Learn how to make light, chewy homemade plain bagels with this easy recipe. Made with instant yeast and ready in under 3 hours, you’ll have warm-from-the-oven bagels on your countertop in no time — and ready for slathering with butter, cream cheese, and more. Once you know how to make your own homemade plain bagels, you’ll want to make them again and again (and again!).

5 star reader review
“These bagels came out so good! This felt pretty ambitious for me (I’ve tried making bread exactly twice with not a ton of success), but the gifs of how to shape the bagels were super helpful in making them come out amazing. I cannot wait to make these again!!”
—Leann
Is there anything better in the morning than freshly toasted bagels slathered in cream cheese? If you answered yes, then you must know that the correct answer is freshly toasted homemade bagels slathered in homemade cream cheese. Congrats, you win points.
But how hard is it to make homemade bagels, really?
The answer is VERY EASY. Like, SHOCKINGLY EASY.
Once you know how to make my quick and easy plain bagels, you'll make them over and over again because, while you know how secretly easy they are to make, your friends don't — and getting to bask in those impressed reactions? Priceless.
Soon you'll feel confident enough to try all my other easy bagel recipes with different bagel flavors and toppings. You can even take your bagel-making skills to the next level with my overnight New York-style bagel recipe, which uses more traditional ingredients and a different shaping technique.

Making bagels is what started my love of bread-making. You can draw a direct line from me learning how to make homemade bagels from a recipe I found on Tumblr back in 2014, to me going to pastry school in 2020, to you reading this blog post right now.
That very first bagel recipe I made was from the Sophisticated Gourmet and though the bagels I made were lumpy and misshapen, they tasted amazing. I was hooked. The more I made bagels, the prettier they became.
I've made my own adjustments to that recipe over the years to streamline and simplify the process wherever possible, finally landing on a version of this easy bagel recipe that is very much my own.
Also, even though homemade bagels are way easier to make if you have a stand mixer with a dough hook, I've made bagels many times without a mixer (I JUST LOVE HOMEMADE BAGELS THAT MUCH, OK?) and, while it requires a bit more upper-body strength for kneading, they turn out great that way too.
There are some recipes I'd go nowhere near if I couldn't use a mixer, and I would tell you if I didn't think they were worth doing without a mixer, but that's not this recipe. This easy bagel recipe is worth making, with or without a mixer.
To Make Bagels You Will Need...
Here are the ingredients you'll need to make your very own homemade plain bagels. See the recipe card at the end of this blog post for the quantities!

I use all-purpose flour to make my bagels, even though bagels are traditionally made with a high protein/high gluten bread flour. I use King Arthur Baking's all-purpose flour, which has a relatively high protein content for an all-purpose flour. If you're using another brand of flour (like a generic store-brand flour) you may have better results with their bread flour.
How to Make Homemade Bagels
To make the bagel dough, whisk all the dry ingredients together in the mixer bowl.

Start the mixer on low and let the dough hook do the work for you. Be patient.
At first, you're just mixing the dough. The goal is to get the ingredients to combine and collect on the dough hook. Then, once the dough comes together on the dough hook, increase the speed slightly and knead until the dough is smooth.

After mixing, the dough will look rough but will pull clean from the sides of bowl.

After kneading the bagel dough, it will be smooth and elastic.
Bagel dough is a low-hydration dough, meaning the ratio of water to flour is relatively low. Bagels have a tight crumb with small air pockets. That density comes from the way the dough is kneaded to create a tight web of gluten that traps smaller air bubbles, and from the relatively low amount of water in the dough.
This homemade bagel recipe has a hydration level of 60%. It's a dense, smooth, and cohesive dough that should easily form a ball. You're looking for something that is smooth and slightly tacky to the touch, but that doesn't stick or cling to your fingers.
The "Roll and Poke" Shaping Method
For this plain bagel recipe, I like to use a simple bagel shaping technique known as the "roll and poke" method.
Divide the dough into eight equal pieces using a kitchen scale. If you combined a few pieces of dough to get the right size dough ball, stack the smaller piece(s) on top of the largest piece. Gently flatten the piece of dough against your work surface, then tuck all the edges up into the middle, pinching them together to form a smooth surface on the underside of the dough.


Flip the dough ball over and cup your hand around it, with your pinkie-finger flush against the counter. Slide your hand toward your body, dragging the dough ball with it. You'll see the front of the dough snag on the counter slightly, pushing the edge under itself and creating surface tension on top of the dough.
The dough will form an oval shape, so rotate it 90 degrees and repeat to get a nice round ball with a smooth top and the edges pinched together underneath.
Once you've shaped all eight pieces of dough into little boules and let them rest for a few minutes, dust your thumb with flour and poke it through the bottom of the dough ball until it comes out the other side.

![[gif] a thumb pokes a hole through the bottom of a round ball of dough](https://thepracticalkitchen.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/How-to-Shape-a-Bagel-4.gif)
When you poke your thumb through the bottom, use it to push any extra edges or seams on the bottom of the dough ball into the center of the bagel, sealing them shut.
Once your thumb is all the way through, wiggle your other thumb in as well so the backs of your thumbs are pressed against each other, and gently stretch and squeeze the ring of dough until the center hole is at least the same width as the sides of the bagel.
![[gif] two thumbs through the hole in the bagel dough rotating it and gentle stretching it](https://thepracticalkitchen.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/How-to-Shape-a-Bagel-5.gif)
![[gif] a fully stretched out round of bagel dough](https://thepracticalkitchen.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/How-to-Shape-a-Bagel-6.gif)
The bagel dough shrinks back slightly before boiling and will shrink again when the dough expands during boiling and baking, so don't be stingy in your stretching.



Boiling Homemade Bagels
The boiling process gelatinizes the starches in the crust, setting them in place while also activating the yeast and air inside the dough to encourage the bagels to expand. The gelatinized crust will also prevent the bagels from expanding too much in the oven.
Think of it like "bagel botox." Boiling is what gives homemade bagels their smooth, shiny, taut bagel crust. The boiled bagels will have a slight texture to them, but will smooth out in the oven.
Right before boiling, stretch the bagels one more time. This will help keep the bagel holes from open as they bake!


The longer you boil the bagels, the thicker the crust will be and the chewier the texture of the bagels will be. You can control the texture and size of your finished bagels depending on how long you choose to boil them. I like to boil my bagels for 1 minute per side, but you can do as little as 30 seconds/side or as long as 2 minutes/side.
Get Creative By Adding Bagel Toppings
To get your toppings to stick to the bagels while they bake, vigorously whisk an egg to make an egg wash.

Bake immediately or sprinkle with any toppings you like. Even if you aren't going to use a topping, I still recommend using an egg wash to get the beautiful shiny crust.
Practical Tips & Recipe Notes
- Be careful not to tear the dough when you stretch the bagels. Bagel dough isn't like play-dough or pie dough, where you can simply combine all the scraps and stick 'em back together. Tearing your dough destroys those beautiful strong gluten strands you spent so much time kneading. When the dough rests, those raw edges and seams will begin forming new gluten connections, so don't worry about them not being perfectly smooth all the way around. This is one of the hardest things to get right (and honestly, your bagels will still taste great even if you don't get this perfectly) so just know that it's something you'll get better at with practice.
- If you want the full history of bagel making history and tradition, check out Maria Baliska's excellent book The Bagel: The Surprising History of a Modest Bread which charts the bagel's turbulent sociopolitical and socioeconomic journey from Jewish bagel peddlers in 17th century Poland to Europe, eventually crossing the Atlantic to New York City and the United States (did you know that the bagel didn't enter into mainstream popularity in the U.S. until the 1970s???). Fascinating!
💭 Have More Bagel Questions?
I've rounded up answers to common bagel questions and how-to guides, including:
- How to knead bagel dough by hand and what it should feel like
- Why bagels are always boiled
- Step-by-step guides for bagel shaping and baking techniques
See my bagel-making 101 guide for more!
📖 Recipe

Homemade Plain Bagels in Less Than 3 Hours
Recipe Notes
- To test if your dough is ready after it rests for an hour, gently press into it with one finger. If it immediately fills in the indentation when you remove your finger, your dough needs more time to rise. If the indentation only fills in part way or fills in very slowly, your dough is ready. If it doesn’t fill in at all or the dough seems to collapse, your dough has overproofed.
- You can mix in a ¼ cup of your preferred topping right into the dough to infuse your bagels with maximum flavor. Just make sure your topping doesn’t include salt, or it can throw off the chemistry of the dough.
- Store in an airtight bag with a paper towel to absorb moisture. Stored properly, they will stay good for 3-4 days. They’ll get a bit hard after the first day or so, but soften up if you toast them. You can also run them briefly under water (!!!), then microwave them for 10 seconds, slice them, and toast them (or put them on a rack in your regular oven for 10 minutes at 350°F).
- *If measuring salt by weight, you can use any type of salt. If measuring by volume, and using any brand that is NOT Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt, cut the amount of salt in half.
- If you cut the bagels before they have time to cool the steam inside will turn the starches to mush. I know fresh-baked bagels are tempting but you really will be a lot happier if you give them some time to cool before slicing!
Ingredients
- 500 grams all-purpose flour
- 18 grams sugar
- 10 grams diamond crystal kosher salt
- 6 grams instant yeast
- 300 grams warm water (90°F)
- 1 egg (for egg wash)
- 2 tablespoons bagel toppings (optional)
Instructions
- Mix. Mix flour, salt, sugar, and yeast in the bowl of your stand mixer. Make a well in the middle and pour the water into the center. Use the dough hook on low speed to mix the dough until it comes together in a shaggy mass, pausing to scrape down the sides of the bowl as needed. This can take 3-5 minutes.
- Knead. Increase the mixer to low-medium speed and knead the dough for 3-5 minutes until the dough is smooth, elastic, and slightly tacky to the touch. It shouldn’t cling to your hands or the bowl.
- First rise. Tuck the dough into a smooth round ball, and place it in a lightly oiled bowl (you can use the mixer bowl). Let it rise in a warm spot (70°F-ish) until about doubled in size, about an hour.
- Preheat. Preheat your oven to 425°F and fill a pan with at least 2 inches of water. Bring it to a low boil on the stove while you shape the bagels. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper or a silicone mat and set it aside.
- Pre-shape (roll). Deflate the dough and divide it into eight equal pieces (use a kitchen scale for precision) and shape them into balls. Gently flatten the piece of dough against a lightly floured surface, then tuck the edges up into the middle, pinching them together to form a smooth surface on the underside of the dough. Then flip the dough over, cup your hand around it, pinkie against the counter, and drag your hand towards your body. Rotate the dough 90 degrees and repeat as needed until you have a nice round ball with a smooth surface on top and a pinched-together seam underneath.
- Shape (poke). Starting with the first dough ball you shaped, dust your thumb in flour and poke it through the underneath seam-side of the dough ball, pushing any rough edges into the middle. Slide your other thumb in and gently stretch the dough out until the hole in the middle is at least the same width as the sides. The hole will close as the dough rests and will close again as it boils and bakes, so don’t be stingy.Cover the shaped bagels with a damp paper towel and let them rest for 5-10 minutes until the water is ready to boil.
- Boil. Briefly stretch each bagel again, then gently drop them into the boiling water, top-side down. Work in batches as needed (I can usually do 4 at a time). The bagels will expand, so don’t crowd them. Boil bagels for 30 seconds to 2 minutes per side, then remove to the prepared sheet pan.
- Bake. Brush each bagel with egg wash, making sure to get the sides and centers. Add any desired toppings. Bake until golden brown, 20 minutes.
- Cool. Remove the bagels from the oven. Let cool on the sheet pan 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. Try to wait at least 20 minutes before cutting them open, but I honestly can’t blame you if you crack after five.


Sally says
First time ever making bagels, these could not be easier! I am planning on making them weekly. Thank you for the great recipe! Delicious 🤤
Rebecca Eisenberg says
So glad you like them!! Enjoy!
Daniel Destefano says
Hi Rebecca, I moved to Denmark last spring. I picked out some cold smoked Faroe Islands salmon today and decided I needed to make some bagels so that we could have it with cream cheese, red onion, and capers. This was my first time making bagels and your recipe, notes, and video made it easy. I've subscribed to your YouTube channel and hope you keep doing what you are doing. I like the recipes from the blog best. Thanks.
Rebecca Eisenberg says
This is such a kind comment! Thank you so much and I’m so glad you enjoyed the bagels!
Traci says
These are easy and good! Having made bagels before I was shocked at how easy! My husband loved them!! I will definitely be making these again and trying different varieties, blueberry next I think!
Sally says
I love bagels and have always wanted to try making them. Every recipe I came across seemed so daunting. I found this 3-hour bagel recipe and thought “I can do that!” I made a batch and my family raved about them. I made another a few days later. The Practical Kitchen has turned into my go-to for baking. Every recipe I have tried has been a hit! Thank you for your hard work!
Meg Lally says
These were so easy and so delicious! I’ve made them a few times and even got my Mum involved.
Elizabeth Bailey says
I have been making Bagels on and off for about 2 years. I was hoping to find a sentence where you suggest the best time to Precut your bagels. I am always cutting mine right when I go to eat them, but for my kids, a precut bagel gets eaten faster than my homemade ones. Would precutting them after the boiling, or after baking them when they are cooled down be best?
Rebecca Eisenberg says
do you mean slicing the bagels? it’s best to let them cool before slicing, otherwise the insides can get gummy. i usually slice the bagels almost all the way through before freezing them, so they stay together in the bag in the freezer but are easy to separate and toast from frozen!
Elizabeth Bailey says
Yes. I was hoping there may be a better time to slice the bagels, before storage. When they are on the warm side, I guess. Thank you, for your reply.
Megan says
Just made these and they sure are tasty. The egg that is brushed onto the bagel I think I put too much on. The bagel has that egg smell on it which isn’t appealing to me but it still tastes VERY good. As a first time bagel maker how can I reduce this smell next time? Is there an alternative to using egg? Do I need to add more water to the egg and very lightly brush the bagel? Thanks!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
It definitely sounds like you used too much egg wash! In the future you can try using just egg white, or adding a little more water to the egg wash to thin it out. You also don't necessarily need the egg wash unless you're trying to get toppings to stick well; you can skip it if it bothers you that much!
Kellie says
I made these today and they actually turned out! No one is more surprised by this than me, lol! The recipe was easy and they taste delicious!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
I’m so glad you gave it a try! These really are the easiest bagels 🙂 enjoy them!!
Alyssa says
Made these and had to pause halfway due to a work emergency. After I shaped them I threw them in the fridge for a couple of hours until I could resume the process. I let them come back to room temp and then just proceeded as directed. They. Were. Awesome! Not sure I’ll ever buy bagels from the grocery store again!
Val says
Another five star recipe! This is the second time I’ve made the 3 hour bagels and with your detailed instructions I’m getting the hang of the rolling and shaping. I made two batches this time but mixed them separately with the dough hook. I was afraid it would be too much for the mixer to handle. Next time I would like to try your tip of mixing the toppings into the dough. Thank you so much for the great recipe! I’m having so much fun!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
I’m so glad you’re enjoying this recipe! A whole world of fun bagel flavors awaits you 🙂
Elizabeth says
Great recipe and directions! Made these bagels first time ever yesterday. I hand kneaded instead of using my Kitchenaid which wasn’t as arduous as I thought it would be. They came out delicious with everything spices for topping. My only difficulty was folding the dough ends up and pinching the dough together. They didn’t want to! In the end only two bagels had a bit of a bumpy bottom.
Lindsey b says
I have been using this recipe for 2 weeks now and I absolutely love it, I have made cranberry and candied pecans bagels and a jerk seasoned cheddar bagel as well. Thank you for sharing
Rebecca Eisenberg says
Oh, I'm so glad to hear that! Those sound like delicious bagel flavors!! Happy baking!
Dianne says
Absolutely easy as can be! Instructions were perfect. Bagels look amazing. I’m waiting for them to cool. Will be working my way through other recipes from your site. Thanks!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
I'm so glad you liked them! Happy baking!
Olivia says
Do you have ideas for mix-ins for these bagels? I'm going to try them plain first to make sure I get the hang of the recipe, but I'd love a sweet option for breakfast bagels and maybe some savory options, too. Any ideas of what kind of mix-ins, or maybe just guidelines for mix-ins? Like dry vs. wet and how to adjust if it's a wetter mix-in? Thank you!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
Great question! Most of my bagel recipes use this recipe as a base — I would recommend checking them out to find one that's similar to whatever you're trying to add and adapting it to use your mix-ins of choice. With wetter ingredients, you'll want to hold back some of the water in the dough, with drier ingredients you may need to increase the water just a bit. Make the recipe plain first so you get a sense of what the dough should feel like, and then it's easy to experiment and adjust from there. No matter what you add to the dough, you can always adjust the consistency by adding more flour if its too wet or more water if its too dry! Happy baking!
Rebecca says
Yeah, these are ridiculously easy and delicious but have created a huge problem.
My family will now no longer eat store bought bagels.
😉
Rebecca Eisenberg says
LMAO it's not the worst problem to have hahahaha
Cora Rea says
If I could give this higher than a 5 star rating, I totally would! This was my first time ever baking anything that wasn't out of a box, and I don't think I will ever go back! This recipe was so simple and easy to follow! I love the entire set up of this page, and will definitely be making these a million more times! I put cheese over a few of the bagels after the egg wash, and they were to die for! My entire family was in love with the chewy, soft yet crispy texture and loved the flavor so much! Coming from the pickiest family ever, that means a lot! Thank you so much Rebecca! I had so much fun and can't wait to check out more of your recipes!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
Welcome to the world of baking from scratch!! You should be so proud of yourself. Keep on baking and enjoy those bagels!
Megan says
I love bagels, but have struggled making them from scratch before. Not with this recipe! I’ve made them a few times now, and they’ve been *chefs kiss* every time, if I do say so myself.
Diana says
This recipe is fabulous and the results make you feel like an excellent baker. Thank you for sharing!
Ashley M says
Could i substitute bread flour with this recipe (that's what i have on hand)? Or would it throw it off?
Rebecca Eisenberg says
You can absolutely use bread flour! You may find you need to add a bit more water to the dough, but it will work.
Mary says
This recipe was so easy to follow and has turned out great the two times I have made it. The second time I made 6 bagels rather than 8 because we prefer a bigger bagel and they still turned out delicious. Thank you Rebecca!
Sarah says
This is only the second time I tried making bagels and OMG did they come out delicious!! Thank you for this recipe!
Elizabeth says
First try making bagels and it was a success! Love the step by step pictures and that ingredients are by weight. Can’t wait to try more!!
Rebecca Eisenberg says
Yes, #TeamKitchenScale all the way! Congrats on your bagel success, and cheers to many more!
Elena says
I made these tonight as dinner rolls and they were AMAZING! crusty on the outside, soft and moist inside. I skipped adding a hole, skipped boiling, and skipped the egg wash. I'll have to try them as bagels at some point, too!
Dawn says
Add my vote to the 5 star rating. My first attempt at bagels and they came out perfect. Topped with your 5 minute Everything Seasoning Blend. Your instructions are direct, and easy to follow, without overwhelming "wordsmithing". Your writing style is somewhat conversational so I feel like you could be in the kitchen next to me. I am a fan! Thank you for the many wonderful recipes.
Rebecca Eisenberg says
Ohhh thank you so much for all the compliments — you're so sweet! I'm thrilled you enjoyed the bagels 🙂 Happy baking! ~Rebecca
Chrissy says
Can't wait to try. Can you swap bread flour for all purpose?
Rebecca Eisenberg says
Yep! It might need a little more water since bread flour is more absorbent but it will work just fine.