Sandwich
is a food, usually two or more slices of bread with one or more fillings, or a
slice of bread with a topping or filling, which is commonly referred to as a
sandwich. Sandwiches widely popular type of food for lunch, usually taken to
work or school, or a picnic to eat as a snack. Usually include a combination of
vegetables, salad, meat, cheese, and a variety of savory sauces or spreads. The
bread can be used as such or may be coated with all the spices to enhance
flavor and texture. They are widely sold in restaurants and cafes.
The
bread-enclosed Convenience foods so-called "sandwich" is attributed
to John Montagu, fourth Earl of Sandwich (1718-1792), a British statesman and
notorious spendthrift and gambler who is said to be the inventor of this type
of food so he had to leave his gaming table to make dinner. In fact, Montagu
not the inventor of the sandwich, but during his excursions in the eastern
Mediterranean, so it's stuffed pita sandwiches and canapés served by small and
Greeks and Turks during their mezze and copied the concept for its obvious
convenience. There is no doubt that the Earl of Sandwich is such a popular
snack among the nobles of England, and in this way, his title was associated
with sandwiches since. The concept is very simple: delicious snacks are served
between two slices of bread into a culinary practice of ancient origin among
the Greeks and other peoples of the Mediterranean.
Literary
references to sandwiches begin to appear in English during the 1760s, not only
in connection with their presumed Englishness, but also under the assumption
that they are a food consumed primarily by the masculine sex during late night
drinking parties. This connotation does not change until the sandwich moves
into general society as a supper food for late night balls and similar events
toward the end of the eighteenth century.
That
sandwich, the creation of caterers, is amply described by Louis Eustache Ude,
an illustrious cook who finished his career as chef de cuisine of the Crockford
Club in London, in his French Cook (1818). Ude took particular care to outline
a proper supper and the critical execution of the superior sorts of English
sandwich that originally gave the food its high status. He explained that bread
for sandwiches filled with salads must be specially baked in molds so that the
texture is dense, though the crust not dry, to avoid sogginess once the
sandwiches are stacked on a silver tray, as they should not bend when held in
the hand. Breads for other sandwiches should be baked long and round like a
tube so that the slices are even and thus fit neatly together without lumpiness
or air spaces between. Furthermore, all crusts on sandwich breads should be
rasped so that they acquire the texture of chamois. His sandwiches for two or
three hundred persons included fillet of guinea fowl with cold béchamel sauce
("make them towards nine o'clock to serve up at twelve"), fillet of
pheasant poached in a fumet, fillet of sole à la Ravigotte, salad sandwiches
made of small lettuces and cresses ("cut the salad off which protrudes . .
. observe much neatness in the preparing of these sandwiches and do not confide
them to any of the kitchen maids.") And finally, anchovy sandwiches:
"the pieces of anchovy should not touch each other, as they might then be
too salt, unless when eaten to assist wine drinking."
Charlotte
Mason was one of the first English cookbook authors to provide a recipe for
sandwiches, which she published quite appropriately along side other supper
dishes like Welsh rarebit and salmagundi (an elaborate ornamental salad):
"Put some very thin slices of beef between thin slices of bread and
butter; cut the ends off neatly, lay them in a dish. Veal and ham cut thin may
be served in the same manner." Her homey recipe is quite different from
the sort of grand fare sent up by the likes of Ude, but far more typical of
what happened to the sandwich in the hands of Victorian home cooks.
During
the nineteenth century, as midday dinner moved later and later into the day,
the need for a hot supper declined, only to be replaced with light dishes made
of cold leftovers, ingredients for which the sandwich proved preeminently
suitable. Thus the sandwich became a fixture of intimate evening suppers, teas,
and picnics, and popular fare for taverns and inns. This latter genre of
sandwich has given rise to multitudes of working class creations, such as the
butty and sarny of Britain, and the bacon-lettuce-and-tomato sandwich of the
American diner. In the home, however, for such meals as English high tea, or
the late-night Quaker "tea" parties of nineteenth-century
Philadelphia, sandwiches were not usually premade, but rather, sliced bread was
provided, enabling diners to assemble a sandwich from the various tidbits laid
out for the meal.
Cookbook
author Eliza Leslie was one of the earliest American writers to publish
sandwich recipes in the United States. Her Directions for Cookery (1837)
contained a recipe for what has become a ubiquitous American institution: the
ham sandwich. Her sandwich consisted of thinly sliced bread spread with butter
and mustard (French mustard flavored with tarragon), and sliced or finely
chopped ham, with no other embellishments. "You may either roll them up,
or lay them flat on plates. They are used at supper, or at luncheon." The
fact that they needed explanation at all may be taken as a sign of their
uncommonness outside of urban centers, since the sandwich of the 1830s was
still more or less a creature of upper-class cookery; Leslie's use of French
mustard gives further evidence of that fact.
During
the early years of the railroad, sandwiches proved an ideal form of fast food,
especially since they could be sold at train stations when everyone got off to
buy snacks. With the appearance of the dining car, the sandwich became a
travel-related institution, and it remains so as the typical meal served as
lunch on airplanes. During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the
sandwich came into its own, especially as a response to the Temperance
Movement. Taverns and saloons offered free sandwiches with drinks in order to
attract customers, which led to the development of many distinctive sandwiches
that have endured. In the United States, these include the club sandwich, a
multi-layered affair designed to combine two or three types of sandwich into
one, a meal in itself, which earned its name through its popularity with
businessmen in private dining clubs.
Among
working-class men, the submarine loaf became a popular vehicle for hearty
sandwiches made with various fillings. This long, narrow Viennese loaf first
appeared in the early 1880s as a marketing gimmick in connection with the
Gilbert and Sullivan operetta "H. M. S. Pinafore," which features a
ditty with sexual innuendos about submarines. The sandwiches made with this
type of bread bear different names in different parts of the country: subs,
grinders, poor boys, torpedoes, and hoagies, all featuring very localized types
of ingredients. For example, the Philadelphia hoagie (derived from
"hokeypokey man," the sandwich vendor), contains the essentials of a
southern Italian antipasto, including cold cuts, Italian cheeses, peppers,
olive oil, and oregano. New England gave birth to the lobster roll: cold,
cooked lobster served with mayonnaise in a small toasted submarine loaf (which
evolved into hot dog rolls). A hot counterpart to this, the so-called beefsteak
sandwich, was first popular in the nineteenth century as fried chipped beef and
onions served over toast. Once married to the submarine loaf, it further
evolved with the addition of cheese and various hot pepper sauces.
Luncheonettes
of the 1920s served grilled cheese sandwiches and the Cuban sandwich, which
resembles a hoagie pressed between two hot irons so that it is slightly
flattened and hot when eaten. In spite of its association with Havana, this
sandwich was created in New York and New Jersey. The most famous of the
American hot sandwiches, however, is the Reuben, which was introduced at
Reuben's Restaurant in New York City (there was also a branch in Miami,
Florida). The restaurant was essentially a Jewish-owned sandwich shop that
offered a wide range of creations named after famous personalities of the 1930s
and 1940s: Danny Kaye, Hedda Hopper, Judy Garland, Ozzie Nelson, to name just a
few. The Reuben Special, the hot grilled sandwich of fame, contained turkey,
Virginia ham, Swiss cheese, cole slaw, and Russian salad dressing. The
substitution of pastrami and sauerkraut came later, as a courtesy to kosher
Jewish customers, who could not eat ham or a mixture of meat and cheese. Reuben
also sold steak sandwiches for $2.00 (the most expensive sandwich on the menu),
a specialty called Chicken Reubenola, and hamburgers on a roll.
The
burger at a time when only a meat dumpling is eaten with bread and gravy, is in
the hands of McDonalds and the like global food chains, becoming the final food
consumed in the industrialized world as a symbol of culture suspicious American
in faraway places. While the Earl of Sandwich did not recognize her finger food
and became Chief Ude and may be dismayed by the lack of rigor in his
presentation, we could find no fault with the comfort of your burger or
trans-gender, intercultural, intergenerational call.
No comments:
Post a Comment