Baking Great Bread at HomeTwist, Dip, Bake. The Snack That Teaches Science.
BeginnerKids Can Bake: SoftPretzels
by Henry Hunter Jr.
Real pretzels, made by real kids, from scratch
Rise Time
30 minutes
Bake Time
8-10 minutes
Yield
8 full-size soft pretzels

Authentic Bread Flavor
Henry Hunter Jr. is the founder of Crust & Crumb Academy and Baking Great Bread at Home. He's been teaching people to bake bread for years, and believes every kid deserves to know what real food tastes like.
Equipment Needed
Ingredients
Pretzel Dough
Simple dough that comes together fast. Each kid can make their own batch, or one batch makes 8 pretzels to share.
The Magic Bath (Baking Soda Solution)
This is what makes a pretzel a pretzel. The baking soda changes the outside of the dough so it turns dark, shiny, and chewy in the oven. An adult handles the boiling water.
Topping
The classic is coarse salt, but you can top these with anything.
Optional Fun Toppings
Set up a topping station and let kids pick their own.
Pro Tip
Warm water means comfortable to touch, like bath water. If it's too hot for your finger, it's too hot for the yeast.
Step 1
Wake Up the Yeast
The bubbles mean it's alive
Just like in the pizza recipe, we start by waking up the . It needs warm water and a little sugar to get going. You'll know it's working when you see bubbles.
Click each step to mark complete
Add warm water to your bowl
Pour ¾ cup of warm water into your mixing bowl. Test it with your finger. It should feel like warm bath water. Not hot. Not cold. Just warm.
Add the sugar and yeast
Sprinkle 2 teaspoons of sugar and 1½ teaspoons of instant yeast on top of the water. Give it a little stir with your fork. Wait 5 minutes. You should see it start to bubble and foam. That means your yeast is alive and hungry.
⏱ Wait Time
Wait about 5 minutes until you see bubbles and foam on top
Pro Tip
If your yeast doesn't bubble after 5 minutes, the water might have been too hot or too cold. Start over with fresh water and new yeast. It happens. No big deal.
Yeast Is a Living Organism
Yeast is a tiny single-celled fungus, so small you can't see one with your eyes. When you add warm water and sugar, it wakes up and starts eating the sugar. As it eats, it produces carbon dioxide gas (the bubbles!) and a tiny bit of alcohol (that bakes away in the oven). This process is called . It's the same process that makes bread rise, and bakers have been using it for thousands of years.
The Takeaway
The bubbles in your bowl are carbon dioxide from yeast eating sugar. Those bubbles are what make your pretzel dough puff up.

See the bubbles? Your yeast is awake and ready to work.
Precise Timers
Use these interactive timers to track your stages.
Yeast Bloom
Step 2
Mix Your Dough
Hands in!
Now we turn that bubbly yeast water into real pretzel dough. This dough is a little stiffer than pizza dough. It needs to be, because you're going to roll it into long ropes.
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Add the oil and salt
Pour 1 tablespoon of olive oil or melted butter into your yeast water. Add 1 teaspoon of salt. Give it a quick stir.
Add the flour, a little at a time
Scoop 2½ cups of all-purpose flour. Add about half to your bowl and stir with a fork until it gets thick and shaggy. Then add the rest and keep stirring. When the fork stops working, it's time for your hands.
Knead the dough
Dust your clean surface with a tiny bit of extra flour. Dump your dough out and start . Push it away from you with the heel of your hand, fold it back toward you, turn it a quarter turn, and repeat. Keep going for about 5 minutes. Pretzel dough should feel smooth, firm, and a little springy. It's stiffer than pizza dough and that's exactly right.
Pro Tip
Pretzel dough should not be sticky. If it is, add a tiny pinch more flour. But don't go overboard. You want it smooth and firm, like a stress ball.

Push, fold, turn. This dough is firmer than pizza dough and that's on purpose.
Precise Timers
Use these interactive timers to track your stages.
Kneading
Step 3
Let It Rise
A short nap for the dough
Pretzel dough only needs a short rise. 30 minutes is plenty. While it rests, the yeast is working inside, making gas bubbles that will give your pretzels their soft, chewy texture.
Click each step to mark complete
Oil the bowl and cover
Put a tiny drizzle of olive oil in your bowl and roll your dough ball around in it so it doesn't dry out. Cover with a clean towel or plastic wrap.
Wait 30 minutes
Set the bowl somewhere warm. The dough won't double in size like pizza dough does. It just needs to relax and puff up a little. About 30 minutes is perfect.
⏱ Wait Time
Let the dough rest and puff up for about 30 minutes

Just 30 minutes. Use this time to set up your baking soda bath.
Precise Timers
Use these interactive timers to track your stages.
Dough Rise
Step 4
Roll Into Ropes
Think snakes, not spaghetti
This is the fun part. You're going to divide the dough into 8 pieces and roll each one into a long rope. The trick is even pressure and patience.
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Divide the dough into 8 equal pieces
Punch the dough down gently. Dump it onto a clean surface (no flour this time, a tiny bit of stickiness actually helps you roll). Using a bench scraper or butter knife, cut the dough in half. Cut each half in half. Cut each quarter in half. Now you have 8 pieces, all about the same size.
Roll each piece into a rope
Take one piece of dough. Roll it between your palms to start, then move to the table. Use both hands and roll outward from the center, applying gentle, even pressure. You want a rope about 20-24 inches long and as thick as your finger. If the dough springs back and won't stretch, let it rest for 2 minutes and try again. The just needs to relax.
Pro Tip
Don't add flour to your surface for this step. A lightly tacky surface gives you grip to roll the ropes. Too much flour and the dough slides instead of rolling.
Gluten Is Like a Rubber Band
When you knead dough, you build a stretchy protein network called . Gluten is elastic, which means it wants to snap back to its original shape, just like a rubber band. When you stretch your rope and it shrinks back, that's the gluten fighting you. If you let it sit for a couple minutes, the gluten relaxes and you can stretch it further. Professional bakers deal with this every day. Patience always wins.
The Takeaway
If dough springs back, don't force it. Let it rest 2 minutes and the gluten will relax.

Even pressure, from the center out. If it fights you, let it rest.
Step 5
Twist Into Pretzel Shapes
Easier than it looks, we promise
The classic pretzel twist is just three moves: make a U, cross, and press. Once you get the hang of it, you can shape one in about 10 seconds.
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Make a U shape
Lay your rope on the table in a U shape, with the open ends pointing away from you.
Cross the ends
Pick up both ends of the U and cross them over each other once, about halfway down. You should have a twist in the middle.
Press the ends down
Bring those crossed ends down and press them onto the bottom curve of the U. Press firmly so they stick. That's it. That's a pretzel.
Place on parchment
Carefully lift your pretzel and set it on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Repeat with all 8 dough ropes.
Pro Tip
Your first pretzel might look a little rough. That's fine. By pretzel number 4 or 5, you'll have the twist down. And honestly, even ugly pretzels taste incredible.
Step 6
The Magic Bath
This is where science makes your pretzel special
This step is what separates a pretzel from a regular bread roll. The baking soda bath changes the outside of the dough so it turns deep brown, shiny, and chewy in the oven. AN ADULT MUST HANDLE THIS STEP. Boiling water is dangerous.
Click each step to mark complete
Boil the water and add baking soda (ADULT ONLY)
An adult brings 6 cups of water to a boil in a large pot. Once boiling, carefully stir in 2 tablespoons of baking soda. It will foam up a bit. That's normal.
Dip each pretzel (ADULT ONLY)
An adult carefully lowers each pretzel into the boiling baking soda water using a slotted spoon or spider strainer. Let it sit for about 30 seconds, then flip and do the other side for another 30 seconds. Lift it out, let the water drip off, and place it back on the parchment-lined baking sheet.
Egg wash and top (kids can do this part)
Beat 1 egg in a small bowl. Using a pastry brush or the back of a spoon, brush the top of each pretzel with the beaten egg. This gives them a shiny, golden finish. Now sprinkle your topping: coarse salt for classic, cinnamon sugar for sweet, everything seasoning for fancy, or parmesan for savory. Your pretzel, your call.
Pro Tip
The baking soda bath only takes about 30 seconds per side. Don't leave them in too long or the dough gets gummy. Quick in, quick out.
The Maillard Reaction
The baking soda makes the water alkaline, which means it has a higher pH. When you dip the pretzel in this alkaline bath, it changes the surface of the dough. When that treated surface hits the hot oven, a chemical reaction called the Maillard reaction happens faster and more intensely than it would on regular bread. That's what gives pretzels their signature dark brown color, their shine, and that unique chewy-on-the-outside, soft-on-the-inside texture. Without this bath, you'd just have a bread roll shaped like a pretzel. With it, you get the real thing.
The Takeaway
Baking soda changes the pH of the dough's surface, which speeds up the browning reaction in the oven. That's why pretzels look and taste different from regular bread.

The baking soda bath is what turns a regular roll into a PRETZEL.
Precise Timers
Use these interactive timers to track your stages.
Baking Soda Dip (per pretzel)
Shaping
Shape Your Pretzels
The classic pretzel twist is simple once you break it down. Three moves and you're done.
Classic Pretzel Twist
The traditional pretzel shape everyone knows.
RecommendedClick each step to mark complete
Make a U
Lay your rope in a U shape with the ends pointing away from you.
Cross the ends
Lift both ends and cross them over each other once, creating a twist about halfway down.
Press down
Bring the crossed ends down and press them firmly onto the bottom curve of the U.
Pretzel Bites
Skip the twisting and cut your ropes into 1-inch pieces. Great for younger kids or dipping in cheese sauce.
Click each step to mark complete
Roll a shorter rope
Roll your dough into a rope about 12 inches long.
Cut into bites
Using a butter knife or bench scraper, cut the rope into 1-inch pieces.
Dip and bake
Dip the bites in the baking soda bath just like full pretzels, about 30 seconds total.
Pretzel Sticks
Just leave the ropes as straight sticks. Dip one end in topping for a fun two-tone look.
Click each step to mark complete
Roll into sticks
Roll each piece into a 6-8 inch rope.
Dip and bake
Same baking soda bath, same bake time.
Proof Test: The shaped pretzels don't need a second rise. They go straight into the baking soda bath and then the oven.
Step 7
Bake Your Pretzels
Pretzels bake at high heat for a short time. This gives them that dark, chewy exterior while keeping the inside soft.
Step by Step
Preheat the oven (ADULT)
An adult preheats the oven to 450°F (230°C). This needs to be fully hot before the pretzels go in.
Bake for 8-10 minutes
An adult places the baking sheet in the oven on the middle rack. Bake for 8-10 minutes. You're looking for a deep golden brown color all over. If they still look pale, give them another minute or two.
Brush with butter
As soon as the pretzels come out of the oven, an adult brushes them with melted butter. This makes them shiny and adds flavor. The butter will sizzle a little on the hot pretzels. That sound means you did it right.
Let them cool for 5 minutes
The hardest part of this recipe. Let the pretzels cool for at least 5 minutes before eating. The inside is very hot right out of the oven.
Preheat Oven
Bake Pretzels
Cool Down
Every oven is different. Start checking at 8 minutes. The pretzels should be a deep, rich brown, not just golden. That dark color is the Maillard reaction you just learned about.
Baking Methods
The simplest method. Works in any kitchen.
Equipment: Parchment-lined baking sheet
Preheat
Preheat oven to 450°F (230°C) for at least 15 minutes.
Bake
Place pretzels on middle rack. Bake 8-10 minutes until deep golden brown.
Butter
Brush immediately with melted butter when they come out of the oven.
Cool
Let cool 5 minutes before eating.
"An adult must handle all oven tasks. No exceptions. Hot ovens and kids don't mix without supervision."
Nutrition Facts
Per 1 pretzel • 8 servings per recipe
* Values are estimates based on standard ingredients
Storage
Room Temperature
Best eaten fresh and warm. Will keep at room temperature for a few hours.
Frozen
Freeze cooled pretzels in a zip-top bag for up to 1 month. Reheat in a 350°F (175°C) oven for 5-7 minutes.
💡 Reheat in a 350°F (175°C) oven for 5 minutes to restore the exterior. Microwave works but makes them soft instead of chewy.
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Troubleshooting
Baker's Notes
Common questions and solutions for perfect results
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