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by sandworm101 2872 days ago
Jewish bagels have holes. Non-jewish bagels, the ones with yeast, often rise so much as to occlude any hole. They are more hamburger bun than bagel.
1 comments

Are "Jewish bagels" what you call matzoh? Or is this a type of bagel with which I am unfamiliar?
No, they're referring to real bagels (chewy, with a shiny exterior) as "Jewish", as opposed to fluffy-white-bread-roll-with-a-hole that is sometimes marketed as a bagel.
I am certain that "chewy with a shiny exterior" bagels that I get at a bakery are made with yeast. They aren't some sort of secret or rare thing any place I've been, from New York to Arizona.

The mass-produced-in-a-factory-with-lots-of-preservatives bagels (e.g. Lenders) are very different, but also obviously made with yeast, and they don't really resemble fluffy white bread IMO.

When I go to my local grocery store in the northeastern US (the chain is in fact owned by a Jewish family), both kinds are available, the one in the bakery area and the other on the shelves with rolls.

Talking about these as though the dividing line was Jewishness or the use of yeast strikes me as both weird and incorrect.

Absolutely, sandworm101 is wrong about yeast and I clarified that up-thread.