Talk:Sandwich
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We need to track down a decent recipe for an Oyster Po'boy which is a hot sandwich. - Sparky This Oyster Loaf (http://www.fabulousfoods.com/recipes/main/sandwiches/oysterloafsandwich.html) sandwich recipe is close -- needs more tabasco and less mayonaise. - Sparky 07:43, 6 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Moved Hot dog to fillings section instead of sandwich type section. Cannot really see that this is a sandwich-type, but rather a sandwich content. If this is a generic sandwich type, which then should include other sausage "sandwiches" it can as easily be pointed out that there should be a "burger" sandwich type which would encompass all sandwiches in the burger bun, i.e. chicken burgers, fish burgers, and other types. Sfdan 17:01, 28 Feb 2004 (UTC)
- Hot dog refers to the bread not the sausage in some parts of Europe. Rmhermen 22:47, Apr 12, 2004 (UTC)
The earl would have been unable to eat a sandwich having sustained an injury at the age of seventeen. most of his food beyond this point would have been soup. There is evidence to suggest that a law in France requiring land owners to feed their workers a mid-day meal may have brought about the invention. There is some conjecture as to where the Earl returned with rthis idea to his estates following a journey abroad
The bread is not "usually buttered" in the majority of sandwiches, so I'm getting rid of that, and appending that as a passing phrase at the end of one of the sentences. In fact, the only one I can think of is the Reuben (though obviously there're more). A light buttering while the bread is baked is understandable, but I feel the statement "usually buttered" implies more than that.
