minutes.
- Add 2 tbsp baking soda to a pot of water and boil each pretzel for 1 minute.
- Place pretzels on greased sheet pan and add coarse salt as desired.
- Bake soft pretzels at 475° oven for 12 minutes.
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| Now onto photos of the process! Woo. |
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Here are the basic ingredients we'll need. Some all purpose flour, a packet of dry active yeast, some salt and some oil (you can use vegetable oil, but I use olive oil for most stuff). Other ingredients we'll use later (not pictured here) are some baking soda for the boiling water and coarse salt for the pretzels. |
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Add 1 cup of warm water (100° - 110°) to a mixing bowl, then sprinkle on the yeast. Cover the bowl with a towel and set aside to let the yeast "bloom". After 10 minutes or so the yeast should be foamy, this is good. |
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| Note: The first packet of yeast I used didn't bloom. The expiration date was fine, but it must have been dead stuff, the water temp was perfect.. Yeast die at 130° and higher, so be careful of the water temp. |
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I then added in the 2 tbsp of oil and ½ tsp of salt, stirred it together, then added in the first 1 ½ cups of flour. Hold off on the rest of the flour at this point.. |
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Now mix the whole mess together. |
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| Then add in the remaining 1 ¼ cups of flour, and mix it in too. |
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Dump the sticky dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead the dough for a good 15 minutes. |
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| Note: Don't skimp on the kneading, most dough (with the exception of biscuits) need a good amount of kneading to get the gluten proteins going. The proteins are what will keep it from breaking later when we roll it out, just like how they keep a pizza from tearing when you toss it. |
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After kneading I lightly oiled a bowl and the dough ball, covered it with a towel, and set it in the unlit oven to rise for 60 - 75 minutes. It's ready when the dough is twice as big. |
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Cut the dough into 12 even chunks.. Or if you decide to make big pretzels divide into 6 chunks. |
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Form all 12 chunks of dough into round balls. Cover them and let them rest for around 15 minutes. |
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Then we start rolling out the dough into long cylinders.. |
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When they're fully rolled out they should each be about 18 inches, but it doesn't have to be exact. |
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Form them each into the shape of a pretzel, or whatever shape you dig :) |
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| Then cover your pretzels with a towel and let rise for another 30 minutes. Yeah, I know, we're doing alotta dough rising here.. But they need it! |
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To get the outside texture you're used to with a big soft pretzel we start a pot of water boiling, with 2 tbsp of baking soda stirred in. |
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| Boil each pretzel for just 1 minute. Don't worry about them falling apart, since letting the formed pretzels rise again should have them pretty well stuck together in their shape now. |
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I let the pretzels boil on one side for 30 seconds, then flipped them over to boil on the other side for another 30 seconds.. I also used a slotted spatula to add them to, and get the out of, the water. |
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| I removed the pretzels from the boiling water and set them on a dish towel I had nearby to drain off the excess water before setting them on the greased sheet pan. |
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Add some coarse salt to the pretzels, not the normal table salt you use on popcorn.. |
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| Note: Make sure you grease the sheet pan pretty good. If it's not lubed up enough you'll be prying your pretzels up with a chisel later :) |
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After baking in the oven at 475° for 12 minutes I pulled them out and put them on a cooking rack and covered with a towel for 10 minutes or so. They turned out just like the kind at a ball game, mMmm. |