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250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 1:24 am
by Gob
Sandwich celebrates 250th anniversary of the sandwich

When John Montagu, the fourth Earl of Sandwich, ordered beef served between slices of bread about 250 years ago he probably did not think his request would become a global convenience meal.

The story goes that the Earl asked for the particular serving so that he could eat while continuing to play cards and his friends asked "to have the same as Sandwich", according to the British Sandwich Association.

The first written record of the sandwich was in 1762 and the Kent town of Sandwich, which is the earldom of the Montagu family, is celebrating the 250th anniversary of the meal.

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Sir Edward Montagu, a prominent naval commander, became the first Earl of Sandwich when he was offered a peerage in 1660.

Steve Laslett, one of the organisers of the Sandwich Celebration Festival, said Sir Edward Montagu chose the title because "at the time Sandwich was the premier sea port in England".

"When he was offered the earldom he could have chosen Portsmouth but he chose Sandwich - today we could be eating a Portsmouth."

Mr Laslett added: "The fourth Earl was a complex character.

"He's First Lord of the Admiralty three times but he was a bit of a lad and he did stay up all night playing cards on many occasions."

Foodsmith Sam Bompas said the Earl of Sandwich was eating with his fingers "when cutlery was de rigueur".

"Eating of record at the time was service á la française where all the food went on the table at the same time and there was an elaborate ritual of carving, aided by troops of servants," said Mr Bompas.

"What you have with the sandwich is the shock of informality. He was a daring man to eat in such a way coming from his social background."

Mr Bompas added that he found it odd that the sandwich did not exist before the Earl of Sandwich ordered meat between slices of bread.

"Other people were probably eating in that way anyway but they were people who weren't written about," he said.

Over the weekend the east Kent town hosts sandwich-making competitions and re-enactments of the moment the fourth Earl of Sandwich asked for the food in bread.

Sandwich Celebration Festival organiser Mandy Wilkins said it had had interest from around the world, including America, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, France and Russia.

Ms Wilkins said: "The sandwich is a global food and Sandwich, our town, is just a little town full of medieval buildings.

"It's bizarre that such an important food item should be named after us."

On Sunday the 11th Earl of Sandwich, who shares his name with the fourth Earl after which the sandwich is said to be named, hosts a lunch in Sandwich.

John Montagu said: "I am delighted to wish a happy 250th birthday to the sandwich.

"My ancestor, the 4th Earl, could never have imagined that his simple invention would spawn a multi-billion dollar industry, employing hundreds of thousands of people in this country."

According to the British Sandwich Association the industry employs more than 300,000 people in the UK and has a commercial value of over £6bn.

Mr Montagu added: "My favourite sandwich is a traditional one: roast beef and hot horseradish on freshly baked bread."


My favourite; Blue Cheese, peanut butter, marmite and hot english mustard, on wholemeal sourdough thick sliced..

Yours?

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 3:15 am
by dales
Pastrami on rye.

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 7:28 am
by Daisy
Crispy bacon and brown sauce on well done white tin loaf.

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 11:05 am
by Guinevere
We have our own Sandwich, just down the coast from here, where my family had a summer beach house for a while:http://www.sandwichma.org/

As for the food, I prefer tuna salad on wheat, with lettuce, tomatoes, and pickles. Sometimes grilled with cheese, hold the lettuce.

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 12:03 pm
by MajGenl.Meade
Toasted cheese....

or instead - pita bread, butter, peanut butter, strawberry jam (if I'm feeling weight conscious)

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 1:05 pm
by Lord Jim
Cold:

Roast beef, horseradish cheddar (or swiss), lettuce, onions, and horseradish sauce on a Dutch Crunch roll....

Hot:

Sliced meatball and sliced hot Italian sausage, mozzarella cheese, and marinara sauce on a French roll....
Blue Cheese, peanut butter, marmite and hot english mustard,
Oh come on, you made that up....

:P

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 1:06 pm
by Sean
Chip butty.

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 2:22 pm
by BoSoxGal
I was going to mention Sandwich, where my grandparents lived for years after they lost their house in Chatham.

But then almost everyplace in Massachusetts is named after a place in the UK, primarily England.


I like lots of sandwiches; it's impossible to pick a favorite. I'd live on sandwiches if I had to. :D

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 2:44 pm
by rubato
A sandwich is a rare treat because we don't use bread often enough to make sense stocking it.

I like a lot of them. Sliced radishes or daikon sprouts are a nice addition. I've been happy with just greens and radishes and a little onion salt. Lovely juicy tomatos in season are great too.

yrs,
rubato

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 10:18 pm
by Gob
Lord Jim wrote:
Blue Cheese, peanut butter, marmite and hot english mustard,
Oh come on, you made that up....

:P
Did not so!

It's called a "Kilworthy", named after the school I once worked at. It was a favourite, toasted or cold, following a meeting of the Monday* club.


*The Monday club was a group of us who all had Monday as our day off. The day was spent climbing or walking on the moors, then retiring to a suitable hostelry for the evening. Getting back to the school, somewhat inebriated, we'd raid the communal fridge. Hence the Kilworthy sandwich was born.

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 10:25 pm
by Guinevere
Sounds pretty iccky to me, sorry, but then I am not a peanut butter fan. I will eat blue cheese with *almost* anything though!

I live in an English-named town, established in 1644, which is about 350 years *after* its namesake. Like it, we are coastal, with a large fishing trade -- in fact we were first an indian trading post, 20 years before we became an official "town." Much much smaller than the namesake though - about 1/20th the population.

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Sun May 13, 2012 10:32 pm
by Lord Jim
somewhat inebriated, we'd raid the communal fridge. Hence the Kilworthy sandwich was born.
Ahh, a concoction invented in the dark while intoxicated...

Now it makes sense....

8-)

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Mon May 14, 2012 12:40 pm
by MajGenl.Meade
rubato wrote:A sandwich is a rare treat because we don't use bread often enough to make sense stocking it.
You don't have sandwiches often because you don't often have bread? But if you had bread you could have sandwiches. So that would make sense stocking it. Because you'd use it. On those sandwiches. Which wouldn't be so rare.

No? :shrug

Meade

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Mon May 14, 2012 1:29 pm
by alice
MajGenl.Meade wrote:
rubato wrote:A sandwich is a rare treat because we don't use bread often enough to make sense stocking it.
You don't have sandwiches often because you don't often have bread? But if you had bread you could have sandwiches. So that would make sense stocking it. Because you'd use it. On those sandwiches. Which wouldn't be so rare.

No? :shrug

Meade
I don't know if this is the case with rubato, but I like really nice fresh bread - and when the kids aren't around much, I don't bother buying bread very often because it goes stale too quickly. I enjoy a lovely sandwich one day, maybe have another day or so of toasted sandwiches and some toast, but still end up with about half a loaf that's too stale to enjoy and goes to the chooks.
I've tried freezing the loaf and just thawing a bit at a time as I need it, but somehow it's not quite the same as absolutely fresh fresh bread.
And the nicest bread has the least preservatives and goes stale even quicker!!

Re: 250 yrs of sandwich

Posted: Tue May 15, 2012 12:39 am
by rubato
alice wrote:"...
I don't know if this is the case with rubato, but I like really nice fresh bread - and when the kids aren't around much, I don't bother buying bread very often because it goes stale too quickly. I enjoy a lovely sandwich one day, maybe have another day or so of toasted sandwiches and some toast, but still end up with about half a loaf that's too stale to enjoy and goes to the chooks.
I've tried freezing the loaf and just thawing a bit at a time as I need it, but somehow it's not quite the same as absolutely fresh fresh bread.
And the nicest bread has the least preservatives and goes stale even quicker!!
We have lovely crunchy nice artisan bread locally but most of it would go stale before it was used up. An embarrassment of riches. Truth.

yrs,
rubato