Want to guess Panera Bread's most popular bagel flavor? It's none other than these tempting Panera cinnamon crunch bagels. There's a good reason why these chewy, crispy, cinnamony treats are so popular; they're absolutely mouthwatering!
If you love Panera's bakery items, make sure to check out our tomato basil bread and chocolate chipper cookie copycat recipes. Don't miss our collection of 8 Panera copycat dessert recipes, too!
Ingredients
This reicpe uses simple ingredients that you probably already have in your pantry, especially if you're an avid baker. Let's go through each ingredient and its purpose.
- Flour: please use bread flour, not all-purpose. You simply cannot obtain the same chewy texture with all-purpose flour, as it lacks a sufficient protein content. My favorite brand is King Arthur Flour. (affiliate)
- Yeast: the vital ingredient that causes the dough to rise and gives it an amazing flavor and aroma.
- Cinnamon Crunch Topping: simply combine brown sugar, white sugar, and cinnamon to create this delectable topping.
- Poaching Liquid: this is one of the crucial steps in this recipe, as it creates the bagel's unique, chewy crust. The poaching liquid consists of baking soda dissolved in a pot of boiling water.
- Cinnamon/White Chocolate Chips: Panera adds white chocolate chips and cinnamon chips to the dough. You can mix them into the dough before its bulk ferment (first rise) or after.
See recipe card for full information on ingredients and quantities.
How to Make Panera Cinnamon Crunch Bagels
Gather the ingredients for the cinnamon crunch bagel dough.
- Combine the flour, salt, and yeast. (image 1)
- Mix in the cinnamon and honey, and gradually add the water to make a slightly sticky dough. (image 2)
- Knead for 5 minutes, then let the dough rest for 10 minutes. Knead for another 2 minutes, or until the dough passes the windowpane test. (See the recipe card to learn this technique.) (image 3)
- Mix the cinnamon chips and white chocolate chips into the dough. (image 4)
- Let the dough rise overnight (8 to 24 hours) in the fridge. The next day, let it warm up for an hour in a warm place. (image 5)
- Divide it into 12 pieces. Roll each one into a ball, poke a hole in the center, and stretch it into a ring shape. (image 6)
- Cover with a towel and let the bagels rise until they are springy to the touch, about 20-30 minutes. (image 7)
- Poach them in a mixture of boiling water, baking soda, and sugar for 30 seconds per side. (image 8)
- Sprinkle the bagels with cinnamon sugar and bake at 425°F for 15 minutes per tray, or until the bagels are well browned and have an internal temperature of at least 190°F. (image 9)
- Let the cinnamon crunch bagels cool on a wire rack before slicing and enjoying! (image 10)
Recipe FAQs
According to Panera's website, one cinnamon crunch bagel contains 420 calories, 7g fat, 380mg sodium, 83g carbs, and 32g sugars. By contrast, my homemade version contains 226 calories, .8g fat, 490mg sodium, 50g carbs, and 18g sugars. This recipe makes smaller ones than Panera's, so if you increase their size, the nutrition facts will change.
No, they aren't. However, if you're making your own, it's easy to make them vegan. The only ingredient in these cinnamon crunch bagels that isn't vegan is the honey that sweetens the dough, but that can easily be substituted with another sweetener, such as brown or white sugar or agave nectar.
While these bagels aren't super unhealthy, they're not the healthiest sweet treat out there! Feel free to enjoy them in moderation like any other dessert. Check out the full nutrition facts for this copycat recipe at the end of the recipe card.
Poaching bagels is one of the most important steps in the process, so don't skip it. Traditional New York bagels are poached in a mixture of boiling water and barley malt, which gives the bagels their distinctive chewy texture and thin, leathery crust. Since barley malt can be hard to find, I've substituted it with baking soda.
The actual poaching process is simple. Make sure the poaching liquid is at a full boil, not a simmer, then carefully lower the bagel into the water. Cook it for 30 seconds on each side, then remove it from the water with a skimmer and place it back on the baking tray. Repeat the process until all the bagels have been in the hot water.
You can spread almost anything you would like on these bagels. I find them delicious by themselves or simply with butter, but feel free to try honey, jam, or cream cheese that has been whipped with cinnamon and brown sugar.
Store
Here's how to keep your freshly baked, copycat Panera cinnamon crunch bagels fresh!
- Like any homemade bread, these bagels taste best the same day.
- If you have leftovers to keep, store them in a paper bag for up to 2 days.
- Don't freeze, as the sugar topping will turn liquidy or sticky when thawed.
- Toast them under the broiler, or reheat them by wrapping them loosely in foil and heating in a 350°F oven.
Expert Tips
- Only use bread flour, not all-purpose, for this recipe. All-purpose lacks the protein content necessary to create lots of gluten, which is the secret to a chewy bagel.
- Bring the poaching liquid to a full boil before adding the bagels.
- Don't poach the bagels for too long, or the crust will be too thick, resulting in a tough, overly chewy bagel that won't rise much in the oven.
- Line the baking trays with parchment paper. The crunchy topping will get all over the trays and will be hard to clean off otherwise.
- Store leftovers in a paper bag at room temperature for up to a few days. Do not freeze; the topping will become sticky and watery upon thawing.
Other Panera Bread Recipes
Recipe
Cinnamon Crunch Bagels - Panera Copycat
Ingredients
For the Dough
- 4 ⅛ cups bread flour
- 4 ½ teaspoons fast-action yeast
- 1 tablespoon salt
- ¼ cup honey
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 ½ cups warm water
- 1 cup cinnamon chips
- ½ cup white chocolate chips
For the Poaching
- water
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
For the Topping
- ½ cup brown sugar
- ¼ cup white sugar
- 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
Instructions
Making the Dough
- Pour the flour into the bowl of a stand mixer. Add the salt and yeast on opposite sides, stirring each one in with your finger. Keeping the salt from touching the yeast prevents it from killing the yeast.
- Add the honey and ground cinnamon and mix with the paddle attachment on low speed until blended.
- Gradually add enough warm water to form a slightly sticky dough. You may not need all the water, or you might need a little extra, depending upon the brand of flour and the humidity.
- Change attachments to the dough hook and knead on medium-low speed for 5 minutes. Turn off the mixer and allow the dough to rest for 10 minutes, then knead on medium-low again for another 2 minutes, or until the dough passes the windowpane test. That means that a large lump of dough can stretch until it is translucent without tearing.
- Knead the white chocolate chips and cinnamon chips into the dough until well blended.
- Shape the dough into a ball, place it in the mixing bowl, and cover with plastic wrap. Let it prove in the fridge overnight (at least 8 hours, but no more than 24 hours). The dough should double in size during this process.
Shaping & Proving the Bagels
- The next day, let it rise in a warm place for 1 hour. See the recipe notes for tips on creating a warm place.
- Punch down the dough and cut it into 12 equal pieces, using a bench scraper and a kitchen scale for ease and accuracy. Roll a piece into a ball, then poke a hole in the center with your finger and stretch the dough to form a bagel shape. Repeat with the remaining dough balls.
- Place the bagels on two 11x17-inch cookie sheets that have been lined with parchment. Cover the trays with clean tea towels and leave to prove for 20-30 minutes, or until the dough is springy to the touch.
- Combine all the cinnamon crunch topping ingredients in a medium bowl until blended, then set aside.
Poaching & Baking
- Fill a six quart Dutch oven with three inches of water and bring it to a full boil, then dissolve the sugar and baking soda in the water. Turn the heat to a simmer until you’re ready to poach the bagels. Before adding the bagels, make sure the water is at a full boil again.
- Gently peel a bagel off of the tray and carefully drop it into the boiling poaching liquid. Let it cook for 30 seconds on each side, which is long enough to set the shape and encourage the dough to puff up. Promptly remove it from the water with a skimmer, drain off the excess water, and place it back on the tray. You can poach up to four bagels at a time.
- Generously sprinkle the bagels with the topping. Bake at 425°F for 15 minutes, or until the bagels have risen, browned, and have a minimum internal temperature of 190°F on a meat thermometer.
- Let the bagels cool on wire racks for at least 20-30 minutes before eating.
Video
Notes
- Need a warm place for the dough to rise? Place the bowl of dough on the top shelf of a cold oven and place a casserole dish filled with boiling water on the lower shelf. Shut the oven door to trap the steam inside.
- It’s best to poach one tray (six bagels) and bake them right away, then let the second tray continue to rise while the first one bakes. When the first tray is almost done in the oven, start poaching the second tray.
- Store leftover bagels in a paper bag at room temperature for up to a few days. Do not freeze; the topping will become sticky and watery upon thawing.
Nutrition
Serving sizes and nutritional information are only an estimate and may vary from your results.
Casey
Hi!
Do you recall about how much each bagel weighed before proofing?
If I split my dough into 6 each bagel would be about 65 grams which seems very small.
I’m sure something is off with my dough but any insight is appreciated!
Emma
I'm sorry, Casey--I have no record of what each bagel weighed before proving. This recipe does make 12 good-sized bagels if you're making a full batch of dough. Keep in mind that although the bagels look small when shaping them, they do increase quite a bit in size as they prove.
Diane Sandy
Keeping the salt and yeast from touching in the first step, but adding the honey and cinnamon and mixing the whole batch in the second step doesn’t make sense to me. At this point the salt and yeast are touching before the water is added. I’m confused.
Emma
The point of mixing them in before the cinnamon and honey is that they're diluted by the flour, which protects them from actually touching. I always keep them on separate sides of the bowl and stir each one in with my finger. This protects the yeast from being killed by direct contact with the salt.
Darci Dembroski
Do you have any secret to keeping the crunchy topping from getting soggy when stored? I love these but have never found a good way to keep them from turning to goo when stored.
Emma
Store them in a paper bag for up to 2 days at room temperature.
Georgianne
I have the same problem when I put them in the freezer! What can I do!
Emma
Unfortunately, the only way to prevent a sticky or soggy topping after thawing is simply to avoid freezing altogether. Storing the bagels in a paper bag at room temperature is the best way to store them.
Staci
Just made these today and they turned out great! Instead of baking soda when poaching, I replaced with honey. I had made some Everything Bagels earlier in the week which encouraged the honey at this step.These were the two first experiences of making bagels and I'm looking forward to making more with my daughter.
Emma
That's great to hear, Staci! I'm so happy that you and your daughter enjoyed these bagels!
Ariana
Do you bake them on the same tray with parchment paper when they are wet? Mine completely stuck to the parchment paper after baking, tried removing right away and after letting cool and then paper and dough just completely cooked together.
Emma
I baked them on the wet paper when I developed this recipe, and I never had any issues. I'm not sure what would have gone wrong.
Lupe Martinez
Is the honey necessary in the recipe or can I opt out of using it?
Emma
You can use 1/3 cup of brown sugar instead of the honey. Enjoy!
Georgianne
I made the bagels today. I don't know yet how they turned out. I noticed when I tried to cut them (after completely cooled) that almost all the topping tried to pop off! I stopped after attempting two and decided to freeze all of them and cut them while still a little frozen to save the topping. I am disappointed. Also next time will make 8 instead of 12 so they will be bigger. Does the topping stay on for you when you slice them???? If so, what could I have done wrong?
Emma
You didn't do anything wrong, Georgianne. Much of the topping fell off for me when I made the recipe; it's brittle and falls off easily. Some bakers have commented online that misting the bagels with water before sprinkling the topping on may help it stick better.
Carol
Hi! You said to add cinnamon chips (if desired) after first rise. Would that be in step 7 on printable recipe after you punch down the dough?
Emma
Yes, you would knead the chips in during Step 7 (after the dough does its first prove). Happy baking, Carol!
jimmey donchey
question! hi there!
When you generously sprinkle on the topping, and bake for 25-30 min.... during baking, does the topping melt off of the bagel? thank you!
Emma
When you sprinkle on the topping, not all of it gets on the bagel to begin with, so that stuff will melt on the tray. A little of the topping may melt off, but it mostly stays on. That's why I recommend lining the trays with parchment paper to make cleanup easy.
Georgianne
I haven't made them yet, but want to be sure the salt is regular salt???
Emma
Yes, it means regular table salt.
Alex
The cinnamon topping is crunchy and light. The dough is airy and soft. These bagels are very nice and they would taste good with cream cheese.
Emma
Thank you, Alex!
Beth
These bagels are chewy and topped with yummy cinnamon sugar. They are very cute to look at, and are reminiscent of cinnamon rolls. These taste good with or without butter.
Emma
Glad you enjoyed these, Beth!