A Quote by Leo Rosten

The first printed mention of bagels... is to be found in the Community Regulations of Kracow, Poland, for the year 1610 which stated that bagels would be given as a gift to any woman in childbirth.
Montreal bagels are much better than U.S. bagels, because there's a sweetness to the dough, and there's a pull. New York bagels are basically bread in the shape of a bagel.
Olympia was a town crawling with music. I was new to the whole punk scene. The culture shock continued; Olympia had bagels! We didn't have bagels in Arkansas. You could order vegetarian food all over town! It was so crazy to me - a place with so many vegetarians, the restaurants made special dishes for them?
And in the last sentence I would like also to mention that Poland is one of the countries with which the United States has run strategic dialogues since last year.
I have very strong opinions about bagels.
In New York, I like it when you can get bagels at 3 in the morning.
I always thought that bagels and lox was my soul food, but it turns out it's sushi.
I tried being anorexic for four hours, and then I was like, I need some bagels.
I tried being anorexic for four hours and then i was like, i need some bagels.
You make me wanna staple bagels to my face, then remove them with a pitchfork.
On weekends, I do brunch at home: whole grain bagels, lox, avocado, eggs, and organic bacon.
Most people, including many Jews, think of Yom Kippur as a 25-hour caffeine headache capped off by a lox-and-bagels binge. It's undeniably that. But it is also, at its deepest level, a dry run. It is the one day of the year when we Jews are asked to look our mortality in the face.
When I'm in L.A., I have salads, sandwiches, and soups all the time. Eating in New York, I feel like I have to have pizza and bagels while I'm here!
I can't keep pumpernickel bagels at home because just knowing they are in the freezer makes it hard for me to fall asleep.
I've liked being Jewish in America - there's a secular version of Jewishness there that's more about bagels and jokes than going to synagogues.
Concerning Poland, I can only say that the peoples of Central Europe and Hungary are a community in fate, to the death. Many of us would spill our blood for Poland any time. And vice versa: in an emergency, many Polish people would give his life to protect Hungarians. This has happened more than once over the course of history.
Guys wake up at your place and they expect breakfast. They don't eat bagels and M&M's in the morning. They want things like toast. I say, 'I don't have these recipes.'
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