[This entry is part of the Sandwich Party - The Quickening. Please see here, here, and here]
My family moved a lot. When I was seven or eight, Portland, Maine became our hometown. One of the first features of the new city to imprint itself upon my mind was the Italian. Noun, not adjective. The Italian is of the family of sandwiches known variously as the sub, hoagie, grinder, etc, but in Portland, Maine, it is simply the Italian.
You should not make this sandwich. There are dozens upon dozens of sketchy little corner stores between here and the beach that do little else but turn out these sandwiches. Pick them up on the way. Don’t run around trying to find all the ingredients yourself. It’s not worth the hassle.
Well, sometimes it is.
Start with soft bread. It should have some give rather than an assertive crust. A baguette is too stiff. One loaf, one sandwich. Twelve inches is good. Fourteen is better. Sixteen? You’re showing off. It must be soft and fresh. It is sliced like a roll, not all the way through, so a V-shaped trough forms to accept the filling. The bread will conform subtly to the shape of the filling on the way to the beach (yes, you are going to the beach, this is an Italian) and the square yard of heavy waxed paper every good Italian is wrapped in will cradle it in the olive oil that slowly leaks out, causing the bread to become moist with it. Extraneous oil is a feature, not a bug. You will wipe it on your belly in the sun at the beach.
Modern menus may offer the “ham Italian” or the “turkey Italian”, and even the “tuna Italian” (please), but by the definition of my boyhood the Italian always contains ham and salami and nothing else, unless by ‘else’ you might occasionally include capicola. The other ingredients are nothing special, but they are all key to the synergy and correctness of the sandwich. They should be deployed in moderation, as the ratio of filling to bread is important. (A popular chain of Italian shops called Amato’s offers what they call a ‘double Italian’, which in doubling all ingredients but bread manages to be half as good as a regular, canonical Italian.)
Cheese: provolone, please, though mild white ‘American’ is not a complete abomination. Now add the vegetables to the declivity. Sliced tomatoes (half-moons, please), green peppers very thinly sliced (longitudinally), planks of dill pickle. Onion in rather sizable dice. Greek olives, halved.
(If you do not like any of these ingredients you can always order an Italian, hold the olives, e.g. but in my opinion you should just spare us all and get a crab roll.)
The sandwich is complete when drizzled with olive oil (preferably from an old, repurposed Gordon’s gin bottle with a bartender’s pour-spout) and liberally dusted with salt and pepper. A small splash of vinegar is permissible, but not in enough quantity to soggy the sandwich nor to compete with the oil, which will baste your sandwich in its waxy slicker on the way to the beach. I did mention the beach, didn’t I?
13 Responses
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July 26th, 2008 at 17.38 CEST+2.00
Excellent.
By the way, there’s an Italian restaurant/deli up the road from me. Guess what I’m having for dinner tonight? Hint: not a crab roll.
(I probably shouldn’t mention that when trying to deploy this post, I temporarily lost it in the wilds of your Wordpress database. Obviously, I persevered [as Erik can attest to] and managed to get this to publish. And we are all better for it.)
July 26th, 2008 at 18.05 CEST+2.00
I love how we arrive to adulthood with such firm ideas how regionally variant concepts must be. Lovely!
July 26th, 2008 at 19.22 CEST+2.00
Well done! A sandwich from the canon indeed. One of my earliest memories involves a trip to Two Lights, the Greek olive from someone’s Italian (quite possibly yours), and a very cross seagull.
Incidentally, I think you mean a crabmeat salad sandwich roll. On a bun.
(”And that’s what it’ll say on the sign!”)
July 26th, 2008 at 22.15 CEST+2.00
Weird. I tried to comment on this from my iPhone, but it got lost, apparently.
I think it’s funny that we arrive to adulthood with the idea that such arbitrary and geographically variant concepts, such as your Italian archetype, absolutely must be a certain way.
Great write-up.
July 27th, 2008 at 14.23 CEST+2.00
Now that brings back oily memories!
I lived in Bangor, ME for a few years. I’d just moved East after growing up in Nebraska/Wyoming/South Dakota where “sandwich” is something your mom makes. It was a bit confusing having so many shops to choose from: most of them offered choices of sandwiches, hot or cold. I remember one place which was packed all of the time and they only made one sandwich, your Italian.
Beach? Not in northern Maine.
July 27th, 2008 at 15.42 CEST+2.00
Love this: “Extraneous oil is a feature, not a bug. You will wipe it on your belly in the sun at the beach.”
July 28th, 2008 at 21.49 CEST+2.00
I’m hungry.
July 29th, 2008 at 14.41 CEST+2.00
That looks awesome!
July 30th, 2008 at 02.50 CEST+2.00
Once I had a turkey AND bacon Italian. So.
: )
July 30th, 2008 at 03.35 CEST+2.00
Tuna Italian, please. Please! In Amato’s-speak: “Large loaded tuna.” Mmmmm, because the mild chunks of tuna set off the extreme salt of the Greek olives and the yow-sourness of the pickle. A completely different animal than the Regular.
July 30th, 2008 at 03.37 CEST+2.00
oops, sorry, that last was NOT Anna, who has been a vegetarian for many years, even if once she did have a turkey and bacon Italian. She used to like the tuna ones, too. But now it’s just veggie for her. Sigh.
July 30th, 2008 at 18.59 CEST+2.00
I’ve lived in Philly for more than 5 years now and am still sandwich-confused. I cannot tell you the difference between a grinder, a hoagie, and your EYE-talian, above. (I have to pronounce it that way to irk my half-EYE-talian husband.)
But I am salivating. Off to fetch my lunch of leftover macNcheese and veggie jambalaya.
August 6th, 2008 at 22.49 CEST+2.00
Yum. I am here drooling over that. I just stumbled upon you and am so glad I did. Your blog is fabulous and your pictures & kids are gorgeous! I’ll be back soon :)