Check your inbox for a welcome email. Email required. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Notice and European users agree to the data transfer policy. The Latest. By Madeleine Davies. By Elazar Sontag. A nice story, but the OED's first printed record of "submarine sandwich" dates to a January phone book for Wilmington, DE, where a restaurant was advertising "submarine sandwiches to take out. Grinder: You're most likely to find one of these in New England, though the more common "sub" has taken over most of the terrain.
Subs, with their Italian bread and piles of fixings, were harder to chew through than your typical ham and cheese on white bread. That toothsomeness got translated into "grinder," since that's what your teeth had to do to get through a bite. A note for nitpickers: at certain points in New England grinder history, grinders have been hot, while subs stayed cold, but that's come and gone over the decades.
Hero: Native to New York, the hero has two main origin stories. First, there's the logical speculation that it's a warped pronunciation of "gyro," the Greek sandwich with spit-roasted meat. But the term is attested back to the late '40s, and Greek gyros only made a splash in American food culture in the '60s, and even that began in Chicago. And maybe more importantly, all of these sandwiches are essentially Italian creations.
The odds that a New Yorker in the '40s would mistake a Greek establishment for an Italian one are approximately nil. The real hero's journey began with the wonderfully named Clementine Paddleworth, who probably coined the word in a food column for the New York Herald Tribune in , since the sandwich was so large "you had to be a hero to eat it.
Where do they call subs grinders? You can call it what you want. But there are certain universal truths when it comes to making an Italian cold-cuts sandwich. The first rule: Yes, you can. The Hoagie vs.
No mustard or mayo. However, unlike the cheesesteak, ordering a hoagie is a much less fraught affair. Website: Quirkbooks. Submarine sandwich Wikipedia. Website: En. A submarine sandwich , also known as a sub, hoagie, torpedo, hero, or grinder , is a type of cold sandwich made from a cylindrical bread roll split lengthwise and filled with meats, cheeses, vegetables, and condiments. It has many different names. The terms submarine and sub are widespread and not assignable to any certain region, though many of the localized terms are clustered in the northeastern United States.
As nouns the difference between grinder and sub is that grinder is anatomical a molar while sub is a submarine. Taste 2 hours ago It really depends on where you grew up.
Some things in life are simple: we know that two pieces of bread with stuff between them, for example, is a … Estimated Reading Time: 3 mins. Estimated Reading Time: 3 mins. Grinders: Which Sandwich Name is … 9 hours ago Chefs can argue all they want about the culinary difference between hoagies , subs, grinders , and other long sandwiches, but these still refer to the same dish: meat, cheese, and toppings sandwiched between two slices of bread.
Estimated Reading Time: 4 mins. The Difference Between Hoagies And Subs Fine Dining … 9 hours ago A hoagie is a bread roll sandwich piled high with deli meats, cheese, fixings and dressing, and is usually at least six inches long. A hot grinder is made on the same type of roll with ingredients such as meatballs, Italian sausage, red … Website: Askinglot. Estimated Reading Time: 2 mins. What is the difference between a hoagie, a grinder, a hero 9 hours ago What is the difference between a hoagie , a grinder , a hero and a sub sandwich?
What is the difference between a hoagie,a grinder,a poboy 6 hours ago re: What is the difference between a hoagie ,a grinder ,a poboy Posted by Y. The Home Shop 2 hours ago The difference between buffers and grinders is fairly simple.
Sub marine Sandwiches Eating 3 hours ago Hoagies. Cursory online research will tell you that each of these names has a distinct origin, with " hoagie " referring to a type of sandwich that was popular among Italian workers Estimated Reading Time: 4 mins. New Orleans 6 hours ago A submarine sandwich, also known as a sub , wedge, hoagie , hero, grinder , baguette, or one of many regional naming variations, is a sandwich that consists of a long roll of Italian or French bread, split widthwise either into two pieces or opened in a "V" on one side, and filled with a variety of meats, cheeses, vegetables, seasonings, and sauces.
What's the difference between a sub sandwich and a hoagie 8 hours ago Answer 1 of 2 : From the Wikipedia article on " Submarine sandwich,": A submarine sandwich, also known as a sub , wedge, hoagie , hero, grinder , baguette, or one of the many regional naming variations, is a type of sandwichthat consists of a long roll of bread split widthwise into two pieces, and Website: Quora.
WikiDiff 5 hours ago Hoagie is a synonym of grinder. Estimated Reading Time: 1 min. The Origin of Hoagies, Grinders, Subs, Heroes, and 5 hours ago Alternately, " hoagie " is said to come from "Hogan," in two different ways. First, it was a common Irish name, and became a nickname for the Irish … Estimated Reading Time: 8 mins.
Thank God For Italians: Submarines, Grinders and Hoagies 3 hours ago If you slap a bunch of meat and cheese between a roll, it must be a submarine sandwich, right?
This diary may appeal … Website: Dailykos. Die Grinder vs Angle Grinder What is the Difference 5 hours ago The main differences between a die grinder and angle grinder are seen in the tool design, power and their sizes.
In Jersey, you tell the person behind the counter what you want on the sub. Or hoagie. Or hero. Ron Giglio, former owner and now manager at Carmen's Deli i n Bellmawr, Camden County, uses the word "sub," even though the Carmen's menu calls them "hoagies. It's all about the bread. A sub is made from a or-so inch loaf, a hoagie from a loaf half that size, he says. Even if you slice that sub loaf into halves or quarters, it's still a sub, according to Giglio. There are varying theories for the word "sub.
Hoagies are often traced to the sandwiches eaten by workers at Hog Island, where the Philadelphia Navy Yard was located, but Bon Appetit discredits that theory; "hoagies" didn't come into use as a word until the 40s, while the Hog Island navy yard shut down in the 20s.
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