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

I can say that as a Swede, we all do not act like this. I eat my sandwiches big and good.
I'm the only Swede that does this D:
 
Nothing wrong with just cheese and bread, but I stopped eating those when I was like 8.

A good grilled cheese sandwich, made with REAL cheese on a crusty bread with some Dijon mustard and shallots is on a whole new level.

REAL cheese should not be grilled, cheese is made to eat as is. Grilling is for sub-par cheese that can't keep up otherwise.

Grilled cheese is the REAL struggwich.
 
Are those prices for bread real? Like $5 for each loaf?
Yeah that is insane. Holy shit.

A loaf or baguette here is maybe $2, $3 for the really larger ones. And my supermarket gouges prices too.

REAL cheese should not be grilled, cheese is made to eat as is. Grilling is for sub-par cheese that can't keep up otherwise.
Wha? Melted cheese can be amazing. Ever had pizza or raclette?

Edit: oh I guess it was sarcasm... or European humour I guess :P
 
Wait. So a sandwich in the US with two breads is a sandwich. And a sandwich with one bread is an open sandwich? Is an open sandwich even a common thing over there or is it a weird exotic variant? Here we simply call both variants for a sandwich, open or closed.
 
I think the biggest difference and the main reason why people from the US can't believe people in Europe would just eat one slice of bread with a single topping is because we have a way bigger variant of bread and the only thing available in the US, whitebread the most unhealthy and mass-produced of them all (EDIT for clarity:
I should probably have phrased it differently as "the bread isn't available" is obviously bullshit: Of course I know more types of bread are available in a first world county. But it seems they aren't really part of the diet or your everyday meals like they are here in Europe or, more specifally, Germany. Again, all I can go from is my own anecdotal evidence and the utter disbelief of one-topping-bread-meals in this thread :P)

I never lived in the US myself, I only know a few people from the US, but they were always surprised and almost shocked at the amount of bread we (germany) eat and how completely different it was from US-style white bread.

This is what I and pretty much everyone else I knew back in school during ate at breakfast - bread with cheese...

http://www.hallofamilie.de/fileadmin/bilder/hallofamilie/Artikelbilder/RTEmagicC_pausenbrot.jpg

bread with ham...

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipe..._mit_Butter,_Wurst_und_zwei_Scheiben_Brot.jpg

whole grain bread without the crust...

http://www.quia.com/files/quia/users/carladefaveri/Pausenbrot/Kasebrot

That's a typical breakfast or dinner in germany. Because the bread itself tastes great and has quite a bit of nutrition - that depends on the type of bread however. Even the bread itself, without any topping, can be a pretty tasty meal. Bread is awesome.

Sandwichs are definetely not as common here as they are in the US. And that's where the misunderstanding comes from: I would never call the stuff you see here sandwiches. It's bread with cheese. But because you only ever use bread for sandwiches in the US, I guess it's hard to convey the difference? Let's try it!

All sandwich meals use bread. Not all bread meals are sandwiches.

If all I got was white bread I would probably go crazy. Just look at these beauties laughing at that piece of white bread!

http://www.koenigbrot.at/Portals/0/EasyGalleryImages/1/1/brot283434.jpg

I don't know how it is in flyover country, but I'd laugh at someone who only ate white bread, just like I'd laugh at someone who only eats pizza, chicken nuggets, and ketchup. White bread is for 8 year olds.
 
Maaan, some of these "sandwiches" (and yes, open-faced sandwiches are sandwiches) are truly depressing. If I am going to go through the trouble of putting one together, you had better believe that I am throwing everything in the fridge, and cupboards into it. A nice crusty roll, some horseradish mayo, deli mustard, pickles, pepperoncinis, sauerkraut, artichoke hearts, tomato, spinach, turkey breast, and pepper jack cheese. Anything less is not worth my time.

Gosh I had this quoted from the last time I viewed this thread.

Some of us Scandinavians use different words for open faced sandwiches and regular sandwiches so it is not a sandwich to us.I like both kinds depending on how hungry I am and I find a lot of people in this thread to be overly narrow minded.
 
I'd like to submit this in rebuttal to the cheese and butter crowd:

tumblr_m13s0onrFL1r8swmoo1_500.png


sandwiches.png


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6N-YmGuiGw
 
REAL cheese should not be grilled, cheese is made to eat as is. Grilling is for sub-par cheese that can't keep up otherwise.

Grilled cheese is the REAL struggwich.

Ok I'll just throw this exquisite croque Monsieur in the garbage.
 
REAL cheese should not be grilled, cheese is made to eat as is. Grilling is for sub-par cheese that can't keep up otherwise.

Grilled cheese is the REAL struggwich.

at my school we had a food truck exclusively serving grilled cheese variations

shit was awesome
 
REAL cheese should not be grilled, cheese is made to eat as is. Grilling is for sub-par cheese that can't keep up otherwise.

A lot of cheeses actually have their flavors open up more when they are melted. Source: girlfriend who worked with and sold cheese for 2 years. Additional source: my taste buds
 
In movies and shows they always do these huge Subway-style sandwiches with tons of toppings. Never just a basic butter and cheese sandwich. Is this common in US homes? Another trope is people only eating a sandwich for lunch. I can't imagine how hungry you must be after such a meal! I know our Norwegian neighbours do this as well, but they're kinda crazy soooooo...

I don't know about the multi-topping thing (as I'm British, not American) but I do have sandwiches for lunch at work. Not just one though, I have a couple.
 
REAL cheese should not be grilled, cheese is made to eat as is. Grilling is for sub-par cheese that can't keep up otherwise.

Grilled cheese is the REAL struggwich.

Not so. It can be eaten as is but grilling it changes the flavor profile so you can grill it for a different taste. REAL cheese can be prepared multiple ways.

You're trying too hard to make the strugglewich seem more reasonable.
 
Wait. So a sandwich in the US with two breads is a sandwich. And a sandwich with one bread is an open sandwich? Is an open sandwich even a common thing over there or is it a weird exotic variant? Here we simply call both variants for a sandwich, open or closed.

open sandwiches are not common here, at least I don't think I have even ever seen one that wasn't french toast.
 
Ok I'll just throw this exquisite croque Monsieur in the garbage.

at my school we had a food truck exclusively serving grilled cheese variations

shit was awesome

A lot of cheeses actually have their flavors open up more when they are melted. Source: girlfriend who worked with and sold cheese for 2 years. Additional source: my taste buds

Not so. It can be eaten as is but grilling it changes the flavor profile so you can grill it for a different taste. REAL cheese can be prepared multiple ways.

You're trying too hard to make the strugglewich seem more reasonable.

You guys should read my next post after that one. It's funny that no one commented on the post I replied to, which was equally as absurd as mine.
 
This is a ham and cheese sandwich from the deli around the corner.
4ZrvukB.jpg

The fuck, is that for real?

Not so. It can be eaten as is but grilling it changes the flavor profile so you can grill it for a different taste. REAL cheese can be prepared multiple ways.

You're trying too hard to make the strugglewich seem more reasonable.

Disclaimer: I don't like cheese.
However, there are a lot of french/swiss cheese where I think heating them up would be blasphemy (and to be honest, they're already so liquid I'm not sure how you'd go about that), maybe the poster was referencing that?
 
12754.jpg

A small selection of the breads available at my local deli. I had no idea that as an American I was living in a bread wasteland.

Yeah, cause every town has a Zingermens. /rollseyes

Yes America has a wide variety of bread if you live in hip place and have the money to purchase it. But you lying about the typical American eat (what to us is) artisan bread every day. That guy begging for money just down the street in your yuppy college town sure the hell isn't eating good bread. The majority of Americans eat wonder bread types and if they want to be "healthy", store variety wheat bread. Food desserts are a real thing in America. It is insulting when America's try to pass off what is consider high ends food stuff in our own country as standard every day fare eating by the majority of people when demographics and show that would be clearly impossible for the majority.
 
Yeah, cause every town has a Zingermens. /rollseyes

Yes America has a wide variety of bread if you live in hip place and have the money to purchase it. But you lying about the typical American eat (what to us is) artisan bread every day. That guy begging for money just down the street in your yuppy college town sure the hell isn't eating good bread. The majority of Americans eat wonder bread types and if they want to be "healthy", store variety wheat bread. Food desserts are a real thing in America. It is insulting when America's try to pass off what is consider high ends food stuff in our own country as standard every day fare eating by the majority of people when demographics and show that would be clearly impossible for the majority.

Take a deep breath and relax. I think if you carefully re-read this thread, you will notice that most of the posts are not 100% serious (mine included).
 
open sandwiches are not common here, at least I don't think I have even ever seen one that wasn't french toast.

Yeah, cause every town has a Zingermens. /rollseyes

Yes America has a wide variety of bread if you live in hip place and have the money to purchase it. But you lying about the typical American eat (what to us is) artisan bread every day. That guy begging for money just down the street in your yuppy college town sure the hell isn't eating good bread. The majority of Americans eat wonder bread types and if they want to be "healthy", store variety wheat bread. Food desserts are a real thing in America. It is insulting when America's try to pass off what is consider high ends food stuff in our own country as standard every day fare eating by the majority of people when demographics and show that would be clearly impossible for the majority.

And here I was sitting, thinking I just offended the whole of american culture by suggesting that maybe Americans don't eat different types of bread as regularly as some other countries.

People were mad, yo.

Also, if you would efer go ahead, pick up some crazy awesome piece of gouda or camenbert and melted I would probably have to kick you out of my house. Or yours. The cheese you melt isn't the same as the cheese you eat by itself.
 
Maybe I'm using the word "sandwich" wrong but these are normal breakfast... things

img_5844_156999231.jpg

This reminds me of a book I read in middle school called Grapes of Wrath.


Wait. So a sandwich in the US with two breads is a sandwich. And a sandwich with one bread is an open sandwich? Is an open sandwich even a common thing over there or is it a weird exotic variant? Here we simply call both variants for a sandwich, open or closed.

Yes, a sandwich that's open is called an "open-faced" sandwich. This isn't common but you can find it in some breakfast restaurants. To sandwich something means place between two objects.


In movies and shows they always do these huge Subway-style sandwiches with tons of toppings. Never just a basic butter and cheese sandwich. Is this common in US homes? Another trope is people only eating a sandwich for lunch. I can't imagine how hungry you must be after such a meal! I know our Norwegian neighbours do this as well, but they're kinda crazy soooooo...

In the US, a sandwich is almost exactly like a burger, except you switch the buns for slices of bread, and the beef patty for cold, sliced meat like turkey, beef, ham, pastrami, etc.

It's as big as you want to make it.

This is a typical sandwich:

sandwich.jpg
 
In the US, a sandwich is almost exactly like a burger, except you switch the buns for slices of bread, and the beef patty for cold, sliced meat like turkey, beef, ham, pastrami, etc.

It's as big as you want to make it.

This is a typical sandwich:

sandwich.jpg

That looks like a normal (lunch) sandwich (I think a lot of confusion from this thread comes from the fact that in Europe, it is common to eat those "open sandwiches" with 1 to 2 toppings for a small meal wen you aren't that hungry or during breakfast).
Not that monstrosity:

Are those... things common in the US?
 
Take a deep breath and relax. I think if you carefully re-read this thread, you will notice that most of the posts are not 100% serious (mine included).

This thread was funny a month ago, but now its been resurrected, it hard to tell if people are joking when they are rehashing arguments that are a month old. Posting a deli from richest city in Michigan and passing of as a common America corner deli and other posters say "if you didn't shop in the ghetto" aren't funny; it comes across classiest. How are Europeans to know if your are pulling their leg, or showing real American culture?
 
Most sandwiches you get from the supermarket in the UK just have 1-2 toppings. Really is surprising that Americans find it absurd a sandwich can have so few toppings.
 
So I played 'open Drake' all along only to unlock true 'Drake' after the fact? That's immersion breaking as fuck. Someone please get me respiration, like right now!
 
Wait. So a sandwich in the US with two breads is a sandwich. And a sandwich with one bread is an open sandwich?

An open-faced sandwich isn't a real thing. :p The entire point of the sandwich is that something is contained between two breads do you can eat it more easily. Bread with stuff on it really needs a different English name since it's basically a different food.
 
OUWHCFt.jpg


4lbs Kryptonite sandwich (Avocado, bacon, beer-battered onion rings, extra pepper jack, ham, mozzarella sticks, pastrami, pesto, roast beef, salami, stuffed-jalapeño poppers, turkey)*

* Pretty sure some of the ingredients have been taken out of the one in the pic, that's why it doesn't look quite as epic

This is a goddamned sandwich
 
ikes-place-kryptonite-sandwich.jpg


$26.62
4lbs Kryptonite sandwich (Avocado, bacon, beer-battered onion rings, extra pepper jack, ham, mozzarella sticks, pastrami, pesto, roast beef, salami, stuffed-jalapeño poppers, turkey)

This is a goddamned sandwich

I can't even find the bread
 
OUWHCFt.jpg


4lbs Kryptonite sandwich (Avocado, bacon, beer-battered onion rings, extra pepper jack, ham, mozzarella sticks, pastrami, pesto, roast beef, salami, stuffed-jalapeño poppers, turkey)*

* Pretty sure some of the ingredients have been taken out of the one in the pic, that's why it doesn't look quite as epic

This is a goddamned sandwich

I had to google the 4lbs to be sure I wasn't remembering the conversion to a normal unit wrong...
Who the hell eats that much? That'd be enough for like 6 people from the looks of it...
 
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