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Online search of New York Times from 1857 to 2000 for exact phrase "bulkie roll" returns no hits. "Kaiser roll" returns 225 hits. Search of Boston Globe from 1980 to present returns 66 hits, all of which simply seem to use the phrase with the assumption that the reader understands it.
Interestingly, a October 22, 1992 Boston Globe restaurant review of a newly-opened State Delicatessen in
Newton, MA mentions that it offers sandwiches on bulkie rolls. The only reason this is interesting is the restaurant is part of a franchise which is presumably connected to the very famous Stage Delicatessen near Carnegie Hall in New York. AFAIK the bulkie is as unknown to New Yorkers as jimmies on ice cream. I'm surprised that the reviewer did not comment on this bit of obvious inauthenticity. But the reviewer didn't have much good to say about the establishment, anyway.
One USENET posting says that "bolki" is Polish for "roll."
That seems good enough to go with, so I've added a note about it to the article. Anyone wise in the ways of diacritical marks, Latin-1, Unicode, etc. I'd appreciate help with the spelling. I did a cut-and-paste from the website she suggests and it comes out "Bułki," an ordinary single lower-case l with a little slash through it.
Dpbsmith(talk)23:46, 17 September 2005 (UTC)reply
Notes: In Portland, Me. in the 1950's-1980's there was a bakery run by Polish immigrants that featured both hard and soft bulkie rolls. Since all of the recipes they featured were from their homeland I would assume the bulkies were as well. They soft bulkies were as described in the article they hard rolls had a much firmer crust. This may have been a regional or even family specialty.--
Psychotyke (
talk)
10:35, 15 March 2009 (UTC)reply
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