Bagel from Fremantle Bakehouse
Posted January 20th, 2011 in Bagelier Bagel, Eat out in Perth No Comments »When I was wondering around Cappuccino strip in Fremantle, I saw two huge bagels in a basket through the window at Fremantle Bakehouse. They were really big, and I just had to try it out and see if they bake a good bagel.
Fremantle Bakehouse is a pretty popular bakery with dine-in section where you can enjoy the baked goods with freshly brewed coffees and teas. I also like their bread – especially the ones with hard crust. My husband liked ciabatta bread with olives the other day.
It was a plain bagel with poppy seeds on top. When a staff passed me the bagel in a paper bag I realised the bagel was actually very light. I squeezed it with my fingers, and the soft crust just broke and became flaky without any resistance, just like other normal white bread. I was little disappointed, but took it home and toasted it to see if the texture was chewy. It wasn’t! It was just normal white bread in the shape of a bagel.
The bagel was just about the size of my hand, and weighed about 100g. My bagels at Bagelier are around 10cm in diametre and weigh about 100g. I know my bagels are quite heavy and dense, but I wondered if this bagel from Fremantle Bakehouse is what people in Perth think of a bagel. I also tried a blueberry bagel from Lawleys Bakery before, and it wasn’t heavy and chewy either. Maybe the bagels I make are too heavy and dense – should I rename it from “bagel” to something else?
In Japan, some bagels weigh around 100g ~ 160g!! Some of them are very heavy and chewy, and some are soft and fluffy. Which texture is good depends on people’s liking, really. BAGEL&BAGEL is very popular in Japan, but some people say their bagels are too soft. I personally like the one with tough crust and chewy interior. Bagelier bagels are best to be eaten toasted. I normally slice bagels in half before freezing, and toast them in a small oven toaster before eating. When I’m making a sandwich, I toast it using a panini press. Toasting it well-done and eating it while hot is my way of eating a bagel. Some people like heating up my bagel in microwave. The bagel becomes soft, but after awhile it tastes little dry, I think.
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