Antonius wrote:Could you be talked into posting more on the making of the bagels and the curing of the salmon and the making of the cream cheese? Especially the bagels...
Antonius,
You could easily talk me into posting more, but you might have trouble getting me to stop!
On bagels:
I originally set out to reproduce the authentic, traditional New York City bagel, but I think I have deliberately drifted off course. The bagel is a great bread for sandwiches, the ultimate expression being the plain bagel with lox, cream cheese, and fixings. My salmon is, by design, somewhat less salty than belly and even nova lox, so I ended up seeking a bagel with a deeper flavor that would complement the lox rather than sit in the background to contrast with the saltiness.
The deeper flavor comes the use of natural yeast cultures rather than commercial yeast. I use a starter culture that originated from a Paris bakery that I also use for baguettes with a slow, cold fermentation to build the flavor.
The chewy texture of bagels comes from the high-gluten flour that most recipes call for. I've got a bunch of different flours and didn't want to keep around high-gluten just for bagels, so I simply add some vital wheat gluten to my bread flour to make it stronger. This dough could likely burn out the motor of the standard household mixer; I use a small commercial fork mixer.
After fermenting, the bagels are very briefly boiled (20 sec.)and then baked. These bagels develop more flavor over the next hour or two.
On Lox:
This is the hardest of the three since one has little control over the characteristics of the main ingredient. I use a dry cure with nitrites since the fish spends more than a little time in the danger zone for food-born illnesses. A weight is placed on top of the fish during curing helping the salt to draw out moisture to concentrate the flavors.
I cold smoke the salmon with a combination of apple and oak wood for about 8 hours. It then rests for a few days.
On Cream Cheese:
During a meal in which I had nailed both the bagel and the lox, it occurred to me that the Philly Cream Cheese, the only brand I had ever used, was adding nothing to the experience - little flavor, gummy texture. So I ended up making my own cultured cream cheese from light cream. This added another layer of flavor and a superior texture that melded perfectly with the bagel and lox.
I could go on forever, but hope this is of interest.
Bill/SFNM