Baking with Children: Soft Pretzels

Every other week on FOOD52, we bring you Nicholas Day -- on cooking for children, and with children, and despite children. Also, occasionally, on top of.

Today: Don't fear baking projects with children -- not even soft pretzels. Just give in.

soft pretzel dough
soft pretzel dough

This column concludes with a recipe for soft pretzels, and it is a stellar recipe for soft pretzels, but because I am going to recommend that you use it as a baking project with your children, there is a reality we need to confront first: There is no phrase in the English language less promising than a baking project with children.

Even the word baking is disingenuous. For any self-respecting child, the baking part of a baking project is gratuitous. The part before baking is what matters: the desperate, increasingly frantic attempt to ensure that nothing is left to be baked. If there is any batter or dough that actually makes it in the oven, the child has failed. Raw dough is the street drug of children; the baked version is less pure.

Also, about that preposition: with children-with? Almost any other preposition would be more accurate: Around. Amid. Against.

>>RELATED: See our recipe for easy (and kid-friendly) Crispy Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies.

There are two ways to deal with the chaos of baking with children: the first is the French way, at least according to Bringing Up Bébé, in which French preschoolers learn patience and independence by baking on their own. They make yogurt cakes for snack! It's a totally adorable cultural ritual, and if you also find it maddeningly competent and superior, you can always tell yourself that their yogurt cakes probably suck. Not that I've done this.

I have tried baking with my preschooler this way-executive function training, with more butter-and you can do it, but it helps to have an entire culture to back you up. It's hard to make your household into France for the afternoon. Which is why I usually go with the second way: give in.

>>RELATED: Read about making whole wheat pizza with kids, and get our recipe.

Don't give up, exactly. Just give in: don't expect that you'll make what you're making. Do not try to be efficient: don't make the thing you've been really wanting to make anyway. If there is a photo of the end product, cover it up. Put a preschool-age drawing in its place.

I love baking with Isaiah, but as with a lot of things in childrearing I love it a little more prospectively than retrospectively. We've been baking together since he was old enough to stir and we have now reached a happy compromise: he wants to taste everything, do everything-measure, mix, knead-and then lick the inside of every bowl afterward. This means that everything is slightly worse than it would otherwise be-poorly measured, undermixed and underkneaded-and that there is less of it, but also that it survives long enough to be baked. It seems like a fair trade.

Since we have established that your helper is working against you-that you have a mole in the kitchen-pretzels may seem ludicrously ambitious. They are not. If you haven't baked pretzels at home, you'll be surprised at what you've pulled off: a perfect pretzel that's crusty and doughy all at once, sweet and salty and a tiny bit bitter. They make you feel like you've gone to the fair.

>>RELATED: Check out The Easy Sell: Eggplant Dip with Yogurt.

They are fast: the initial rising time is 90 minutes, which means your child will still remember having made the dough when it is time to shape it. They involve a maximum of dough throwing-about: before shaping, you have to roll out lengthy coils, which make good edible necklaces or babushka-style headscarves. Remember to remove from child before baking.

And no matter what they look like, their taste is unimpaired. Ours looked afflicted with elephantitis. With a few extra mouths for help, they didn't survive an hour outside of the oven.

soft pretzel
soft pretzel

Baker's Sign Soft Pretzels

Lightly adapted from Naomi Duguid and Jeffrey Alford's Home Baking: The Artful Mix of Flour and Traditions from Around the World (Artisan, 2003)

Makes 8 pretzels

1 cup milk, scalded and then cooled
2 teaspoons instant yeast (or active dry; the difference is minimal)
1 tablespoon barley malt syrup
2 1/2 to 3 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt (fine grained)
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut in pieces and softened
1/4 cup baking soda
1 egg yolk, beaten with 2 tablespoons milk

1. In a mixing bowl, stir the yeast into the lukewarm milk, then add the malt syrup and a cup of flour. Stir, then add the salt and butter and stir again. Add 1 1/2 cups more flour and mix well. Knead on a floured surface or in the bowl for approximately five minutes.

2. Cover the bowl and let rise for about 90 minutes, or until doubled. The dough should have a soft, satiny feel to it.

3. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees, with a baking stone, if you have it, or a baking sheet, if you don't.

4. Lightly flour your cutting board or counter. Turn the dough onto your work surface and divide into 4 equal pieces; then cut each piece in half, so you have 8 total. Cover a baking sheet with a piece of parchment paper.

5. Roll each piece of dough out by putting it under your palms and moving your palms back and forth to make a long coil. The dough will stretch easily and then snap back. Alternate between pieces of dough so that each has time to briefly relax; it will stretch farther afterward. You want each coil to be about 24 inches long.

6. To shape the pretzels, take one end in each hand and twist them around each other a couple of inches from the ends of the coil. (You'll have what looks like a circle with a couple of antennae sticking up.) Lay the dough down on the parchment paper and fold the ends (the antennae) over so that they stick to the bottom of the circle -- it should now look more or less like a pretzel. Prepare another sheet of parchment paper or a flour-dusted peel.

7. Meanwhile, boil 3 cups of water in a saucepan, then add the baking soda and stir to dissolve. With the water just below a simmer, pick up each pretzel with a spatula and hold it in the baking soda bath (on the spatula) for 20-30 seconds. It will puff up slightly and soften. When you remove the pretzel, let the baking soda water drain off the bottom (otherwise it will stick to the bottom and taste bitter), brush the top with the egg yolk and milk solution and then place on the new sheet of parchment paper or the peel. Sprinkle with salt.

8. You can either bake each pretzel immediately after boiling and brushing or you can wait and put them in the oven in a single batch. (I do the latter.) Bake for about 10 minutes; check in after 8 minutes. They are done when golden brown. Do not overbake; you want the contrast between the crusty outside and the pillowy inside. Eat as soon as they are cool enough to handle.

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Photos by Karen Mordechai