Jerusalem bagel
Jerusalem bagel or Jerusalem ka'ak is a type of bread baked in Jerusalem. It has a ring shape but is otherwise only baked and not boiled unlike a traditional boiled bagel. It is related to Middle Eastern ka'ak bread.
Typically, this is a yeasted, crusty bread which is shaped into an oblong ring and covered in sesame seeds. The dough has a lighter texture than a traditional bagel. It can be sliced and served with various toppings. Countless variations of it exist across the Eastern Mediterranean, but the oblong one from Jerusalem remains the most iconic and is thought to stretch back to the Middle Ages.
History
Ottoman Period
While the precise origins are unknown, Jerusalem bagels are often traced back to the Ottoman period; similarities are drawn to Turkish simits. Ottoman records from the 16th and 17th centuries contained references to a bread known as ka'k, this bread is sometimes described as hard and dry, and sometimes described as a soft bagel.According to one story, Jerusalem Ka'ak or Jerusalem Bagel became popular in the holy city during the visit of the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent's wife Roxelana to Jerusalem in 1552. She ordered the creation of a charitable kitchen known as "Khaski Sultan". Initially, the ka'ak was part of a complete meal consisting of rice and meat, but over time it evolved into a main dish consumed by Palestinian residents of the city, over time, the shape of Jerusalem Ka'ak or Jerusalem Bagel changed from a round shape without a hole to one with a hole, and eventually to its current rectangular form.
20th Century
According to historian Gil Marks, the modern Jerusalem bagel may have originated among the Arab residents of Jaffa city around the year 1948, the original bread was skinnier than the modern versions.A photo taken on the 14th of July, 1967 shows a boy selling sesame coated, ring-shaped, "bagels" in the alleys of the Old city of Jerusalem. Ka'ak-al-quds likely became popular among Israelis following the Six-Day War in 1967, when Israelis gained access to the old city and its souks, after which it became known as the Jerusalem bagel.
As of the 2020s, there were over 20 operating bakeries making ka'ak al-Quds, some of the bakeries making ka'ak have been operating for 120 years, with one having operated for 200.