Cheesesteak Supreme
Cheesesteak with peppers, onions, and mushrooms.
Journey into the delicious depth of our Submarine Sandwiches category! This is your one-stop guide for understanding the fascinating world of subs. From the rich history of this sandwich classic to regional variations, we explore the length and breadth of flavor-packed creations. Whether you're a fan of traditional Italian Subs or you love to experiment with gourmet twists, we've got you covered. Dive into our recipes, tips, and tricks, and prepare to submerge your taste buds in flavor!
Cheesesteak with peppers, onions, and mushrooms.
Philly cheesesteak with lettuce, tomato, onion, and mayo added.
Capriotti's Bobbie folds a Thanksgiving dinner into a sub roll: turkey hand-pulled from whole birds roasted overnight, herbed stuffing, cranberry, and mayo. Wilmington, Delaware, since 1976.
Raw ground beef on rye with onions and salt; Wisconsin holiday tradition, controversial.
A pounded beef cutlet, breaded, deep-fried, and drowned in marinara on an Italian roll, with giardiniera cutting the richness. Chicago's South Side counter sandwich.
A pork loin cutlet pounded to the width of a plate, breaded and fried until it hangs inches past its bun. Indiana's sandwich, eaten from the bare overhang inward.
Cajun boudin is a soft link of pork, liver and seasoned rice, squeezed from its casing onto soft white bread in the gas stations and meat markets of Acadiana. The rice-sausage of southwest Louisiana.
Any cold cuts on a hero roll with lettuce, tomato, onion, and dressing; varies by bodega.
Ground beef chopped apart on a bodega griddle, fused with melted American cheese and onion, scooped onto a hero with cold lettuce, tomato, and mayo: the East Harlem chopped cheese.
Cucumber and cream cheese spread on bread; Louisville tea sandwich.
A kaiser roll crowned with caraway and coarse salt baked into the crust, rare roast beef, a controlled dip in jus, fresh horseradish. Beef on weck seasons every bite from the outside in.
Trade the jarred smear for horseradish grated fresh at the counter and the Buffalo beef on weck turns confrontational, a sinus-clearing rush over caraway, pretzel salt, and rare beef dipped in jus.
The US-adapted bánh mì softens the Saigon original, starting with a heavier bread. Chieu Lê's 1981 food truck and Lee's Sandwiches carried it to an American audience that had never eaten one.
Fried whiting (not trout) on white bread with hot sauce and saltines; Baltimore soul food.
Italian cold cuts sub; White House Sub Shop famous for theirs.
An Arizona cheese crisp cooks the tortilla itself: a large flour round, buttered, blanketed in cheese, broiled rigid and blistered, then cut into shards. Tucson's open-faced, never-folded crisp.
Slow-roasted round shaved off a slicer onto a small sesame-onion bun, dressed only with Arby's Sauce and Horsey Sauce. The Raffel brothers' founding menu item, on every counter since 1964.
Thin-sliced roast beef under pourable cheddar cheese sauce and sweet-tangy Red Ranch on a toasted onion roll: two liquids on one bun, Arby's signature specialty since 1978.
Raw marinated ahi spooned cold onto a toasted bun: a modern Hawaiian sandwich built to carry a loose, glistening filling that was never cooked and brings no shape of its own.
Built in a line, not a stack: filling down the centre of a soft tortilla, rolled tight by tension and cut on the bias. A 1990s American take on the burrito, now a French chiller fixture.
The chain-boulangerie chicken wrap: a soft wheat tortilla sealed at the seam, around a band of cold roast chicken, lettuce, tomato, and herbed mayonnaise.
A whole Caesar salad, romaine and chicken and parmesan and croutons, tossed in its own garlicky dressing and rolled tight in a tortilla. The 1924 Tijuana salad with one new part: the wrapper.
The Lille brasserie's beer-and-cheddar melt built as a closed sandwich: ham under a broiled rarebit sauce, a second toast as the cap, eaten hot with cutlery.