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Posts for August 2nd 2010

A Grilled Cheese So Good, It's Criminal?

August 2, 2010 9:30 pm · Posted by nancyeinhart

I hear you can get just about anything delivered in New York, including, apparently, a hot grilled cheese in a paper sack. According to a story in today's New York Post entitled "He's making a gouda living," an underground chef in the East Village is taking orders via text message for freshly griddled grilled cheese sandwiches, delivered on street corners.

Identified only as "Ronnie" out of fear of the health department, the shady sandwich maker says,  "I feel like a drug dealer because I'm handing people a paper bag and they're handing me cash." Ronnie charges $5 to $7 a sandwich. You'll have some cash leftover if you want to visit the underground lobster roll dealer.

Given, grilled cheese sandwiches are addictively good, but they're also ridiculously easy to make at home. Had I known they had such street value, I could have turned a serious profit after our great grilled cheese off. So what's your take on Ronnie: great idea or ridiculous gimmick?

Roast Beef: Wecked, Dipped, and Wrecked

August 2, 2010 7:35 am · Posted by nancyeinhart

Chicago's beloved Italian beef sandwich and Buffalo's signature beef on weck taste like they were separated at birth. But it's the nuances that set these regional favorites apart from each other and that other famous juicy roast beef sandwich, the French dip. Here's how to tell them all apart.

The Beef on Weck

Hometown: Buffalo, NY

Origins: Brought to New York by German immigrants in the early 1800s, beef on weck is one of America's oldest sandwiches.

Defining characteristics: Thinly sliced hot roast beef served on a kimmelweck bun, a Kaiser-type roll sprinkled with caraway seeds and salt crystals, and dipped in roasting juices.

Where to try one: Schwabl's in Buffalo or Charlie the Butcher.

Keep reading for the "French" and "Italian" takes on hot roast beef.