A bagel and cream cheese (also known as bagel with cream cheese) is a food pairing that consists, in its basic form, of a sliced bagel spread with cream cheese. Bagels with cream cheese are traditionally and most commonly served sliced horizontally and spread with cream cheese and other toppings.[1]
Bagels with cream cheese are common in American cuisine, especially in the cuisine of New York City and American Jewish cuisine. Bagels with cream cheese became popular in the 1980s as they expanded beyond Jewish communities. Bagels served closed as a sandwich also became increasingly popular for their portability. The basic bagel with cream cheese serves as the base for other items such as the "lox and schmear", a staple of delicatessens in the New York City area and across the U.S. While non-Jewish ingredients take well to bagel sandwiches, such as eggs and breakfast meats, cold cuts and sliced cheese, several traditional Jewish toppings for bagels do not work well between bagel halves, including the popular whitefish salad, pickled herring or chopped liver for the simple mechanical reason that soft toppings easily squirt out the sides when the bagel is bitten, as even a fresh bagel is firmer than most breads.
American cuisine
A bagel with cream cheese is common in American cuisine, particularly in New York City.[2] It is often eaten for breakfast; with smoked salmon added, it is sometimes served for brunch.[2][3][4][5] In New York City circa 1900, a popular combination consisted of a bagel topped with lox, cream cheese, capers, tomato, and red onion.[6]
The combination of a bagel with cream cheese has been promoted to American consumers in the past by American food manufacturers and publishers.[7] In the early 1950s, Kraft Foods launched an "aggressive advertising campaign" that depicted Philadelphia-brand cream cheese with bagels.[8] In 1977, Better Homes and Family Circle magazines published a bagel and cream cheese recipe booklet that was distributed in the magazines and also placed in supermarket dairy cases.[7]
American Jewish cuisine
In American Jewish cuisine, a bagel and cream cheese is sometimes called a "whole schmear" or "whole schmeer".[9][10] A "slab" is a bagel with a slab of cream cheese on top.[10] A "lox and a schmear" is to a bagel with cream cheese and lox or “Nova” smoked salmon. The latter being the particular style of Atlantic salmon used by Jewish delis on the East coast, and often also referred to as lox, especially outside the old and shrinking Jewish lineage of delis,[11][12] Tomato, red onion, capers and chopped hard-boiled egg are often added.[12][13] These terms are used at some delicatessens in New York City, particularly at Jewish delicatessens and older, more traditional delicatessens.[10][14]
The lox and schmear likely originated in New York City around the time of the turn of the 20th century, when street vendors in the city sold salt-cured belly lox from pushcarts.[12] A high amount of salt in the fish necessitated the addition of bread and cheese to offset the lox's saltiness.[12] It was reported by U.S. newspapers in the early 1940s that bagels and lox were sold by delicatessens in New York City as a "Sunday morning treat", and in the early 1950s, bagels and cream cheese combination were very popular in the United States, having permeated American culture.[2][a]
Mass production
Both bagels and cream cheese are mass-produced foods in the United States.[2][16][17] Additionally, in January 2003, Kraft Foods began purveying a mass-produced convenience food product named Philadelphia To Go Bagel & Cream Cheese, which consisted of a combined package of two bagels and cream cheese.[18][19]
In popular culture
Bagels and cream cheese were provided to theater patrons by the cast of Bagels and Yox, a 1951 American-Yiddish Broadwayrevue, during the intermission period of the show.[a][20][21][22] The revue ran at the Holiday Theatre in New York City from September 1951 to February 1952.[20][22] A 1951 review of Bagels and Yox published in Time magazine helped to popularize bagels to American consumers throughout the country.[8][23]
Bagel and lox with the cheese in the middle,
Bagel and lox let it toast on the griddle,
Bagel and lox with the cheese in the middle,
And a slice of onion on the side.
^ ab"The next stop for the bagel: Broadway. Its break into stardom came in the 1950s. By that time, the cream-cheese bagel was close to supplanting the traditional, Saturday-morning ham, eggs, and toast in America. It had saturated the culture."[15]