Hercule
Practically Family
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- Western Reserve (Cleveland)
^^^
Also Maine Lobster Rolls With Whoopie Pie for only $99.99
Dam, that looks good (though I'd prefer it to be crab)!
^^^
Also Maine Lobster Rolls With Whoopie Pie for only $99.99
I'm not picky about the brand, but it has to be pump, not steam. I feel you get more coffee essence (?) out of the grounds. ...
A real Mainer wouldn't eat a lobster roll. A proper Maine lunch is an "Italian."
We don't call them "subs," though -- they're just "Italians." And they're best purchased, not from a supermarket, but from a neighborhood corner store or a gas station. They're properly wrapped in a layer of wax paper and a layer of butcher paper, the better to soak up the copious amount of oil drenching the sandwich and soaking into the roll. The roll must be a soft, white-bread roll -- not crusty, not grainy. The cheese must be sliced white American -- not Mozzarella, not Provalone, not yellow or orange American, not Velveeta. The pickles must be sliced hamburger dills, not sweet. The ham must be sliced thin. There must be a great deal of salt and pepper applied to the top of the sandwich after the oil.
There is nothing "Italian" about the sandwich other than the fact that it was invented by an Italian immigrant in Portland. Any attempt to make it "authentically Italian" automatically voids its "Maine Italianness." Attempts by preening foodies to do so really tick us off.
Have "Saigon" sandwiches made their way to coastal Maine yet?
As we see, all seems to go mainstream, worldwide. Since the 90's?
But we got still a relatively wide choice of diner-snacks and -meals, here in Germany. You can munch, until you burst.
A real Mainer wouldn't eat a lobster roll. A proper Maine lunch is an "Italian."
There was a time when I would take umbrage at being called a food snob, but let me tell you, I will not eat a sandwich called a sub. A sub is an abbreviation for submarine, it is not a sandwich. The title of sandwich came about when The Earl of Sandwich, a compulsive gambler, ordered a hank of beef between two slices of bread, whilst at the gaming tables. The food that he ordered was so designed that the bread prevented his fingers from becoming greasy, and therefore spoiling the deck of cards.Snobs of any type, in my experience, often just want the rare and unusual, thinking that alone makes it better.
I was dragged to a BBQ place in Seattle in the middle of my cross-country train trip from NYC in September, by a dedicated food snob.
I've never seen a Saigon sandwich here, but we do have a Vietnamese restaurant that's just opened. It's called "Pho Shizzle," so I don't know as I'd consider it wicked authentic....
The bread in a proper Maine Italian roll is plain white bread -- it's a little sweeter than a hot dog roll, but otherwise it's pretty much the same thing except longer and wider. No fancy or artisanal rolls need apply -- the uniform spongy Wonder Bread texture is absolutely essential to the sandwich because it soaks up the grease that would otherwise run all over the sandwich eater. The oil is usually plain olive oil -- no fancy infused oils or "extra virgin" boutique oil will cut it, just the cheap utility-grade oil from the grocery aisle. Likewise, no fancy deli-quality cold cuts -- the best meat always came from the Kirschner plant in Augusta, which unfortunately has gone out of business, so we have to make do with Oscar Mayer's or whatever cheap store brand is on sale at the Shop-n-Save this week.
Lobster rolls are pretty much entirely a tourist thing here -- I've never seen a local eat one unless it was given to them for free. When we eat lobster, we eat it the proper way -- we tear it apart with our bare hands and eat it right out of the shell, on a paper plate, with butter to dunk the meat in, and we are careful to suck all the juice out of the legs. We do *not* eat the "tomalley," the green stuff in the body which is the lobster's liver. We know what a liver does, and we know what's in the water where the lobster lives, and we'd just as soon pass on ingesting it.
but let me tell you, I will not eat a sandwich called a sub. A sub is an abbreviation for submarine, it is not a sandwich. The title of sandwich came about when The Earl of Sandwich, a compulsive gambler, ordered a hank of beef between two slices of bread, whilst at the gaming tables. The food that he ordered was so designed that the bread prevented his fingers from becoming greasy, and therefore spoiling the deck of cards.
And so the name of the ubiquitous meal between two slices of bread was born. It was not, nor has it ever been, on the menu card of a submarine.
If you buy lobster in the summer, you're getting "shedders," which have recently molted and their shell is still relatively soft. You can easily rip it apart with your bare hands. The drawback to a shedder is that it's full of water, and the meat isn't as big as the shell, so the water spills all over you when you tear into it. Hence, bibs.
Lobster in the winter is "hard-shell," which means you'll need a tool to crack the claws -- a hammer or a set of nutcrackers will do the job nicely. Otherwise, you can pry the shell apart with your fingers if you know where the joints are. The tail you just twist off, break off the flippers, and then push the meat out with your finger.