How the Bagel was invented in Poland

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
  • Where would you go to eat a really good and original bagel? It may seem logical to think of the U.S. and specifically New York City, which is known for its famous New York-style bagels. However, contrary to popular belief, the bagel did not originate in the USA. It was actually invented in Eastern Europe, specifically in the Polish city of Krakow. The bagel was first mentioned in Krakow's Jewish community ordinances in 1610. We went to Krakow in search of the original bagel.
    How do you like your bagel? Tell us in the comments!
    #Bagel #Poland #Krakow
    -----------------------------------------------
    CREDITS
    Report: Jens von Larcher
    Camera: Paul James Pearson
    Edit: Moritz Schetter
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    DW Food brings you the perfect blend of culinary trends, easy DIY recipes, exciting food secrets & a look behind the scenes of Europe’s culinary culture.
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Комментарии • 107

  • @talktomenowxbmc
    @talktomenowxbmc 7 месяцев назад +20

    There is another food popular on NY that has Polish origin. It is called bialy. It looks like a flatter bun with onions in the middle. In eastern part of Poland, Lublin & Zamosc, you can buy larger round bread with onions in the middle. It is called cebularz (cebula = onion). Why is it called bialy is unknown. In Polish bialy means white.

    • @kamilfilipowicz
      @kamilfilipowicz 7 месяцев назад +8

      Bialy... because full name is Bialystoker - as it was supposedly brought from Bialystok Jewish cuisine.

  • @alparslanesmer4251
    @alparslanesmer4251 Год назад +38

    When I was a kid back in the 1980s I thought pizza were American food. This was also the same for Budweiser after I reached the legal drinking age. I managed to get the taste of real Budweiser in Prague five years ago. If Turks had given as many immigrants to the New World, I believe the traditional simit and doner would be known as American food too.

    • @michal8976
      @michal8976 10 месяцев назад +2

      But American pizza is american food this same with bagel this food evolve from italian pizza and polish obwarzanek but they have own unicque american style which made them american food

    • @bullet1544
      @bullet1544 9 месяцев назад +5

      In Poland, turkish Kebab's are favourite fast food.

  • @Princeduclare
    @Princeduclare Год назад +32

    "Reasonably bagely" is my phrase of the week, I'm going to annoy everyone i know with this.

    • @DWFood
      @DWFood  Год назад +2

      😅

    • @ongvalcot6873
      @ongvalcot6873 Год назад +1

      Bigly!

    • @butspan7618
      @butspan7618 Год назад +3

      and the Italian's don't even consider American pizza a pizza.

    • @ongvalcot6873
      @ongvalcot6873 Год назад

      @@butspan7618 Lots of Americans accepted and adopted pizza before many Italians, particularly in Northern Italy.

    • @tonygunk4850
      @tonygunk4850 Год назад

      Right, because Italians didn't have totamatos. Same here, Americans always put a spin on the thing.... That why that New Yorker couldn't just admit the begal was good.

  • @Pawel__M
    @Pawel__M 7 месяцев назад +9

    Hello from Poland. Obwarzanek (meaning "something that you first blanch/preboil) may be the ancestor of the New York bagel, yet it tastes more like the German pretzel - but it's softer and a bit sweeter. And it must be made only in the Cracow region and only following the traditional method - as it has got special status thanks to the European Union’s “Protected Geographical Indication”-a form of trademark intended to “protect product names from misuse and imitation” insuring that locally specific foods (like Parma ham and Dutch Gouda cheese) don’t have to compete with fakers.

  • @jeemoon1626
    @jeemoon1626 Год назад +23

    Wow. That lady Klaudia really knows what she is doing!

    • @patricedecourcy4505
      @patricedecourcy4505 Год назад +1

      Why? Those are not proper bagels. Actually, besides shape, they have nothing to do with bagels. Bagel dough should ferment overnight (as they do in NY) and then bagels should be BOILED and baked.

    • @jeemoon1626
      @jeemoon1626 Год назад +1

      @@patricedecourcy4505 it was a joke, because they brought in this expert and she didn’t display much as far as technique or specifics.

    • @patricedecourcy4505
      @patricedecourcy4505 Год назад +2

      @@jeemoon1626 Sorry, lost in translation, now I get it! :) The whole process is ridiculous.

    • @elismyrefugeelismysalvatio9140
      @elismyrefugeelismysalvatio9140 11 месяцев назад

      @@patricedecourcy4505 Yeah the scuffed american process and mentality is clown.

  • @Jan96106
    @Jan96106 Год назад +9

    This is nice to know.

    • @DWFood
      @DWFood  Год назад +3

      Thank you for watching!

  • @ivanocallari9955
    @ivanocallari9955 6 месяцев назад +1

    Montreal has great bagels too.

  • @ongvalcot6873
    @ongvalcot6873 Год назад +23

    Montreal bagels are more like Krakow bagels.

    • @mareksicinski3726
      @mareksicinski3726 Год назад

      tbf this is this local restaruant's bespoke idea, the more important part is the origin of the bagel as a concept ther,e which isn't talked about as precisely

    • @ongvalcot6873
      @ongvalcot6873 Год назад +3

      @@mareksicinski3726 The origins are in Central Europe. There is possible link to German pretzels. Keep in mind that Krakow was very German several 100's years ago.
      When you see picts from pre-WWII Poland bagels there looked more like Montreal bagels, i.e. large hole while NY bagels evolved toward the tight holes. Bagels used to be carried on a thick stick or strings by bagel sellers.

    • @bartomiejnozka8992
      @bartomiejnozka8992 Год назад +4

      @@ongvalcot6873 As I've state in other comment if by German you mean Austrian then yes Kraków was occupied by them.

    • @ongvalcot6873
      @ongvalcot6873 Год назад +1

      @@bartomiejnozka8992 No, I meant Germans not Austrian.. Krakow's burghers were German since the middle ages. Austrian do not appear on the scene until the late18th century.

    • @bartomiejnozka8992
      @bartomiejnozka8992 Год назад +3

      @@ongvalcot6873 Please cite source of this information. Wikipedia says differently.
      I am very interested since Kraków was capital of Poland.

  • @userabuser181
    @userabuser181 Год назад +6

    Wow ❤

  • @shylockwesker5530
    @shylockwesker5530 7 месяцев назад +1

    Whichever you like, they are only tasty on the day of making them, preferably in the morning.

  • @lukask4021
    @lukask4021 7 месяцев назад +2

    I'm polish and had no idea haha. I still prefer ny bagel, sorry Kraków.

  • @michelhv
    @michelhv Год назад +47

    MONTRÉAL is where you should wrongly believe the bagel was invented. Kudos to Poland for actually inventing such a delicacy! Our style is actually much closer to the Krakow one (twists and turns) than the NY one.

    • @DWFood
      @DWFood  Год назад +4

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @mareksicinski3726
      @mareksicinski3726 Год назад +5

      or even more precisely polish jews; it isn't specified in the video but apparently it was to get around medieval guild restrictions on making obwarzanki, the Christian bakers' guilds had a monopoly on those recipes

    • @ongvalcot6873
      @ongvalcot6873 Год назад

      @@mareksicinski3726 Medieval Krakow was German and the Jews there were German Jews. Connection of obwarzanek and bagel to pretzel is obvious.

    • @bartomiejnozka8992
      @bartomiejnozka8992 Год назад +11

      ​@@ongvalcot6873 Medieval Kraków was German? I don't think so. Kraków is native Polish city.
      In 1795-1809 It was occupied by Austrian Empire.
      In 1815-1846 it was called "Wolne, Niepodległe i Ściśle Neutralne Miasto Kraków i jego Okręg"/"Free city of Kraków" so basically it was govern by itself, but dependent on Prusia, Austria and Russia.
      In 1846-1867 and 1867-1918 by Austrian and Austrian-Hungarian Empire.
      Then small episode in 1939-1945 from German s.
      In other then this times it was Polish.
      Not everything is or was German...

    • @ongvalcot6873
      @ongvalcot6873 Год назад

      @@bartomiejnozka8992 Yo do not know history. Medieval Krakow burgers were mostly German. Why do you think Wit Stwosz was in Krakow?

  • @stiepanholkien605
    @stiepanholkien605 5 месяцев назад

    Repeat with me, Obvazhanek, I bet in Czech it's even spelled like that. The word means something like boily/boilie.

  • @thomasschumacher5362
    @thomasschumacher5362 Год назад +1

    Beigel to bend

  • @jacekchmielewski6372
    @jacekchmielewski6372 Год назад +14

    Bagel or bargirl did not originate in Eastern Europe but Kraków.

    • @jankowalski6338
      @jankowalski6338 Год назад +2

      they think it's in eastern Europe

    • @Paparapatheraper-POL
      @Paparapatheraper-POL Год назад +11

      How can America know that Poland is in Central Europe,when half of Europe thinks the same simply lack of education.
      I do not know how in other countries, but in my childhood it was necessary in school to know where each country is located and to know its capital.

    • @metanoian965
      @metanoian965 Год назад +4

      @@Paparapatheraper-POL Polad is in the Center of Europe. But, most people think it's in Mongolia or on the moon somewhere. Hard to tell.

  • @MbisonBalrog
    @MbisonBalrog 5 месяцев назад +1

    But did the Jews do the kneading and boiling and baking themselves? Is this a food and recipe they actually invented?

  • @justynadzt7728
    @justynadzt7728 3 месяца назад +1

    It's funny, because most of what is considered Jewish cuisine is actually Eastern European cuisine, and the Jews who lived in Eastern Europe brought this cuisine to the United States.

    • @KLEIDMANN
      @KLEIDMANN 2 месяца назад

      Also middle eastern cuisine like hummus and falafel

    • @air2091
      @air2091 2 месяца назад

      Its almost like you use the ingredients you have access too

  • @myopinions1
    @myopinions1 4 месяца назад

    You proved it's similar and not like a bagel

  • @easykid5625
    @easykid5625 10 месяцев назад +2

    i would have never thought that bagels are popular in NY.

  • @Yatzo
    @Yatzo 7 месяцев назад +2

    EVERYTHING WAS FINE TILL "EASTER EUROPEAN"...

  • @Jerry500.
    @Jerry500. Год назад

    U guys really thinked that they were invented in New York? 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @DWFood
      @DWFood  Год назад +4

      🤔 Did you watch the video?

  • @patricedecourcy4505
    @patricedecourcy4505 Год назад +1

    What makes bagels different from other kinds of bread/buns is that they are boiled before baking. So what's the point of making a video about bagels and showing something what has nothing to do with bagels. Obviously bagels in Cafe Blossom are not boiled. Disappointing material.

    • @mareksicinski3726
      @mareksicinski3726 Год назад

      It got a bit sidetracked by the plot writing so they could make it better

  • @domingojeromececilio5059
    @domingojeromececilio5059 Год назад

    Marry me Klaudia ❤

  • @yehtoon4237
    @yehtoon4237 Год назад +12

    Bagel and Pizza may not be invented in New York but we made it well known.!!!!!!!!

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 Год назад

      New York style bagel and new York style pizza were invented in New York

    • @DWFood
      @DWFood  Год назад +2

      Both are world famous!

    • @mareksicinski3726
      @mareksicinski3726 Год назад

      i kind of wonder, it might be true to

    • @piotrb4240
      @piotrb4240 Год назад

      The American version of pizza (or even more specifically, the NYC version) is a cousin of the Italian pizza, and you can debate whether it's the same food item or not. I'd say it's not. Same goes for bagels. BTW, a cousin of the bagel, bialy, also very popular in NYC, is a descendant of a Jewish version of the Polish bagel, developed in Bialystok, NE Poland. Hence the name, "bialy" (literally: white).

  • @adber299
    @adber299 Год назад +10

    41 yo and i do not know single person to eat obwarzanek for breakfast or handing it out to kids for school snack. Tourists buy them mostly to feed pigeons…

    • @lucys.4695
      @lucys.4695 Год назад +1

      True

    • @kimka3855
      @kimka3855 Год назад +2

      I do haha

    • @danm7561
      @danm7561 Год назад +3

      I also eat it often. You have to extend your circle! ;)

    • @adber299
      @adber299 Год назад

      @@danm7561 you eat them only when in Krakow, which is less than once a year i presume. I was not reffering to tourists like yourself, but actually people living in Kraków and that is the difference

    • @danm7561
      @danm7561 Год назад +3

      @@adber299 Hey, I live here 20 years, I'm in Kraków everyday :)

  • @mzple
    @mzple Год назад +3

    Yes was created by polish jews and brought to the US by Polish Jewish immigrants.

  • @DarkAngel-vf4em
    @DarkAngel-vf4em Год назад +13

    thanks for the short docu.
    When people will understand that Jew is not a race or ethnicity, but a religion.
    There are american jews, polish jews, german jew and even arab jews. stop making a race or ethnicity out of the religion.
    Those who invented Bagel were Poles but whose religion was Judaism.
    Edit: spelling

  • @phpn99
    @phpn99 Год назад +3

    New York bagels are crap. The best Jewish bagels are to be found in Montreal

  • @mypointofview1111
    @mypointofview1111 6 месяцев назад

    For me the bagel is overrated

  • @eupowa7
    @eupowa7 Год назад

    Is DW being paid to make these adverts for Poland? So flattering it's a little embarrassing. Thanks tho! 😅

  • @jaimeortega4940
    @jaimeortega4940 Год назад +6

    Kind of hard to beat a NY bagel or pizza both some of the best in the country and the world. Even the guy from the Polish Jewish Center preferred NY bagels.

    • @zeitgeistx5239
      @zeitgeistx5239 Год назад +3

      Lmao, narrow minded American.

    • @michal8976
      @michal8976 Год назад +38

      I dont think its hard to beat, bc there is nothing to beat. NY bagels are just diffrend style than Kraków one. One person will prefer Kraków other will prefer NY. Just it depend about where you live (memories), whats your taste etc.

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 Год назад

      Exactly. Fresh New York style bagels are amazing

    • @Dreju78
      @Dreju78 Год назад +36

      "Even the American from New York, who grew up on NY style bagels, that is now, somehow working in a Jewish center in Poland preffered the New York bagel!" Wow! Such a shocker! 😁

    • @mareksicinski3726
      @mareksicinski3726 Год назад +3

      ...ok other than the cafe blossom bagels being a weird side tangent that somewhat muddies the waters abt the topic of the video, the guy literally is from New York and had even just flown in there

  • @tomasmieldazys3253
    @tomasmieldazys3253 4 месяца назад

    It was in Lithuania!!!! not in poland!!!!

  • @kestutisa3826
    @kestutisa3826 11 месяцев назад

    Bagel is Polish as much as German scientist Kopernik

    • @DWFood
      @DWFood  11 месяцев назад +1

      This requires further explanation...

    • @chlopakzpolski
      @chlopakzpolski 11 месяцев назад +3

      Nationality is not ethnicy otherwise Piłsudski would be Lithuanian.

    • @kubarybczynski661
      @kubarybczynski661 10 месяцев назад

      Kopernik was prussian.

    • @maxinorge
      @maxinorge 10 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@DWFoodpeople say the scientist is german when he's polish

  • @mxweng
    @mxweng 10 месяцев назад +2

    I am not a fan of bagels. I live nearby the birth place of the most famous and popular restaurant called MacDonald's. I prefer MCD burgers over bagels but I don't eat there often and last time I had it was a month ago in Odessa, Ukraine.

  • @cronosx6174
    @cronosx6174 8 месяцев назад +1

    The bagel was created by Jewish people living in Poland, but Polish who aren't Jewish seem to want to take credit for the creation of the bagel, too.

    • @kamilfilipowicz
      @kamilfilipowicz 7 месяцев назад +8

      It's literally in this very report, as well as Wikipedia - reports of Polish Obwarzanki are 300 years older than Jewish Bagels...

    • @air2091
      @air2091 2 месяца назад

      @@kamilfilipowiczthose arent bagels tho

  • @give_me_my_nick_back
    @give_me_my_nick_back Год назад

    Bull shit... I've never ever seen or heard about these in poland, closest I can think of is some old, hard and risgusting bread with holes sold at historical churches for some reason (perhaps as some religious penitential food)

    • @pin7131
      @pin7131 10 месяцев назад +7

      As a Polish man born in Kraków and raised in a nearby village, obwarzanki are everywhere and are commonly eaten for breakfast here.
      They are sold everywhere in poland but most often here in the Lesser Poland region where the city of Kraków is located.

    • @mirekhomarek8562
      @mirekhomarek8562 8 месяцев назад +5

      Nie słyszałeś nigdy o krakowskich obwarzankach?