Onion roll

{{refimprove|date=October 2024}}

{{short description|Bread flavored with dry onions}}

{{Infobox food

| name = Onion rolls

| image = Ratners onion rolls.jpg

| image_size =

| caption = Onion rolls made with the recipe found in "The World-Famous Ratner's Meatless Cookbook".

| alternate_name = Jewish onion rolls, Ratner's onion rolls, Miami onion rolls

| country = Central-Eastern Europe

| region =

| creator = Ashkenazi Jews

| course =

| type = Bread

| served =

| main_ingredient = Flour, eggs, butter, water, oil, sugar, onion, poppy seeds

| variations =

| calories =

| other =

}}

Onion rolls are a roll of Ashkenazi Jewish origin similar to a bun, that is made of a soft, slightly sweet dough similar to challah, containing dried onions throughout which create its signature flavor. It is often topped with dried onions, and occasionally poppy seeds. {{cite web |url=http://www.cobblestonemill.com/CSM_Varieties/Variety.cfm?CategoryID=57&ProductID=53 |title=Cobblestone Mill - Varieties - Buns and Rolls - Onion Rolls |website=www.cobblestonemill.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061103064039/http://www.cobblestonemill.com/CSM_Varieties/variety.cfm?categoryid=57&productid=53 |archive-date=2006-11-03}}

Overview

Onion rolls are a small roll, originating in the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe several hundred years ago. The rolls contain flour, water, eggs, oil, salt, yeast, sugar, dried onions, and often poppy seeds. Today they are most typically used for sandwiches by those in the Jewish community, although they are also used as a dinner roll and can be commonly found at Jewish delis and bakeries across North America and Israel.

History

=Early history=

Onion rolls originated in the Ashkenazi Jewish community of Eastern Europe several hundred years ago, and were brought to the Americas by Jewish refugees fleeing Eastern Europe at the turn of the 20th century (late 1800s). These refugees brought their traditional Jewish foods with them to their new homes in America, especially in New York City, which became a center of Jewish culture and was where the onion roll became most notable.

=20th century=

Onion rolls could be found at Jewish bakeries, restaurants, delicatessens, and markets around the United States and other places with a significant Jewish population. However most notably, the kosher dairy restaurant Ratner's opened in New York City’s Lower East Side neighborhood in 1908, and began serving its famous onion rolls soon after. These onion rolls became famous both within the Jewish community and among other New Yorkers as well. The restaurant opened several more locations but eventually, they all closed in 2002. At the restaurant’s peak up to 3,000 onion rolls were baked and served every day.{{cite book |title=The World Famous Ratner's Cookbook}}

=2002–present=

According to Jewish American cookbook author and baker Stanley Ginsburg, “It’s almost impossible to find a decent onion roll.”, since the closing of Ratner’s in 2002 which prompted him to help write a cookbook, ”Inside the Jewish Bakery”, offering his version of an onion roll, and other classic Jewish breads and other baked goods.{{cite news |last1=Brawarsky |first1=Sandee |title=For the love of an onion roll |url=https://jewishweek.timesofisrael.com/for-the-love-of-an-onion-roll/ |access-date=18 October 2019 |agency=The Jewish Week by The Times of Israel}} Onion rolls have since been featured in other Jewish baking cookbooks as well. The family that formerly owned Ratner's later published a book with a recipe for their original onion rolls after the restaurant's closing.

Today onion rolls are most commonly found in supermarkets across the Northeastern United States, as well as the Los Angeles and Miami areas, due to their large Jewish populations. Onion rolls are sold by a variety of brands including Kasanoff’s, Miami Onion Roll Company, Ratner’s, Zomick’s, and others in stores across the country. Bakeries in Detroit have created a “New Yorker Onion Roll”, which is made in the style of Ratner’s.

Onion rolls are also still found in Jewish bakeries and dairy restaurants in the United States, as well as Israel.

See also

Notes and references