Bialy Recipe

Bialy Recipe
  • Author: Anonymous

This recipe guides you in creating delicious homemade bialys, showcasing a soft and chewy dough topped with savory onions, seeds, and seasonings. The process involves preparing a poolish starter, crafting the bialy dough, shaping the individual bialys, adding the flavorful toppings, and baking to perfection. Enjoy these bialys fresh out of the oven for a delightful treat!

— Constant Cookbook

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup (70 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1/3 cup room temperature water
  • 1/4 teaspoon active yeast
  • 1/2 teaspoon active yeast
  • 1/4 cup warm water
  • 3 cups (480 g) bread flour
  • 2 cups (300 g) white whole wheat flour
  • 2 cups room temperature water
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
  • 2 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 large onion
  • kosher salt
  • 2 -3 tablespoons poppy seeds
  • 2- 3 tablespoons sesame seeds
  • fresh ground pepper
  • Cornmeal

Instructions

  • Make the poolish starter by mixing all three of those ingredients together in medium bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature overnight (anywhere from 8 – 24 hours).
  • Make the bialy dough by dissolving the yeast and warm water in a bowl or glass measuring cup. Stir and let set until it starts to foam (about 5 minutes). While the yeast proofs, place both flours in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook. Stir the two ingredients together for a minute to blend. Add the room temperature water, the proofed yeast water and all of the poolish starter to the flour and turn the mixer on to low. Stir until all the ingredients start to form a dough. Turn the mixer up to medium high and knead the dough for 5 minutes. Add the salt and knead for 1 more minute to incorporate.
  • Remove the bowl from the mixer and cover it with plastic wrap. At this point you can either let it sit at room temperature for 2 hours to rise, or you can refrigerate the dough overnight for a slow rise. Line three 13 x 18 baking pans with parchment paper and dust with cornmeal, semolina flour or all-purpose flour. Once the dough has risen (either method) remove it from the bowl and roll it out into a log on a clean floured surface. Using well-floured hands, pinch off an 85 g (3 oz) piece of dough, roughly the size of a large tangerine (think large golf ball or small baseball). Flatten the piece of dough and pinch the center of the disk so the middle has a depression. Place on the baking sheet and continue with the remaining dough, five or six to a sheet.
  • Once you’ve formed all the bialys, cover the dough with plastic wrap and let rise for an hour at room temperature. In the meanwhile, place the olive oil in a medium pan and heat the oil until it starts to shimmer. Add the onions and cook until they soften and they turn golden. Remove from heat and let cool. Once the bialys have risen, preheat the oven to 450˚F. Remove the plastic wrap and spoon roughly 1 tablespoon of onions into the middle of each bialy. Sprinkle each bialy with a pinch of kosher salt as well as poppy and sesame seeds if using. Sprinkle each with a pinch of fresh ground pepper as well if using. Move the bialys close to the center of the pan and to each other. 
  • Place the 9 x 13 baking pan upside down over the bialys, covering them completely and then put a heavy brick, cast iron skillet or heavy oven proof pot on top of the pan.
  • Place in the oven and bake for 15 minutes. Remove from the oven and remove the brick and 9 x 13 baking pan. Place the bialys back in the oven and bake an additional 5-8 minutes or until the edges of the bialys turn golden brown. Let cool for 5 to 10 minutes before moving bialys to the wire cooling rack. Repeat with the remaining uncooked bialys. Eat immediately or within a day. Freeze any remaining bialys as they don’t keep well at room temperature past the first day.

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Cook Time

20M

Prep Time

PT15M

Yield

16 bialys

Nutrition

  • Calories: 120 kcal
  • Serving Size: 1 serving