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  2. Orwashers Bakery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orwashers_Bakery

    Orwashers Bakery is a famous breadmaking business in New York City that has been listed among the top ten bakeries in America. [1] Also known as A. Orwasher Handmade Bread Inc. it was established in 1916 on 78th Street in the Yorkville area of the New York City borough of Manhattan and it is now one of the last vestiges of the thriving ...

  3. Henry S. Levy and Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_S._Levy_and_Sons

    Henry S. Levy and Sons, popularly known as Levy's, was a bakery based in Brooklyn, New York, most famous for its Jewish rye bread.It is best known for its advertising campaign "You Don't Have to Be Jewish to Love Levy's", [1] [2] [3] which columnist Walter Winchell referred to as "the commercial [] with a sensayuma" (sense of humor).

  4. Pastrami on rye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastrami_on_rye

    Pastrami on rye is a sandwich comprising sliced pastrami on rye bread, often served with mustard and Kosher dill pickles.It was popularized in the Jewish delicatessens of New York City and has been described as New York's "signature sandwich".

  5. Finnish bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnish_bread

    Rye bread, known as ruisleipä, is a popular dark and sour bread in Finland, distinguishing itself from German rye breads by its less greasy and moist texture and differs from Swedish rye breads by not being sweet and lacking spices like caraway. Traditional Finnish rye breads, such as reikäleipä and limppu, were historically dried on poles ...

  6. Nordic bread culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_Bread_Culture

    Nordic food culture in the south and east of the region comprises a tradition of baking softer rye breads. In Denmark and especially in Sweden, the soft rye bread is sweeter; in Finland, a drier sour rye bread type is traditional. Iceland has for the past hundred years imported grain to make bread, as grain is not cultivated on the island.

  7. Ruisreikäleipä - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruisreikäleipä

    Bread hanging from a pole in the ceiling. Ruisreikäleipä (Finnish pronunciation: [ˈrui̯sˌrei̯kæˌlei̯pæ], rye hole-bread) is a kind of Finnish bread, a flat rye flour loaf with a hole in the middle. It is sometimes referred to as reikäleipä ([ˈrei̯kæˌlei̯pæ]), shorter term without ruis (rye) which applies also to the oat loaf ...

  8. Yonah Schimmel's Knish Bakery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yonah_Schimmel's_Knish_Bakery

    It is as much a landmark as an eatery and has frequently been an artist's subject. A portrait of the Yonah Schimmel Knish Bakery by Hedy Pagremanski (b. 1929) is in the permanent collection of the Museum of the City of New York. [7] Jewish-Irish painter Harry Kernoff painted this bakery on a trip to New York in 1939. [8]

  9. Ruisleipä - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruisleipä

    Freshly consumed rye bread is thick, while bread stored for an extended period becomes thin. Traditional rye bread shapes vary, with large, round, and thick bread being the most common. In Karelia and Savo, this type of soft rye bread, often referred to simply as leipä (bread) or musta leipä (black bread), was a weekly staple. Other regional ...