Jazzfood wrote:Besides a combo from Al's @ lunch and a steak for dinner, I went meatless today as well. Didn't even miss it.


Looks terrific, had a similar sandwich at my cousin the Goat Kings house yesterday. Cheap white bun, layer of crisp skin bits, mound of piggy, thin cut fresh cabbage, drizzle mustard based BBQ sauce.jimswside wrote:13 hour Berkshire pork shouler, homemade scratch cole slaw, on a LaBriolla pretzle roll.
G Wiv wrote:Looks terrific, had a similar sandwich at my cousin the Goat Kings house yesterday. Cheap white bun, layer of crisp skin bits, mound of piggy, thin cut fresh cabbage, drizzle mustard based BBQ sauce.jimswside wrote:13 hour Berkshire pork shouler, homemade scratch cole slaw, on a LaBriolla pretzle roll.
Carolina in Chicago
little500 wrote:You can't go wrong with cheap white bread and smoked pig. Nearly everyone likes them, but the cabbage and mustard sauce are not so common. Slaw on que sandwiches is most common in Memphis and Arkansas;
Don't get me wrong...Jim's sandwich looked great! I sure wouldn't turn it down.
Never had plain cabbage on a pit piggy sandwich before, clean crunch of unadorned cabbage, along with crisp bits of skin, pulled fresh from the pit pork and drizzle of mustard based BBQ sauce hit it home.jimswside wrote:I like the simple, but I bet great chopped cabbage with a mustard bbq sauce that Gwiv's buddy knocked out.
G Wiv wrote:Never had plain cabbage on a pit piggy sandwich before, clean crunch of unadorned cabbage, along with crisp bits of skin, pulled fresh from the pit pork and drizzle of mustard based BBQ sauce hit it home.jimswside wrote:I like the simple, but I bet great chopped cabbage with a mustard bbq sauce that Gwiv's buddy knocked out.
little500 wrote: Slaw on que sandwiches is most common in Memphis and Arkansas; .
Evil Ronnie wrote:little500 wrote: Slaw on que sandwiches is most common in Memphis and Arkansas; .
little:
How can you omit Eastern North Carolina here?


little500 wrote:You can't go wrong with cheap white bread and smoked pig. Nearly everyone likes them, but the cabbage and mustard sauce are not so common. Slaw on que sandwiches is most common in Memphis and Arkansas; mustard sauce, like that hawked by Maurice's Piggy Park, is mostly confined to parts of South Carolina.

dansch wrote:I just had a nice snack sandwich of sliced Fox and Obel baguette with slices of Salumeria Biellese Rosetta de Lyon salami, pan fried in just a bit of Nordic Creamery's Summer Butter. I was tempted, at first, to add something to the sandwich (condiment of some sort, cheese, whatever), but I'm glad I kept it simple. Crispy on the outside, with the butter's pronounced grassy note, and warm, salty, and porky on the inside, with the salami's fat melting in to the bread.
-Dan
I had been making a similar sandwich recently, with slices of salami I brought back from Borough Market , a touch of mustard, and a little aged cheddar, pan-fried on seeded rye bread. Much bolder flavors than today's sandwich, but definitely a winner.gleam wrote:I often make a sandwich much like that, but I do like to add a thin layer of very good dijon to the bread, and I will often use the biellese soppressata instead.