🇩🇪 German Cuisine

Brezel

Pretzels

Prep Time 90 min
Servings 8
Difficulty Medium
Calories 313 kcal

Soft, chewy pretzels with a mahogany-brown crust from a lye bath, sprinkled with coarse salt. Best eaten still warm with sweet mustard and a cold wheat beer.

Ingredients

  • 500g bread flour
  • 300ml warm water (40C)
  • 7g instant yeast
  • 2 tbsp butter, softened
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • For lye bath: 1 litre water, 3 tbsp baking soda (or food-grade lye)
  • Coarse salt for topping
  • Spicy mustard for serving

Instructions

  1. 1 Combine the warm water, yeast, and sugar in a large bowl. Let stand five minutes until foamy and active. Add the flour, softened butter, and salt. Mix until a dough forms, then knead on a floured surface for ten minutes until smooth, elastic, and slightly tacky.
  2. 2 Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with a damp towel, and let rise in a warm place for one hour until doubled in size. The dough should be puffy and spring back slowly when poked gently with a flour-dusted finger.
  3. 3 Punch down the risen dough and divide into eight equal pieces. Roll each piece into a long rope about sixty centimetres long and slightly thicker in the middle than at the ends. Consistent thickness ensures even browning during baking.
  4. 4 Form each rope into a pretzel shape: create a U shape, then cross the ends over each other twice, and fold them down to press onto the bottom of the U. The traditional pretzel shape should have three holes and the crossed section at the bottom.
  5. 5 Bring one litre of water to a boil and add the baking soda. Carefully lower each pretzel into the simmering alkaline water for thirty seconds, flipping once. This bath creates the characteristic dark brown, chewy crust that defines an authentic German pretzel.
  6. 6 Place the boiled pretzels on parchment-lined baking sheets. Score a deep slash across the thickest part of each pretzel with a sharp knife or razor blade. Sprinkle generously with coarse salt crystals, pressing them gently into the surface.
  7. 7 Bake at 220C for twelve to fifteen minutes until the pretzels are deeply mahogany brown with a shiny, crackly crust and a soft, chewy interior. Serve warm with spicy German mustard and cold beer for the authentic Bavarian experience.

Did You Know?

Traditional Bavarian pretzels are dipped in a lye solution (Natronlauge) which creates their distinctive brown crust and unique flavor. Baking soda is the safer home substitute.

From The Culinary Codex — http://theculinarycodex.com/dish/german/pretzels/