Tuesday, January 21, 2014

50 States; 50 Meals: New Jersey

One of our country's great debates.  What do you call a sandwich made on long Italian or French bread stuffed with meat and cheese?  Whatever you call it usually determines what region you are from.  "Hoagie" originated in Philadelphia.  They're "Heroes" in New York.  New England calls them "Grinders".  If you hail from New Jersey they're a Submarine, Sub for short.

There are two theories about where the sub first originated.  One theory is that a man named Dominic Conti immigrated to New York from Italy in the early 1900's.  He opened a grocery store called Dominic Conti's Grocery Store.  Mr. Conti sold his traditional Italian sandwiches at his store.  His recipe was a long crust roll, filled with cold cuts, topped with lettuce, tomatoes, peppers, onions, oil, vinegar, Italian herbs and spices, salt, and pepper. Mr. Conti used a special sandwich making technique of starting and ending with a layer of cheese so the bread would not get soggy.  He named the sandwich a Submarine after seeing the Fenian Ram, a recovered submarine in the Paterson Museum.

I consulted with my Jersey cousins about this week's meals.  One of my cousins said that Italian subs were a must in southern Jersey and that the bread must be crusty.  No soft rolls.  I turned to the best sub maker I know, Wegmans.  Don't get me wrong I thought about buying all the meats and making them myself but getting them made at Wegmans was more budget friendly.  I got two "Danny's Favorites"; Genoa Salami, Capicola, Spicy Ham.  The "grown-up" version had provolone cheese, lettuce, tomato, submarine oil, oregano and hot peppers.  The "kid version" had regular ham, provolone, lettuce and tomato.  My girls loved the salami and it is now requested for lunches.

Just look how yummy.  My mouth is watering.
Italian Sub


We had Disco fries on the side.  Disco fries are usually found in Jersey diners.  They are steak fries covered in cheese and brown gravy.  I combined a quick recipe with a Paula Dean recipe.Disco Fries

Disco Fries

One Bag of Steak Fries
One packet of McCormick Beef Gravy
2 Cups (1 bag) Shredded Yellow Cheddar

Prepare the Steak Fries following the oven directions on the bag.
Prepare the gravy following directions on packet.
Place cooked fries in a wide, shallow casserole dish or baking sheet and sprinkle with the shredded Cheddar cheese, layering the fries and the cheese. (If you want the cheese to be completely melted, bake in a 350 degrees F oven for about 4 minutes after layering the fries and cheese.)
Remove from oven, top with Brown Gravy and serve immediately.   Another option is to serve the gravy on the side.

Side note:  This was a lot of cheese and I don't usually say such a thing.  I will probably start with a cup of cheese and go from there.

Jersey Dinner


Next State:  Home of the Chili



50 States; 50 Meals: New Hampshire

For New Hampshire we went all maple syrup.  It was very delicious but by the end of the meal I was maple syrup'ed out.

What's not to love about having breakfast for dinner?  We had some texas toast in the house after making Hot Browns with some leftover Christmas turkey so I made french toast.  (As I write this the Throwdown with Bobby Flay: Hot Brown is on Food Network.)  To go with the french toast I made Maple Syrup Apples.  I'm pretty sure I wasn't using the famous New Hampshire apples but they were good nonetheless.  Some of us put the apples on the french toast and some put them on the side.  Either way they were very good AND easy to make.

French Toast        Maple Apples        French Toast and Apples

For dessert we had Maple Syrup and Snow Candy.  This apparently is very popular in New Hampshire.  Lucky for us it happened to snow that day.  I had the girls get two big bowls of snow before it turned to ice and rain.  We stored the snow in the freezer until it was time for dessert.  Two big mixing bowls turned out to be enough for a family of four.  It's pretty cool.  The syrup hardens once it touches the snow.  We did not finish by eating pickles or saltines as the recipe suggests but I do see why they make the suggestion.  After the french toast, apples and snow I was ready for a different taste.

Snow and Maple Syrup

Next up: We're getting on the turnpike and heading to Jur-zee.
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