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Poll: Which do you say? |
Discussion:
Which do you say?
Gordondon son of Ethelred
· 19 years, 7 months ago
I say sub or hero. If it's hot it's a hero, if it's cold its a sub.
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Two answers here as well.� It depends who I'm with.� With family, it's a hoagie because that's what they call 'em.� With anyone else, it's a sub.� I've picked it�up from living outside Western PA & in actual civilization ;-)
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ChrisChin is Getting Old
· 19 years, 7 months ago
I usually say "hero bread" when I want my sandwich as a hero. Sometimes I say sub, but usually I'm at Subway or some other shop that uses sub. Otherwise, it's hero.
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Andrea Krause
· 19 years, 7 months ago
I realized after making this poll that I think we may have had it before.
Anywho...I say sub, because I grew up with Sub parents...but i live in a land of grinders. I hate the term, and I hate when I find myself using it because I'm immersed in it. I mind it less when they're talking about a hot sub, for some reason...but when they say grinder about a cold sub? Really grates for some reason. ![]()
caroline: tired.
· 19 years, 7 months ago
I haven't ever been out of the Philadelphia area long enough to even notice any other name. But yeah, everyone says hoagie here.
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I remember when I first heard it called a "sub" and I was like, "What in the world are you talking about?"
Hoagie pwns your pants. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Bruce Rose
· 19 years, 7 months ago
It depends on the sandwich and the region. Long, skinny sandwiches are subs. A grinder is a hot, toasted sub. Growing up, our local supermarket sold hoagie rolls, which were short Italian breads, about the size of a double-wide hot dog bun with a slightly thicker crust.� They were perfect for steak sandwiches.�Hoagies, to me, are sandwiches on six- to eight-inch breads with both ends intact. Po' Boys are only available in Gulf shore states, and tend to have unexpected meats on them. ![]() ![]() Possible. My introduction to grinders was in New London, CT. The shop didn't offer cold sandwiches that I remember. The closest thing to a grinder I can find in Chicago is Quizno's. The toasting is pretty good, but the sandwiches aren't really big enough to be grinders. The grinders I remember were too big to close. We had a pretty good grinder shop in Bloomington, IN (Mancino's) and another one in Indianapolis (W.G. Grinders, a chain based in Ohio). ![]() I grew up in the New London, CT area and since moving away I have missed Grinders.� I finally took it upon myself to duplicate them out here in Ohio.� I would say the chief distinction is the copious amounts of olive oil.� In the southeastern ct area, if you order a "regular grinder", (toasted or not), it will be built from the ground up as follows: Sliced open grinder roll Chiefley ![]() That sounds like a good sandwich. :-) My first grinder was steak, peppers, onions and cheese going into the oven, lettuce and condiments after it came through. I don't remember copious amounts of oil, but that was long before I realized what olive oil could do to a sandwich. ![]()
Bruce,
What I described was a "regular Grinder". A typical grinder shop would sell all kinds of other grinders that are more traditionally like a sub sandwich. So the one you are describing would not have olive oil on it. For example, a tuna grinder, or a hot meatball grinder. Those are not that much different than subs and hoagies anywhere else. It's that "regular" grinder that is the distinctive one. When I was last in CT, I had a really good grinder at Mystic Pizza Two, in No. Stonington, CT. Its a second store to the now famous Mystic Pizza in CT. Chiefley ![]()
I totally agree... Grinders are hot hoagies. :o)
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lawrence
· 19 years, 7 months ago
what's interesting is that 'sub' is not a regionalism at all, but a generic name for the type of sandwich based on its shape. there are really only a few places that have specific names for them.
that said, I'll always call them hoagies and cheesesteaks (hoagies are mostly cold, cheesesteaks are hot, and sometimes don't have steak - the important distinction, at least, is that a cheesesteak is NOT a hoagie), as my primary exposure to them was in Philadelphia. damn, I need to get back to Lee's (or Pat's, or Geno's). It's been over three months... ![]()
Josh Woodward
· 19 years, 7 months ago
I think of a sub as being able to be hot or cold, but a grinder is baked.
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Michael (foof) Maki
· 19 years, 7 months ago
It's funny, because while I was vaguely aware of Sub Sandwiches beforehand, I never had one (and thus, rarely referred to them) before Subway moved into my area around my Junior year in High School.
So, after that, they were subs by default. ![]()
You were influenced by The Man(tm)! For shame!
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