Is it common to make big multi-topping sandwiches in the US?

Really?

egg-mcmuffin.jpg

McMUFFIN
 
Also not all sandwiches even need bread

One of the GOAT sandwiches, the Jibarito for example:

Which is usually traditional Hispanic sandwiches with the bread swapped out with some kick ass plantains and usually Rosa sauce or whatever.

Also, shouts out to Lucky Dill in Palm Harbor Florida for consistently making the best sandwiches big and small.

They made the "piled high" sandwich I posted earlier, and my absolute favorite "big" sandwich ever the Kevin Cranston which has the perfect match of sweet and savory that compliments well with the onion challah roll :

and lots of smaller sandwiches like the Bird and Beast (not pictured) and twists on conventional sandwiches.

Kickass place..
 
so it's a fried bread sandwich really? because there is grilled cheese in UK like this, which is prepared using a grill and not a frying pan so it makes sense

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You don't actually cook the cheese in a grilled cheese sandwich though. Just get it gooey enough where you can bite through it without chewing.
 
This is a Danish ostemad. A slice of cheese on top of buttered rye bread.

All you need really. You wish you had it this good.





This below is the sort of stuff you get if you eat out:

Do you guys eat the open face sandwiches with a knife and fork? It looks good, but it doesn't seem like the hand held food a sandwich is here in the U.S.
 
To be fair, Europeans make up for their pitiful sandwiches by having doner kebabs.

th


I ate so many fucking kebabs when I was in England.
 
People really do need to travel more. And yes, folks from Europe as well.

I remember having thick multi topping sandwiches in the Caribbean--in street food not Americanized hotel food for tourists.
 
Unfortunately sandwiches are a bit worse in America on account of our shit cheese.

You are aware that American cheese isn't, in fact, the only cheese in America, right? There's a ton of different cheeses in the US - we even have entire stores dedicated to just cheese. Even your average supermarket features a ton of fancy cheeses now.
 
You are aware that American cheese isn't, in fact, the only cheese in America, right? There's a ton of different cheeses in the US - we even have entire stores dedicated to just cheese. Even your average supermarket features a ton of fancy cheeses now.
now you're gonna tell me we don't just have bud light
 
OP, I think your sandwich game needs a little work. I suppose if we are only looking at sliced bread type sandwiches then Americans do put a lot of toppings. I really wouldn't want it the other way tho, I'd feel like I was missing out on some pretty tasty creations.

The Italian Deli around the corner offers me a choice of bun, meat, cheese, and a myriad of toppings. In addition to the regulars I can add stuff such as eggplant, artichoke heart, roasted red pepper, sliced green olives, pesto, Dijon, or whole grain mustard. They then cram it in to a panini grill. I love it. Looking at the origins of a panini it looks like it is a strong Italian origin and not just some Americanized adaption. It is a sandwich to me in any case.
 
You are aware that American cheese isn't, in fact, the only cheese in America, right? There's a ton of different cheeses in the US - we even have entire stores dedicated to just cheese. Even your average supermarket features a ton of fancy cheeses now.

I live in the US, man, that's why I had American cheese on hand to make a quick parody pic. If only I had some Kraft singles the joke would have been more obvious.
 
I live in the US, man, that's why I had American cheese on hand to make a quick parody pic. If only I had some Kraft singles the joke would have been more obvious.

Have you read that thread about American cheese? People don't even realize there's a difference between deli American and Kraft singles. You can understand my concern :P
 
Have you read that thread about American cheese? People don't even realize there's a difference between deli American and Kraft singles. You can understand my concern :P
Yeah.

American cheese from the deli is orders of magnitude above Kraft singles.

That said, both iterations are kind of the guilty pleasures of the cheese world.

not even prisoners eat shit like this
Oh come on. A piece of liverwurst on a slice of toast with maybe a little bit of mustard is simply...good.

Not everything has to be flashy.
 
Oh come on. A piece of liverwurst on a slice of toast with maybe a little bit of mustard is simply...good.

Not everything has to be flashy.

Yeah, but when it's used as some shining example of sandwich-making in order to say "lol 'murica," I can see how people can get a little testy.
 
That meal would cost like 50 cents in the US. Anyone her can have it "that good." We choose not to because we already have it much better.
I'm a euro in a major US city and I know of exactly one place to get bread good enough for this and it's not cheap. Europeans have the right ingredients but stand to learn how to use them better from Americans when it comes to sandwiches :]

Do you guys eat the open face sandwiches with a knife and fork? It looks good, but it doesn't seem like the hand held food a sandwich is here in the U.S.
You can use knife and fork but typically hold them at the sides or cut them in half and fold them. Easier to eat than a lot of these cow-with-a-cracker-on-either-side type of sandwiches that people like to post.
 
You can use knife and fork but typically hold them at the sides or cut them in half and fold them. Easier to eat than a lot of these cow-with-a-cracker-on-either-side type of sandwiches that people like to post.

My grandpappy didn't storm the beaches of Normandy to see free Europeans cower to substantial sandwiches.
 

Man, if I were in a desperate enough position to consider this a meal, I'd pawn off my possessions and head to the nearest soup kitchen. If I saw a child pull only this out of his lunchbox I'd set the CPS to speed dial.

But seriously, this is what I get when I crave a sandwich:

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So here's my daily breakfast gaf. Tasty (and healthy) crisp bread with pâté (the second most common sandwich topping after cheese) and cucumber slices, banana and some milk.

V5F15G7.jpg
 
So here's my daily breakfast gaf. Tasty (and healthy) sandwich with pâté (the second most common sandwich topping after cheese) and cucumber slices, banana and some milk.

V5F15G7.jpg

When I was in Austria the bed and breafasts would supply you with these individual wedges of pate. They were very similar to this.

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But with pate instead of soft cheese. Any idea what the name of that brand was or if there is a name for pate served in that style.
 
Dagwood knows how to make a fucking sandwich.

Oh wow, I just now realized that's why Denny's god-tier breakfast sandwich was called the Breakfast Dagwood. Unfortunately they no longer offer it due to an incident where an entire European family simultaneously had heart attacks from just seeing it on the menu.
 
This is definitely ok in my book. Looks maaaaybe a little dry and could use a couple extra sauces but it definitely helps me respect our Belgian brethren.

What kind of meat is in that.

It's made with shoarma or kebab meat usually. But it's actually not really breakfast food. My ideal breakfast is either a

"smos"

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or

"koffiekoeken"

koeken_01.jpg
 
EuroGAF - you can't even begin to comprehend the American sandwich game.

Best exclusive you have is right here:
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Thanks to this thread I'm getting a Reuben for lunch tomorrow:
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To be fair, Europeans make up for their pitiful sandwiches by having doner kebabs.

th


I ate so many fucking kebabs when I was in England.

Good god, yes!

I had a lot of butter/meat/cheese on a single piece of bread in Germany, which was totally fine, but nobody ever called it a sandwich.
 
It's made with shoarma or kebab meat usually. But it's actually not really breakfast food. My ideal breakfast is either a

"smos"

brood.jpg



or

"koffiekoeken"

koeken_01.jpg

Now this I can get behind. Belgian food is great, though sandwiches are the last thing to enter my mind when I think of things to eat in Belgium. Then again, my mental list there looks something like: "Chocolate, chocolate, chocolate, waffles, chocolate, chocolate waffles, chocolate..."
 
Oh lord, those reactions on a butter and cheese sandwich. That is what loads of people here eat for lunch. Amazing to have such a response, I guess part of the reason why weight is a much bigger problem in the US.

Hell, pretty much every day I have two meals with one condiment between two slices of bread.

Do you guys eat the open face sandwiches with a knife and fork? It looks good, but it doesn't seem like the hand held food a sandwich is here in the U.S.

I know of one person that eats it like that. But it is light because it is one slice of bread with one topping. You can hold it at the bottom if you really care about not touching the topping. That or you put another slice of bread on top of it, it's no rocket science.
 
Oh lord, those reactions on a butter and cheese sandwich. That is what loads of people here eat for lunch. Amazing to have such a response, I guess part of the reason why weight is a much bigger problem in the US.

Hell, pretty much every day I have two meals with one condiment between two slices of bread.

This is poverty.
 
Now we finally know the real source of the US obesity epidemic; overloaded sandwiches.

I basically stopped eating soft bread because even a couple of simple cheese sandwiches is like a whole meal of calories even though it doesn't fill you in the least. These American ones are probably 1000+ calories each. So yeah sandwiches are not good for you, although super tasty. It's something you can eat a couple of times a month just like any other fast food.
 
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