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The great divide – a New York born bagel maker explains what separates bagels from beigels

The American imports are proving popular in London, Dan Martensen of It’s Bagels gives us the lowdown

November 11, 2024 13:20
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3 min read

Queuing for beigels is nothing new. Londoners have been waiting (im)patiently for an early-hours carb fix on Brick Lane or Golders Green High Road for decades.

But the lines of people snaking round the block at Primrose Hill’s It’s Bagels have taken our city’s dedication to floury foods to the next level. And it’s the New York style bakeries that have triggered this fresh appetite for the Jewish roll with a hole. A small tsunami of bakeries are riding the wave of London’s latest bready trend.

What’s all the excitement about? I asked Dan Martensen of It’s Bagels — one of the OG’s of the UK capital’s newer bagel bakeries — to describe the New York bagel.

A taste of home: Dan Martensen, It's Bagels Photo: Teo Della Torre[Missing Credit]

He told me that Big Apple bagels are bigger and texturally different to their UK cousins, which he describes as smaller, doughier, sweeter with a softer chew than their crustier cousins.