Interesting! Thank you for the food history lesson.
A quick Google tells me that bologna is essentially mortadella except for the detail that the fat chunks are blended into bologna. Is there any other big differences?
I made "The Bologna" sandwich from the "Turkey and The Wolf" cookbook which is named after an award winning sandwich shop in New Orleans. I strongly encourage a visit if you're in the area.
Anyways, this sandwich includes, thick white bread, lettuce, bologna, American Cheese, Dukes Mayo, scratch made mustard, and salt & vinegar chips.
I'm not huge on bologna. However, this sandwich was award winning at the restaurant so I decided to give it a go. I understand the hype. It's not something I'll eat often, but I could see myself revisiting this every now and again. The satisfaction of pressing down and crunching the chips would make it all worth it again.
Personally, the homemade mustard was a home run. It was my first time ever trying to make mustard and now I feel like the bottled Dijion in my fridge is a scam.
Fantastic_Feasts OP t1_jef3kdx wrote
Reply to comment by fulvio91 in [Homemade] The Bologna Sandwich by Fantastic_Feasts
Interesting! Thank you for the food history lesson.
A quick Google tells me that bologna is essentially mortadella except for the detail that the fat chunks are blended into bologna. Is there any other big differences?