Sunday, February 20, 2022

The Po'Boy Sandwich

Beloved of Louisiana, and particularly of New Orleans, the Po'boy sandwich is a creation from the streetcar strike of 1929, where restaurants and sandwich stands were trying to make a cheap, filling sandwich from local ingredients.  Today, you can't hardly swing a dead cat in New Orleans without hitting a Po'boy stand.  The Po'boy lets a chef get creative with sauces and additions.

Below, foodie Mark Weins makes a tour of New Orleans Po'boy stands, and I admit that I have never heard of any of these.  When I go to New Orleans, one of my favorite stops is Mother's, on Poydras street.  They make this thing called a Debris Po'boy that is absolutely incredible.  How Mark missed Mother's on his list is beyond me.

3 comments:

  1. Oh yeah! Crawfish Po'boy (with a splash of Tabasco) for the win!

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  2. Termite5:17 AM

    Parran's is another good one.

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  3. That's just cruel. Me stuck here in FL eating what are supposed to be Po'boys using sourdough bread stuck under a flame to simulate crisping -- even in "New Orleans style" restaurants!

    Let's face it -- all other ingredients are standard (though the lettuce shred texture is worth noting), but if it ain't French bread, it ain't a Po'boy!

    And oh how I long for Manuel's tamale stands on the corner... Opelousas born, Algiers raised (yeah, New Orleans, but I try not to highlight it).

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