American sandwich culture is not one tradition but a few dozen of them, stacked on top of each other and rarely in agreement. The country runs on the burger and the sub, but those two words hide a sprawl: a steamed cheeseburger in Connecticut and a smashed one in Oklahoma are barely the same food, and a hoagie, a grinder, a hero, a wedge, and a po' boy are five regional names for an idea that refuses to settle on one.
The organizing fact is regional pride. Philadelphia argues about cheesesteaks, New Orleans about po' boys, Buffalo about beef on weck, Louisville about the Hot Brown, and every barbecue belt argues with every other barbecue belt about pork, sauce, and smoke. Layered over the regional map is a second one: the fast-food chains and delis that took a local sandwich and shipped it nationally, sometimes improving it and sometimes flattening it.
The 23 categories below capture how the V5 catalog of 466 American sandwiches actually sorts. The largest are the burger and its regional dialects, the sub and its many city names, American barbecue, the Jewish deli's smoked-meat shelf, and the dense long tail of regional specialties that travel badly and stay home on purpose. Below the anchors, the full filterable catalog lets you browse every entry by name or category.
Browse by family
Peanut Butter & Jelly and the Sweet Sandwich
Peanut butter and jelly and its relatives: the Fluffernutter, the grilled PB&J, the banana version, and the dessert sandwiches that share the same logic. · 9 sandwiches
The Bagel & Appetizing Sandwich
The boiled-and-baked bagel split and built into a sandwich: lox, nova, sable, sturgeon, whitefish salad, and the bialy and knish that share the counter. · 7 sandwiches
The Lobster Roll & New England Seafood Roll
The split-top roll built around lobster, clam, scallop, oyster, or stuffie: a New England format defined by its bread as much as its catch. · 6 sandwiches
Tacos, Burritos & American Wraps
The folded and rolled flexible-bread sandwiches of American street food: tacos, burritos, the Mission burrito, tortas, arepas, pupusas, gyros, shawarma, and the wrap. · 27 sandwiches
The Japanese-American Katsu Sando
The crisp-cutlet sandwich on soft milk bread, crust removed: the Japanese sando as it reads on an American menu. · 1 sandwich
The American Hot Dog
The sausage in a soft split bun and its dense regional dialect: Chicago, the coney, the half-smoke, the Sonoran, the Polish, the brat, and the corn dog. · 33 sandwiches
The Cheesesteak
Thin-sliced griddled beef and melted cheese on a long roll, with the Philadelphia ordering grammar of wit, witout, whiz, and provolone, plus the roast pork cousin. · 17 sandwiches
The Po' Boy
The New Orleans sandwich on light, crackly Louisiana French bread: fried seafood or slow-roast meat, dressed, with the Peacemaker and Ferdi in the same family. · 13 sandwiches
The Cuban & Florida Latin Pressed Sandwiches
The pressed Cuban and its Florida relatives: medianoche, Elena Ruz, the pan con builds, the croqueta preparada, the Miami sandwich, and the tripleta. · 14 sandwiches
The American Breakfast Sandwich
Egg, a cured pork, and cheese on a roll, biscuit, or bagel: the bodega bacon-egg-and-cheese, the Southern biscuit, the Jersey pork roll, and the breakfast build. · 19 sandwiches
The Fried Chicken Sandwich
A fried or grilled chicken fillet on a soft bun with pickle and sauce: the chain icons, the Nashville hot version, the Buffalo build, and the Korean-American style. · 27 sandwiches
Grilled Cheese & the Melt
Cheese griddled between buttered bread, and the melts that extend it: the tuna melt, the patty melt, and the American bistro croque monsieur. · 6 sandwiches
The American Burger
The ground-beef patty on a bun and its regional dialects: the smash, the steamed, the onion-fried, the Juicy Lucy, the slider, the chains, and the non-beef builds. · 50 sandwiches
American Barbecue
Smoked pork and beef piled on a soft bun: pulled pork, brisket, burnt ends, whole hog, ribs, and the regional sauce arguments from Carolina to Texas to Kansas City. · 31 sandwiches
Italian Beef & French Dip
Thin-sliced roast beef on a sturdy roll, served wet: the Chicago Italian beef, the Los Angeles French dip, beef on weck, the pastrami dip, and pit beef. · 15 sandwiches
The Jewish Deli: Pastrami, Corned Beef & the Reuben
The cured-and-steamed beef sandwich on rye: hand-cut pastrami, corned beef, the Reuben and Rachel, and the towering combination builds. · 9 sandwiches
The American Fish & Shellfish Sandwich
Fried or griddled fish and shellfish on a bun or roll: the chain filet, the regional grouper and walleye and lake trout, the crab cake, and the catfish sandwich. · 16 sandwiches
The Sub, Hoagie, Hero & Grinder
The long-roll sandwich under all its regional names: the Italian sub, the parm hero, the chain builds, the chopped cheese, and the wedge. · 60 sandwiches
The Club Sandwich & BLT
The stacked, toasted, pinned sandwich and its parent the BLT: the three-decker club, the California club, the Monte Cristo, and the Dagwood. · 8 sandwiches
The Stuffed Pocket & Hand Pie
Dough sealed around a filling and baked: the Nebraska runza and bierock, the Upper Peninsula pasty, the Fleischkuekle, the pepperoni roll, and the egg roll. · 8 sandwiches
The Open-Face & Hot-Plate Sandwich
The knife-and-fork sandwich served on one slice under gravy or sauce: the Hot Brown, the hot turkey and roast beef plates, the horseshoe, the slinger, and avocado toast. · 11 sandwiches
The American Lunch-Counter Classics
The bound-salad and simple sliced-bread sandwiches: chicken, egg, and tuna salad, the tomato sandwich, pimento cheese, ham and cheese, turkey, and the Sloppy Joe. · 16 sandwiches
Regional American Specialties
The dense long tail of place-named American sandwiches that travel badly and stay home on purpose: scrapple, livermush, goetta, the muffuletta, the jibarito, and the rest. · 52 sandwiches