gleam wrote:I agree in general, but I think a very notable exception is bread. Bread, to me, always tastes best torn in a big chunk off a fresh loaf.
Vital Information wrote:Thin, as thin as possible, I want smoked salmon or other smoked fish. I think this works because the fish practically dissolves on the tongue.
Josephine wrote:thin slices might reduce sensations of pressure and movement in the mouth, thus permitting the taster a taste and fragrance experience unclouded by this type of "noise".
Christopher Gordon wrote: "you aren't getting your money's worth if it's sliced too thin."
Christopher Gordon wrote:Deli meats and cheeses should always be sliced thin...not quite shaved, but thin.
trixie-pea wrote:It's not a ham smoothie, but certainly the foam revolution speaks to the theory of coating the palette with maximum flavor.
Funny, I totally disagree. I like my corned beef, pastrami and roast beef sliced thick and I absolutely abhor thinly sliced turkey. I think that "whole" meats should retain the texture and consistency of meat. Slicing them thin turns them into some kind of meat flavored mush. On the other hand, I like most salami and other cured sausages sliced paper thin. With ham, it depends on what type. Standard boiled or baked ham I like thick, but dry cured hams like serrano, I like thin. Most cheese, I also like thinly sliced, especially sharper cheeses. In that case the maximum flavor for minimum volume theory holds true, but in the case of softer and creamier cheeses, the texture is as important as the flavor.JoelF wrote:Certainly meats sliced for sandwiches, thinner = better. Corned beef, pastrami, turkey, etc.
eatchicago wrote:I agree with d4v3 on this one. I absolutely hate "shaved" or very thinly sliced turkey or any cold luncheon meat for that matter. On a sandwich, the texture crosses the line into something that's not quite meat-like. I generally prefer what is commonly considered "medium thickness" by most deli counter-people.
Best,
Michael
LAZ wrote:I think this a matter of personal preference. For example, I like cheese in thin slices; my husband, the cheesehead, would rather have a a big chunk.
David Hammond wrote:Cheese, though, is one of those food items that I almost always prefer sliced thin.
nr706 wrote:David Hammond wrote:Cheese, though, is one of those food items that I almost always prefer sliced thin.
Where do you get a thin-sliced ricotta?
d4v3 wrote: I like my corned beef, pastrami and roast beef sliced thick
Ann Fisher wrote:d4v3 wrote: I like my corned beef, pastrami and roast beef sliced thick
I was thinking about this thread when we stopped at Jake's, lucky us, on a trip north Saturday. They slice that corned beef plenty thick (and in fact thicker than they were slicing when Mike G took this photo)--and as far as I'm concerned, anything Jake's does with corned beef is what ought to be done with corned beef.