Sandwich Steak Haché
Ground beef patty sandwich; French burger.
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!
Ground beef patty sandwich; French burger.
Alsatian egg-noodle dumpling pan-finished in butter, packed into a country loaf with browned onion and Munster, a winstub carb-on-carb novelty.
The wrapped baguette on the Gare de Lyon platform: a cold-chain sandwich decided by the use-by clock, sold through Relay and Hubiz, eaten on a TGV tray.
The French traiteur's reading of the Nordic table: smoked salmon, a cool layer of fromage frais, and dill, on a dense northern loaf or pain de mie. A whole register borrowed, not one dish.
The Sandwich Savoyard is the Alpine cheese counter in one hand: Beaufort or Reblochon sliced on in quantity over a crusted loaf, a fold of mountain ham, a cornichon for the sharp note.
Smoked salmon sandwich; often with cream cheese.
Salmon with avocado; modern combination.
The Sandwich Saucisson-Cornichons builds the small brined gherkin into the architecture, the vinegar pulse threaded through the cured sausage so the pickle resets the palate at every bite.
The Lyonnais cooked sausage poached and baked inside a brioche shell, sliced thick onto baguette with a stripe of Dijon, sold warm off the Sunday Saint-Antoine quay at the Bobosse and Sibilia stalls.
A demi-baguette spread thick with beurre Charentes-Poitou AOP and shingled with coins of saucisson sec, ordered at a Paris zinc counter as one hyphenated word.
A length of coarse-chopped Toulouse pork, sold raw and grilled to order, laid hot into a split baguette with mustard. The loose grain is the point, and the bread has to catch the juice.
Toulouse sausage on bread.
Strasbourg's smoked Alsatian sausage on bread: a thin natural casing under tension, the audible snap at the bite, the same family the American hot dog descends from.
Morteau smoked sausage on bread; Jura specialty.
Montbéliard sausage sandwich; smaller than Morteau.
Le Mans rillettes worked into a baguette: the Sarthe larder turned into a hand-held lunch on the Paris-Brest line in 1900.
The Sandwich Sardines Grillées is built around fresh sardines cooked over fire, not lifted from a tin. Meatier and smokier than the canned kind, it tilts toward lemon, pepper, and bright char.
Crottin de Chavignol coins on a buttered baguette, eaten with a glass of white Sancerre off the same flint hillside as the goat pasture.
Salers sandwich: an Auvergne pressed raw-milk cheese made only on summer-pasture milk in a wooden gerle vat, grassier and more rustic than its Cantal cousin.
The Lyonnais bouchon salad, hot lardons and a four-minute poached egg over bitter frisée, folded into a split pain de campagne so the yolk binds the leaves at the canut weaver's noon.
Sandwich Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine: a baguette built around the Loire goat log, an ash-rolled cylinder with a rye straw at its centre, sliced into even discs with a thread of honey or a walnut.
A ripe Saint-Marcellin pours rather than slices: an 80g Dauphiné cow's-milk disc spooned from its crock onto crusted bread, no butter needed, the cheese doing all the talking.
Sandwich with rosette de Lyon (large dry-cured sausage).