Soft Pretzel Recipe – Homemade chewy, super soft pretzels stuffed with melty cheddar cheese & savory herbs, finished off with a light sprinkle of sea salt. Fast, easy and a family favorite!
** PLEASE READ: There isn’t any actual garlic in the recipe!! We originally had fresh garlic in the recipe, but the garlic flavor was overpowering so we used chopped onions and parsley instead, which gives the pretzels a milder garlic flavor!
These homemade pretzels are dangerously easy. Seriously. Make them once and you will lose all fears of homemade pretzels once and for all. I promise. If we can make them, so can you.
Last week, when we had another wave of snow along with another few days off from school, I decided it would be the perfect time to tackle homemade pretzels. What better way to spend a snow day than experimenting in the kitchen next to the warmth of the hot oven?
Let me just say, these pretzels turned out way better than I ever expected. They’re so fluffy. So soft. So wonderful. So heavenly. And…. SO easy. You’ve GOTTA make these!
1. What makes these pretzels so easy? Instead of the boiling method typically used to create the classic texture to the outer layer, I simply used an egg bath. There is simply no need to go through all the trouble of boiling each individual pretzel. An egg wash is so much easier and less intimidating, yet still leaves you with that glossy outer layer and fluffy inner layer that a soft pretzel is known for.
2. This recipe calls for bread flour. The difference between bread flour and all purpose flour is that bread flour is made from hard, high-protein wheat. It also has more gluten strength and protein content than all-purpose flour. So what does this all mean? It means that bread flour leaves you with a fuller/fluffier/chubbier pretzel.
** For a heartier version, you could do half whole-wheat flour, half bread flour.
3. Use brown sugar instead of white sugar. It gives the pretzels an extra depth of flavor from the molasses in the brown sugar.
4. These pretzels are stuffed with melty cheddar cheese, dried parsley flakes, and dried chopped onion. Even though there isn’t any actual garlic in these pretzels, the onion and parsley mixes with the cheddar and leaves you with this incredible cheesy garlic bread flavor stuffed into this pretzel.
5. Don’t be scared of kneading! Kneading makes bread and rolls light, airy, and chewy. It’s a crucial step in making yeast breads and it so easy to learn… I learned from this video. Watch 0:25-1:10. The video says to knead the dough for 6-8 minutes, but this dough really only needs about 1-2 minutes.
6. Halfway through baking, brush the pretzels you must with melted butter. Brushing the butter on halfway through gives the butter a chance to dissolve so of it’s greasiness and wedge itself into all the nooks and crannies of the pretzel before the pretzels come out the oven.
** Be careful to not knock the sea salt off the pretzels when you brush on the butter.
Above is a visual of how to shape the pretzels. There is no rolling pin required.
With a sharp knife, cut ball of dough in half and then into thirds to make 6 smaller balls of dough. Each ball should be a little over 1/2 cup. This measurement does not have to be exact. Use as much or little dough for each pretzel as you wish – the size of the pretzel is completely up to you.
Take each ball of dough and roll into a rope. As even in diameter as you can get it. My ropes were about twenty five inches long. Feel free to make your pretzels as thick or as thin as you wish. I personally like thicker pretzels, but make sure you do not make your ropes too thick because the dough will expand quite a bit in the oven.
These pretzels are quick, easy, and chewy. A perfectly approachable recipe for beginners, adults, kids, and all soft-pretzel lovers. Enjoy! 🙂