The Conservative Cave
Current Events => The DUmpster => Topic started by: franksolich on July 25, 2010, 06:33:49 PM
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http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=236x79214
Oh my.
It's Sunday, the day God gave us for repose and relaxation, so Skins's island-lite.
cleveramerican (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 07:39 PM
Original message
Describe your all-time best sandwich thread.
In the early 80's I was on vacation skiing in Austria.
One day we skied down into Italy, Vittepino
And standing on this little street in my ski boots, at a little booth of a place, I had the most wonderful meatball sandwich.
The very best one I have ever had in my life.
It has lived in my memory since.
Tesha (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 07:49 PM
Response to Original message
1. I have to admit ...
I get my favorite all time sandwich once each year.
Still warm from the vine thick slab of heirloom tomato, still sizling thick sliced bacon or two, a swipe of cold mayo,
and toasted good white bread
for some reason I only eat one a year, maybe it's to keep it special - like Christmas
Well, franksolich can't disagree with a bacon-lettuce-tomato sandwich, provided of course the fat is cooked off the bacon, one uses real mayonnaise, and inside of wheat bread, toasted or untoasted.
One suspects the Tesha primitive gets haemerrhoids, with that white bread.
cbayer (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 08:13 PM
THE BAYER ASPIRIN PRIMITIVE
Response to Original message
2. Roast beef poboy dressed with gravy from domolise's in New Orleans.
tishaLA (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 09:27 PM
Response to Original message
3. My dissertation director took me to a place in Hollywood called Lucky Devil
it's run by that guy Lucky who got famous being the beefcake in a Diet Coke commercial. As a result of his residuals, no doubt, he opened this place on Hollywood Blvd that serves somewhat upscale versions of diner food, so they have, for example, Kobe beef Philadelphia Cheesesteaks (I grew up in Philadelphia, and that, to me, is a sacrilege). Anyhow, I ordered a grilled cheese, but it wasn't just any grilled cheese. It was gruyère and tomato on rosemary and something focaccia. With a side order of the most delicious fries ever made--they were shoestring and crispy crispy crispy, but not burnt--and a garlic aioli.
I also ordered a Chimay. Hey, the dissertation director was paying. It was a GOOD lunch.
hippywife (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 10:21 PM
MRS. ALFRED PACKER
Response to Original message
4. I have two. (Sorry!)
One is my own homemade Italian sub. And the other is an everything bagel, toasted, with pastrami or corned beef, a slice of red onion and a schmear.
The empressof all (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 10:38 PM
THE IMPERIOUS PRIMITIVE
Response to Original message
5. Chopped Liver and Bacon on Good Rye.
It has to be the rye with seeds and a seriously crunchy crust. I like it with raw thinly sliced red onion, fresh from the garden tomato, maybe a few slices of hard boiled egg and a hefty smear of Mayo. It's so good it'll kill ya.
I also love a good Cubano. Spicy pulled pork, swiss cheese and ham grilled then gently opened and a perfectly fried egg and pickles added.
For dessert I wouldn't mind a thin layer of Crunchy Peanut butter, marshmallow fluff, Nutella and a slice or two of bacon on white toast. I'd like a little ramekin of chocolate ganache on the side for dipping.
I know....I have issues.
Yeah, the imperious primitive, who as moderator douses campfires on Skins's island discussing this site, has issues, two in particular. The weight, and the teeth. It perhaps has something to do with her dietary choices.
noamnety (1000+ posts) Sat Jul-24-10 12:25 AM
Response to Original message
6. For me it was a free one I got at some meeting
So simple. Really good artisan bread, a boatload of fresh spinach, and a thick thick smear of pesto.
It redefined sandwiches for me, and I spent a few months afterwards having that in my lunch daily, sometimes with the addition of brie.
DrDan (1000+ posts) Sat Jul-24-10 07:28 AM
Response to Original message
7. I don't anything better than a smoked meat from Schwartz's in Montreal with a pickle.
But . . . have never had a bad meal while skiing.
japple (1000+ posts) Sat Jul-24-10 10:15 AM
Response to Original message
8. Thinly sliced smoked turkey, sliced avocado, thinly sliced homegrown tomatoes and cheddar on a flour tortilla. Warmed in the oven until the cheese is melty.
blaze (1000+ posts) Sat Jul-24-10 11:35 AM
Response to Original message
9. The Dan-o Sandwich
OK, here's the thing. This sandwich is great as a veggie sandwich, too. Obviously, just skip the salami.
-Sourdough Bread
-Italian Dry Salami (not Genoa, or Cotto. Dry. Columbo is good, I prefer Gallo)
-Provolone is the main cheese. If you're a cheese freak like me, you can add other cheeses, too, but take it easy. Too much cheese cancels out the flavor. Don't use too strong a cheese either. Don't do anything stronger than a cheddar.
-Very thinly sliced Red Onion
-Some sliced Black Olives
-Some thinly sliced Pepperocini's
-Salad Sprouts
-Sometimes, on the top slice, I'll spread some Cream Cheese
-The only condiment I use is Gulden's Brown Spicy Mustard.
It can be baked, if you like. 350º until the bread is golden brown. Personally? I don't bake it.
Options: Avocado makes for a nice change. So do those spicy sprouts.
Violà ! Dan-o Sandwich.
Warpy (1000+ posts) Sat Jul-24-10 12:05 PM
THE DEFROCKED WARPED PRIMITIVE, #09 TOP PRIMITIVE OF 2009
Response to Original message
10. Mixed mushrooms, Emmenthaler cheese, a vaguely mustard sauce dipped in batter and fried so the outside was both crunchy and light as a feather.
I've nearly duplicated it except for that sauce. Any more mustard would have ruined it. Any less and it would have been a characterless cream sauce. Other ingredients are hot pepper (again subtle), nutmeg, and something else I still can't identify.
It was that happy marriage of the right ingredients, the right technique, the right grill temperature, and even the right place and server.
Geezuz. franksolich is a big cheese eater, a really big cheese eater, but has never heard of most of these cheeses the primitives have named. franksolich generally sticks with all grades of cheddar, and Swiss, assiduously avoiding soft cheese, and of course cheese "food." Just the real stuff.
Blue cheese salad dressing, although not strictly pure cheese, is great when used in place of butter, on corn-on-the-cob, or smeared on bread for sandwiches. But it has to be extra-thick, high-quality blue cheese salad dressing, not the watery stuff.
Duer 157099 (1000+ posts) Sat Jul-24-10 06:23 PM
Response to Original message
12. I can't pick just one
I've had too many really great sandwiches in my lifetime.
Well, yes, of course.
Generally, the best sandwich, if one looks at food as mostly fuel for the body, is peanut butter on whole wheat or rye bread, no jelly.
And in season, two-week-old dried-out white turkey meat, vigorously peppered with salt, on whole wheat or rye bread, with or without mayonnaise or blue cheese salad dressing or sour cream.
If one looks at food for taste (in addition to fuel), few things beat the standard bacon-lettuce-tomato sandwich, again provided the fat is cooked off the bacon. Or a hamburger that's been pressed down hard on the grill so as to squeeze out all the grease, in a whole wheat or rye bun, with mayonnaise or blue cheese salad dressing or sour cream to top it. Maybe a leaf or two of lettuce, too.
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Bacon, lettuce, and tomato. I might go along with mozzarella or some other fresh, soft cheese, but you can't beat a BLT for a sandwich.
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Bacon, lettuce, and tomato. I might go along with mozzarella or some other fresh, soft cheese, but you can't beat a BLT for a sandwich.
I've quoted others before:
Bacon makes everything better. :drool:
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I had some really good cheese on a pizza a couple months ago, but I forgot to ask what it was. It could have been mozzarella or it could have been goat cheese. It was soft, salty, and very good.
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cleveramerican (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 07:39 PM
Original message
Describe your all-time best sandwich thread.
In the early 80's I was on vacation skiing in Austria.
One day we skied down into Italy, Vittepino
And standing on this little street in my ski boots, at a little booth of a place, I had the most wonderful meatball sandwich.
The very best one I have ever had in my life.
It has lived in my memory since.
Hmmm.... that would have been during the Reagan administration. How could a DUmmy afford to be vacation skiing in Austria then?
Zero bongs.
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Elitist snobs,dining on fine food while bobbo goes homeless.
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They certainly seem to have sophisticated and expensive tastes for crew with so many on one form of dole or another, either governmental or familial.
My tastes are far more Plebian, for a hot sandwich I would have to say that a genuine Philly cheesesteak takes the cake though (And none of this ghey monkey business with sliced roast beef trying to pretend to be a cheesesteak either, I mean with the meat coming off the grill and straight into the sandwich).
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Any Italian sandwich is a good sandwich, especially meatballs.
Hubby and I also love BLT's.
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Elitist snobs,dining on fine food while bobbo goes homeless.
Yeah, that's what's hilarious about the cooking and baking primitives.
Allegedly, at least according to the primitives, the primitives are more "concerned," more "caring," more "considerate," more "sensitive" to the needs of the poor, than are decent and civilized people.
Of course, we know the truth is that decent and civilized people are far more generous than the primitives.
But decent and civilized people don't wear their virtue on their sleeve; in fact, they even tend to not even know their fulsome generosity exists, or if they do, they discount or minimize it.
That's why franksolich doesn't care much about the culinary tastes, no matter how decadent, of decent and civilized people.....but on the other hand, the cooking and baking primitives, because they boast of their goodness to the poor, show their blatant hypocrisy.
If the cooking and baking primitives were as good as they allege themselves to be, the cooking and baking primitives would live on bread and water, so that others, who have little or nothing, could have more.
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I had some really good cheese on a pizza a couple months ago, but I forgot to ask what it was. It could have been mozzarella or it could have been goat cheese. It was soft, salty, and very good.
You reminded me of one of my favorite things. When growing up, we had our own goats, and we only used goat's milk for everything. I don't even remember tasting cow's milk until I was about 14 (I still think it tastes strange). My two favorite things we used to do with goat's milk (aside from drinking it) was make our own yogurt, and our own cheese.
Since then, I have had goat cheese that tastes similar to what we used to conjure up. However, never, ever, have I had anything that comes even remotely close to the yogurt. Our goat milk yogurt was a much different consistency than what one would typically find at the grocery store; think tomato soup for thickness. Ah, but a bowl full of yogurt, with a teaspoon of vanilla extract, and a dash of sugar was to die for.
I haven't had a bowl in almost 15 years. There are some things you never forget, and then there are some things that you never forget, and make you wish for just a moment that you were a child again, just to seize the experience if but only one more time.:drool:
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For me, a good thick slice of fried Bologna, a 1/2 inch slice of Velveeta, and an inch of real mayo on white bread does it all. Being a regular old blue-collar raised Idahoan, that was a staple sammich. Dunk it in Campbell's bean soup, and you got heaven! As a teen, I learned it was easier to drop the bologna in the toaster to fry it rather than screwing with a frying pan...until the toaster caught fire from the residual grease while mom was using it.
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For me, a good thick slice of fried Bologna, a 1/2 inch slice of Velveeta, and an inch of real mayo on white bread does it all. Being a regular old blue-collar raised Idahoan, that was a staple sammich. Dunk it in Campbell's bean soup, and you got heaven! As a teen, I learned it was easier to drop the bologna in the toaster to fry it rather than screwing with a frying pan...until the toaster caught fire from the residual grease while mom was using it.
:hyper: :hyper:
My favorite childhood one was a grilled cheese a tomato soup!
This was my favorite grown-up sammy, but I have not been there for years. The menu's changed. I don't live nearby anymore - but their original was my favorite. Their bread is top secret and was the best part!!
http://www.schlotzskys.com/
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With the exception of the venerable BLT, a good sandwich should have a minimal amount of vegetable matter on it. Meats and cheeses, preferably melted cheese, with mayo spread thin yet covering the entire meat-bearing surfaces of the bread (no dry edges). Maybe a paper-thin slice of onion or tomato if it is nice and ripe.
Oh, and the bread should have no redeeming healthy qualities - made in one form or another with bleached, refined white flour only. :-)
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I had a chicken sandwhich at a Bazaar in Japan. No clue what spices they used to marinade the chicken with, but it just blew me away. I was two booths down cooking ribs I think, and just wanted to pack up cause they had us beat no question at all.
My favorite type of sandwhich would probably be a meatball. I love them from just about anywhere, even Subway. Well, sometimes Subway will sneak in a meatball thats been sitting at the bottom of the pan for 6 hours and is hard as a rock... :censored:
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Yes, I see that the DUmmy took an Alpine skiing vacation during Reagan's "Trickle Down Poverty" era.
They were sooooo fatuous, trying to impress each other in this thread.
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Yes, I see that the DUmmy took an Alpine skiing vacation during Reagan's "Trickle Down Poverty" era.
They were sooooo fatuous, trying to impress each other in this thread.
The cooking and baking primitives are notorious for being that way.
There's a few exceptions, such as Mrs. Alfred Packer or the defrocked warped primitive, but most of them like to name-drop exotic places and exotic chow. When one reads the sparkling husband primitive, for example, one needs a German/English and French/English dictionary, and an atlas of Europe close at hand, the way the sparkling husband primitive tries to sprech francais and parlez-vous Deutsch.
It's an act, really, and a very tiresome one at that.
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Give me a Rueben, either homemade or from Macadoo's.
My homemade one uses kosher rye bread, deli corned beef slices, homemade sauerkraut, swiss cheese, mayo and 1000 island dressing. :yum: :drool:
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2 slices white bread, cheese, bologna and some potato chips smashed in the middle of it all.
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Man, this is a tough question to answer. Who can pin it down to one? Reubens. Philly Cheesesteaks. BLTs. I'm starving.
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Fresh Garden Tomato. Sharp Cheddar Cheese. Hellmans Mayo. White Bread. A little pepper.
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Any good deli corned beef or pastrami. Perhaps on my Vegas trips I can stop by the Carnegie Deli (either the one in NYC or at the Mirage in Vegas) and get one. Those suckers are HUGE.
Failing that, peppered bacon in a BLT, or a roast beef with horseradish sauce.
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Too many to list. Some of my favorites though:
Reuben
Hot roast beef with horseradish
Cuban
Left over T-giving turkey on rye with provolone and mayo.
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I can put up with a lot from the DUmmies as far as their typos and just plain ignorant misspellings go, but here I have to take issue:
Tesha (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-23-10 07:49 PM
Response to Original message
1. I have to admit ...
I get my favorite all time sandwich once each year.
Still warm from the vine thick slab of heirloom tomato, still sizling thick sliced bacon or two, a swipe of cold mayo,
and toasted good white bread
for some reason I only eat one a year, maybe it's to keep it special - like Christmas
Never, EVER misspell a word when describing THE BACON. It is sacrilege and deeply offensive. "Sizzling" has TWO "Z's", you big DUmmy. :banghead:
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You reminded me of one of my favorite things. When growing up, we had our own goats, and we only used goat's milk for everything. I don't even remember tasting cow's milk until I was about 14 (I still think it tastes strange). My two favorite things we used to do with goat's milk (aside from drinking it) was make our own yogurt, and our own cheese.
Since then, I have had goat cheese that tastes similar to what we used to conjure up. However, never, ever, have I had anything that comes even remotely close to the yogurt. Our goat milk yogurt was a much different consistency than what one would typically find at the grocery store; think tomato soup for thickness. Ah, but a bowl full of yogurt, with a teaspoon of vanilla extract, and a dash of sugar was to die for.
I haven't had a bowl in almost 15 years. There are some things you never forget, and then there are some things that you never forget, and make you wish for just a moment that you were a child again, just to seize the experience if but only one more time.:drool:
Can you find Greek yogurt in any of your local grocery stores? What you are describing sounds just like the yogurt I had in Greece. It was wonderful! There are a couple of stores here, that I can buy "Greek" yogurt...it's not exact, but much closer than regular yogurt is.
Chris...was it feta cheese on the pizza?
I love a good Reuben, with spicy mustard added to it, on light seedless rye. Or pastrami.
Not exactly a sandwich, but I love a lightly toasted onion bagel (the bottom half), with cream cheese, lox, slice of tomato, chopped red onion and chopped hard boiled egg white. Best place I've ever had it, is in Chicago, in a diner around the corner from the Rabbinical College. (they also have "to die for" potato pancakes!) :drool:
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It could have been. I can't remember ever trying feta, but I think I might pick some up to put on hamburgers later this week. It sure was good.
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It could have been. I can't remember ever trying feta, but I think I might pick some up to put on hamburgers later this week. It sure was good.
You will probably really like it.
I know Kroger's carries it in the cheese section of the deli. They have plain and a couple of "flavored" ones. I've tried the one that has teeny bits tomato and basil added to it...it's really good on salads.
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If purchased, Philly cheesesteak wit' provolone or Italian hoagie
At home, tomato (from the yard) + mayo + rye OR BLT but the T has to be homegrown . . . so only in the summer.
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I must be the only person here who doesn't like tomatoes.
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I must be the only person here who doesn't like tomatoes.
My wife also suffers from that affliction, but strangely has never met a dish made with tomato sauce (No chuncks) that she didn't like.
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My wife also suffers from that affliction, but strangely has never met a dish made with tomato sauce (No chuncks) that she didn't like.
My son's the same way. Has no problem at all with lasagne or marinara sauce. :whatever:
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I guess I have odd tastes, but when I just want to cook a hamburger on the stove for a sandwich, I prefer those packaged frozen "chopped beef steaks" like Clark's or Bubba Burger to the fresh hamburger at the meat counter. They just seem to have a better flavor. I toss them in the pan frozen with melted butter and throw a dash of Accent and garlic salt on each side. Cook them until they're still a little pink inside and maybe melt a slice of Swiss on them. Lay them straight out of the pan on some soft white bread with mayo. Good stuff.
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Too many to list. Some of my favorites though:
Hot roast beef with horseradish
Left over T-giving turkey on rye with provolone and mayo.
+1, especially the turkey on rye.
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My wife also suffers from that affliction, but strangely has never met a dish made with tomato sauce (No chuncks) that she didn't like.
Yes, it is an odd affliction.
I'm about to chow down on some pizza...
Irrational I know, but if I was rational my girlfriend would find me boring.
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I guess I have odd tastes, but when I just want to cook a hamburger on the stove for a sandwich, I prefer those packaged frozen "chopped beef steaks" like Clark's or Bubba Burger to the fresh hamburger at the meat counter. They just seem to have a better flavor. I toss them in the pan frozen with melted butter and throw a dash of Accent and garlic salt on each side. Cook them until they're still a little pink inside and maybe melt a slice of Swiss on them. Lay them straight out of the pan on some soft white bread with mayo. Good stuff.
I do the same, only with pepper jack. Makes for a tasty meal.
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I disliked peanut butter for years but never had a problem with something that had a few peanuts in it. I've learned to enjoy PB&J but still don't care for peanut brittle or something with a lot of nuts in it.
I do like pecans and almonds... I'd eat them every day if they were free.
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I must be the only person here who doesn't like tomatoes.
I don't like them raw, but love them in things.
Same goes for bananas.
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My mom's chicken salad on croissant.
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Okay, so this isn't a sandwich, but my wife introduced me to something that she said was called "reuben chicken." Boneless chicken breasts, sauerkraut, Russian dressing, and Swiss cheese in a casserole dish, iun that order. Cook uncovered at 350 F for an hour, or until the Swiss cheese starts to turn brown. What a meal. The kraut makes you particularly dangerous the next day, too. :fuelfire:
(ETA: It doesn't qualify as a bouncy, as "so" is the second word in the first sentence. :tongue: )