





Cathy2 wrote:
I could easily envision Tacos Maria as a location for an LTHforum get together. How else can you try so many mega tortas in a short time?
d4v3 wrote:There was a place in Rogers Park that made an identical sandwich. It had a different name, but had the same over the top contents. Like the sandwich pictured it was made with copious amounts of mayo, which I could have done without.
Oh yeah,sorry. In the top picture it looked like mayo, but in the other pictures you can tell it is cheese. I guess I would like this version of that sandwich better. The sandwich I was thinking of was the Cubana Rey from El Rey del Taco. It was milanezo, jamon, salchicha, tocino, chorizo, huevos, queso amarillo, pina. No white cheese (which they put on other sandwiches), but it had an egg.Cathy2 wrote:d4v3 wrote:There was a place in Rogers Park that made an identical sandwich. It had a different name, but had the same over the top contents. Like the sandwich pictured it was made with copious amounts of mayo, which I could have done without.
I believe that is white melting cheese. If you look at the cheese surface, it has a thin skin from cooling.



Rene G wrote:
It's stuffed with milanesa, pollo, salchicha, jamón, queso, huevo, lomo, chorizo, pierna roja and piña. As you can see, they don't believe much in vegetables. This is the sandwich that inspired Scofflaw's guapichosa.
Rene G wrote:As you can see, they don't believe much in vegetables.
Rene G wrote:The tortas futboleras idea has been widely copied and they can be found all over Chicago, from the far north side to the far south side.
d4v3 wrote:Rocky's in Roger Park serves 78 varieties of Tortas, from the simple "La Tigres", which is plain Carne Al Pastor to "La Seleccion Femenil" which is Chuleta Ahumada, Tocino, Chorizo, Huevo, Milaneza, Queso Blanco y Queso Amarillo (pork chop, bacon, Mexican sausage, egg, breaded steak, white and yellow cheese). All of the Tortas and Huateques (whatever that is) have football related names (like the torta Beckham).


I just meant the rolls usually used for tortas AKA teleras (if you google "torta roll", you will see pictures) which are softer without pointed ends and a hard crust like a Bolillo. I have eaten tortas for many years and in my experience, Bolillos are NOT normally used. I know Dona Torta has been (or was) around for many years, as has Rocky's. As I recall, Dona Torta used to also use the teleras for their tortas (but it has been many years since I ate a torta there). I was referring specifically to Rocky's "Super Tortas Futboleros" as a trademark name for over-stuffed tortas.JeffB wrote:Upthread someone mentioned Dona Torta uses a bolillo as opposed to a "torta roll." In my experience, they are one in the same. Some sandwiches such as cemitas/semitas, use that self-same named anise and sesame focused roll, while pambazos/pambasos use the bread of the same name. And sometimes one sees the softer teleras used. I'm not sure I've seen a Mexican roll marked "torta" before, but who knows. Maybe it's a descriptive name like "hoagie roll."
d4v3 wrote:Rocky's in Roger Park serves 78 varieties of Tortas, from the simple "La Tigres", which is plain Carne Al Pastor to "La Seleccion Femenil" which is Chuleta Ahumada, Tocino, Chorizo, Huevo, Milaneza, Queso Blanco y Queso Amarillo (pork chop, bacon, Mexican sausage, egg, breaded steak, white and yellow cheese).
d4v3 wrote:Rocky's had been around for many years, and lays claim to having invented the "tortas futlboleros" genre. I wonder if that's true.
d4v3 wrote:Since El Rey del Taco was just up the street from Rocky's, it makes sense that their "Cubana Rey" sandwiches were patterned after Rocky's Futboleros.
In the Cuban Sandwiches thread, JeffB wrote:NB: Mexican sandwiches dubbed tortas cubanas are their own "thing" and, as best I can tell, have nothing to do with the classic sanguiche mixto born of the Cuban diaspora in Florida. In Mexican food jargon, "Cubano" tends to be shorthand for the florid, the baroque, the over-the-top. I've seen this applied to drinks (eg, micheladas Cubanas) as well as to other foods (pizza) in Mexico but also in other parts of Latin America (specifically, Argentina). Accordingly, tortas cubanas usually have the kitchen sink (stuff like hot dogs, bacon and milanesas) in addition to the standard beans and guac on a hollowed out bolillo or telera. I say this not to discredit the torta Cubana as inauthentic, because it is a real Mexican sandwich that doesn't appear even to reference the Cuban sandwich so much as use an adjective, "Cubana," that has specific connotations. But I wouldn't want a novice to think the Mexican torta Cubana is the same thing as the Cuban sandwich.
JeffB wrote:Signage for Dona Torta Chilanga is the same as Dona Torta on Ashland, which has had these over the top combos for many, many years going back to pre-LTH discussions.
I have lived at my present address for 20 years and I seem to remember Rocky's opened just a couple of years after I moved there. As I recall,they once put "The Original" Tortas Futbolereas on their flyers. They now call themselves "The Home of Super Tortas Futboleras". I just assumed that meant they were the first to adopt the name. They are certainly the first (and only) all Futbol themed restaurant I know of, and with 78 varieties of futbol themed tortas, they are certainly the most fanatical. I haven't been there in many years, even though it is right around the corner from me. I would be interested in your take on the Smoked Pork Chop Torta with bacon,chorizo, egg, cheese and Milaneza (The selection Femenil).Rene G wrote:d4v3 wrote:Rocky's in Roger Park serves 78 varieties of Tortas, from the simple "La Tigres", which is plain Carne Al Pastor to "La Seleccion Femenil" which is Chuleta Ahumada, Tocino, Chorizo, Huevo, Milaneza, Queso Blanco y Queso Amarillo (pork chop, bacon, Mexican sausage, egg, breaded steak, white and yellow cheese).
I ate a Seleccion Femenil. Report to follow in another thread.d4v3 wrote:Rocky's had been around for many years, and lays claim to having invented the "tortas futlboleras" genre. I wonder if that's true.
Rocky's opened about 15 years ago. I'm curious where you heard or read that claim? I think it might well be true.