Davidovich Bagels Are Headed to Thailand

"Thailand statue" by @Doug88888 is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Name: Marc Fintz
Title: Director of Business Development
Phone: (212) 391-2870 xt 113
Email address: marc@allnp.com

Davidovich Bagels Are Headed to Thailand

"Thailand statue" by @Doug88888 is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.February 21, 2023 (NYC),- All Natural Products’ Davidovich Bakery announced today that it has reached a historic agreement that will bring NYC’s most beloved kettle boiled, plank baked, artisan Kosher, Pas Yisroel bagels to Thailand.

Company spokesperson and author of The History of Bagels in America, Marc Fintz, said “The continued international demand for our authentic NewYork City water boiled bagels has continued to skyrocket. The rise of the global marketplace of the 21st Century has exposed people from all corners of the globe to our authentic bagels and the desire to introduce them to marketplaces from the Middle East to the Pacific Rim has been one of our largest growth segments.”

In addition to being found in the finest retailers in New York City, Davidovich Bagels can be found throughout the United States, the Far East, parts of Europe, the Middle East and, starting in 2023, Thailand.   Thailand is a land of beautiful beaches, majestic Elephants, Siamese cats, Buddhist traditions and, now, Davidovich Bagels.

You don’t have to go to Thailand to find these famous bagels, because they are everywhere fine foods are sold.

About Davidovich Bakery

For years New Yorkers enjoyed these delicious traditional bagels without ever even knowing the name of the Artisans who produced them. Then the word started to spread. People around NYC, around the United States, and all around the world started to talk about these unique, throwbacks to the original days of bagel making, the Davidovich Bagel.Davidovich Bagels Are Headed to Thailand

Sold in the finest establishments in the world. Davidovich Bagels use the finest ingredients, are hand made, kettle boiled, plank baked, Non GMO, and Kosher. Davidovich Bagels have been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Time Magazine, Forbes, The NY Daily News, The Village Voice, The Forward, and many, many more publications. Featured on ABC News, The Jon Stewart Show, The History Channel, The Discovery Channel, Andrew Zimmern’s Bizarre Foods and many more television programs.

Most recently Davidovich Bagels were presented to the US Congress’s Bagel Caucus as an example of “TRUE NYC BAGELS”.

Davidovich’s Bagel Talk With David Page (Episode 14)

Davidovich's Bagel Talk With David Page
Davidovich’s Bagel Talk With David Page

February 17, 2022 (NYC)Davidovich’s Bagel Talk With David Page (Episode 14).  Author and Journalist, David Page, joins Comedian Joseph Pontillo to discuss his newest book, Food Americana.  Food Americana is an anthology collection of stories about cuisine that has become uniquely identified as American.   Bagels are an important part of this legacy and a chapter in David’s great book.  This is a terrific and exciting new episode of Davidovich’s Bagel Talk.

Food Americana is available on Amazon and everywhere books are sold.  It is a must read for anyone who loves food and who has a craving for bagels, pizza, American Chinese Food, and more.  You can check it out;
David Page changed the world of food television by creating, developing, and executive-producing the groundbreaking show Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives. Now from this two-time Emmy winner comes Food Americana, an entertaining mix of food culture, pop culture, nostalgia, and everything new on the American plate.
Some more praise for Food Americana,
Terrific food journalism. Page uncovers the untold backstories of American food. A great read.”George Stephanopoulos, Good Morning America, This Week and ABC News’ Chief Anchor

 

2021 International Book Awards finalist in History: United States
Living Now Book Award, Silver – Cookbooks, Ethnic Holiday
#1 New Release in History Humor, Food & Cooking, and Media Tie-In Cooking

Are you interested in being a guest on Bagel Talk?  or have a suggestion for a guest please visit us at http://www.allnp.com

A Brief History of the Bagel

A bagel is a round bread, with a hole in the middle made of simple ingredients:  high-gluten flour, yeast, salt, water, and malt.  Its dough is boiled, then baked, and the result should be a rich caramel color.  It should not be pale and blond.  A bagel should weigh five ounces or less and should make a slight crackling sound when you bite into it.  A bagel should be eaten warm and, ideally, should be no more than four to five hours old when consumed.  All else is not a bagel.

The bagel’s birthplace is considered to be Poland.  A story popular in the United States is that the first bagel was produced as a tribute to Jan Sobieski, 17th Century King of Poland, after he saved Austria from Turkish invaders at the battle of Vienna in 1683.  According to Maria Balinska, the author of “The Bagel: The Surprising History of a Modest Bread” (Yale University Press) it is just that-a story.

The first known reference to the bagel among Jews in Poland, according to Balinska, precedes the Battle of Vienna by seven decades.  It is found, she says, in regulations issued in Yiddish in 1610 by the Jewish Council of Krakow outlining how much Jewish households were permitted to spend in celebrating the circumcision of a baby boy- “to avoid making Gentile neighbors envious, and also to make sure poorer Jews weren’t living above their means.”

Eastern European immigrants arriving in the United States at the turn of the 20thcentury brought the bagel with them to the streets of the Lower East Side.  The rise of the bagel in New York in inextricably tied to that of the trade unions, specifically Bagel Bakers Local 338, a federation of nearly 300 bagel craftsmen formed in NYC in the early 1900s.

Local 338 was, by all accounts, a tough and unswerving union.  It was set up according to strict rules that limited new membership to the sons of current members.  By 1915, it controlled 36 bagel bakeries in New York and New Jersey.  These bakeries produced the original New York Bagels, the standard against which all others are still, in some manner judged.

What did they look like?  They were a mere three ounces.  They were smaller and denser than their modern descendants with a crustier exterior and chewier interior.   They were made entirely by hand.

Local 338 held its ironclad grip on the bagel market for nearly half a century, until industrial bagel-making machines were introduced into the market in the early 1960s.  The introduction of the bagel machines meant any retailer or bakery owner could make their own bagels with non-union help.

Today Davidovich Bagels are the links to the Old World bagels brought to the Lower East Side of New York.   They are:

  • Kosher-Pas Yisroel
  • Retarded for 18-24 hours
  • Hand Made
  • Kettle Boiled
  • Plank Baked
  • Double Seeded
  • All Natural
  • Certified Made in NYC

and now for the modern World concerns

  • Non-GMO Certified
  • Vegan (except Egg)