Day-

Honey-oat pretzels
Can’t. Stop. Eating. These! Beatrix Bakes bread queen Emma
Lonsdale held my floury hand every step of the laugenbrezel
(lye  pretzel)-making way, and now I can hold yours.


The thing that makes these pretzels so distinct is a pre-bake dip
in alkaline water. Lye/caustic soda is traditional – giving the
exterior a rich mahogany-hued lustre and a mineral-rich flavour.


The very diluted lye solution reacts to heat during baking and
neutralises to a harmless (I have eaten LOTS to ensure this is
true) carbonate. If you have a crumb of fear about lye, I offer
a baked bicarbonate of soda option which is almost as good,
flavour-and colour-wise. Think a really good tribute band–
not  the real deal, but still foot-tappingly fun.


To make the dough, whiz the oats in a food processor until they form
a fine and flossy meal. Set 50 g (1¾ oz) aside for pre-bake sprinkling
and combine the remaining 120 g (4½ oz) with the bakers’ flour and
salt. In the bowl of an electric stand mixer, weigh the yeast and water
and whisk to dissolve. Add the butter and honey, then tip the dry
ingredients on top.


Using the dough hook, knead on speed 4 (below medium) for
8 minutes. Stay close to the mixer – this is faster than a normal low
dough speed, and you don’t want the mixer to walk off the countertop.


The dough will have a shaggy start, then become a smooth and very
springy pillow with clean bowl sides.


Remove the bowl from the mixer, spray the top of the dough with
cooking oil and cover with plastic wrap. Set aside to double in size,
which will take about 1–2 hours at room temperature.


When the dough has risen, scrape it onto your work surface (no
flour required) and divide into six pieces, weighing around 120 g
(4½ oz) each.

continued
Keeps Pre-bake, can be frozen for up
to 2 weeks. Post-bake, these are at
peak delicious 20 minutes to 2 hours
after baking. They refresh admirably in
a hot oven for 5 minutes.


Makes 6 pretzels. Takes Around 3 hours, but most of
that time is hands-off proofing.

170 g (6 oz) rolled oats
300 g (10½ oz) bakers’
(strong/bread) flour
9 g oz) fine sea salt
12 g oz) fresh yeast or
4 g (⅛ oz/1 teaspoon)
dry yeast
200 g/ml (7 oz) tepid water
20 g oz) unsalted butter,
room temperature soft
50 g (1¾ oz) honey
cooking oil spray
The pre-bake dip
15 g oz) food-grade caustic
soda/lye (available online –
don’t buy it from the
supermarket)
750 g/ml (1 lb 11 oz) lukewarm
water or
90 g (3 oz) baked bicarbonate
of soda (baking soda)
750 g/ml (1 lb 11 oz) lukewarm
water
The post-bake glaze
30 g (1 oz) unsalted butter
30 g (1 oz) honey