[ noun ] (Yiddish) glazed yeast-raised doughnut-shaped roll with hard crust <noun.food>
bagel \ba"gel\ (b[=a]"g'l), n. [Yiddish beygl, prob. fr. dial. G. Beugel. --RHUD] a glazed leavened doughnut-shaped roll with a hard crust.
Note: A similar roll in Russia is called a bublik. [WordNet 1.5 +PJC]
So how about planning ahead by preparing breakfast the night before, including such foods as fruit juice, a whole-wheat bagel, yogurt or perhaps a banana.
"We know Murray well from the bagel business," says Robert Wunderle, a vice president at Supermarkets General Corp.
Trupp was unemployed and lived off a $100,000 inheritance, said Albuquerque police, who were looking for him in connection with Tuesday's bagel shop slayings.
But it noted the "strengths of the community, particularly its culture and extent of self-help within families." The district still has a few reminders of its Jewish past _ an all-night bagel shop or the J. Minsky and Sons textile store.
Brick Lane still has a few reminders of its Jewish past, including an all-night bagel shop and the J. Minsky and Sons textile store.
The starch and proteins push out the water and crystalize, hardening the food, but heating the bagel reverses the process, he said.
One big event is a June "bagel day" in which Mr. Lieberman and other volunteers show up at 39 commuter train stations for three hours to hand out bagels and cream cheese and accept Make-A-Wish donations.
This partial blindness, called bagel vision, makes faces appear as a ring of flesh with nothing in the middle.
Muffin and bagel shops abound in the subterranean shopping malls which criss-cross the financial district.
A ski-masked gunman walked into a bagel restaurant and opened fire today, killing two people and critically wounding a third, then escaped from the shop safely, police said.