Thank you for reading Between the Layers! The Intimate Art of Making a Sandwich - No. 205Recipes and rules for making beautiful sandwiches when life isn’t a tea party.
ALL MY LIFE I’VE SLICED OFF CRUST from sandwiches for the people I love dearly. Sandwiches are intimate foods you make for someone no matter how many times you repeat them. Scrambling an egg and wrapping it up in buttered toast for breakfast when he’s overslept on exam day. Laying thin strips of turkey with a whisper of mayo on Pepperidge Farm white when she’s going through chemo. Peanut butter and strawberry jam on wheat, no crust, cut into squares you can pull swiftly from a sack without your hands leaving the wheel. I guess you could count the sloppy Sunday bacon and tomato sandwiches in the summertime, too. No telling how many hours I had put into growing those Bradleys and Cherokee Purples, scarfed down in seconds on soft white by family wolves at the kitchen table. Maybe not the circular cucumber sandwiches with dill I stamped out with perfection for that herb society tea. That was more duty than love. But the pimento cheese finger sandwiches I cut the crust off for his mother? That was love. When food and life intersectThese past two weeks in Nashville have been tragic. The school shooting leaving six dead ignited a plea for gun reform by students, teachers, parents, and grassroots organizations. When three state legislators were not recognized to speak in support for gun reform in our state Capitol, they raised their voices. Two of the Tennessee Three, as they were quickly named, were expelled from the statehouse because they didn’t follow decorum. As of this newsletter’s writing, Nashville’s Metro Council voted unanimously to send one of them, lawmaker Justin Jones, back to the legislature. The hearing for the second, Justin Pearson, is set for Wednesday in Memphis. While a discussion of decorum might be saved for another day, I will say that I have been in situations as a woman when I have not been heard. My words have been drowned out by men around me. And my natural reaction is to breathe more slowly and speak louder and with authority. If I had been a legislator and my constituents were peacefully protesting in the rain because they want no more schoolchildren and teachers gunned down and believe Tennessee’s gun laws are too lax, I would have done no differently than the Tennessee Three. I know from your comments that many of you are weary of my writing about school shootings and assault rifle bans instead of recipes. But when it’s your town, and I hope that it never is, you might understand. As of this writing, a shooting has taken place at the Old National Bank in downtown Louisville, our neighbor to the north. From early reports, five are dead and more wounded. A federal law enforcement source told CNN the gun used was an AR-15 style rifle. Kentucky is a permitless carry state, meaning gun owners over 21 are legally allowed to carry concealed guns in public without a license. What is it about a sandwich that feels intimate?Sandwiches filled lunchboxes but they were also what we took to families after someone they loved had died. I’m talking about those light and earnest sandwiches of chicken salad, pimento cheese, smoked salmon, egg salad, turkey and cranberry, cucumber and cream cheese, tomato and mayo. However you cut them—circles, squares, triangles, or rectangles—they stacked well, packed well, and presented well. Depending on where you are from, they might be called tea sandwiches. When you make a sandwich for someone close to you, you know their choice of bread without asking - and toasted or not. You know if they are a crust person. Sweet pickles or sour. Mustard or mayo. You know if they like cheese or tomato. And if the tomatoes should be peeled first. These aren’t questions you ask a stranger unless you work at a deli, but they are answers you learn by listening and observing. Maybe it wasn’t so much the sandwich I made for my son as it was I knew how it felt to go into an exam hungry and didn’t want him to experience that. I knew what it was like to drive through unknown places before GPS and be afraid to stop and get something to eat. I didn’t know what chemo felt like, but I had read it messed with your desire to eat. If I could make that sandwich for my mom more delectable, then would she eat it? Sandwich rules…yes, there are rules.So many sandwiches seem weighty. The photos of piled meat we see on TV and on social media feeds, that’s primal feeding. I’m talking about reasonable sandwiches you can make at home. In New Orleans where tea sandwiches are taken seriously, and in England, here are some good rules for making them: Rule #1: According to Claridge’s hotel in London, the first rule of making memorable sandwiches is a sharp serrated knife. You’ll need a knife with teeth that aren’t too large or they will tear the bread. And the bread itself needs to be both soft but also have enough texture to it to cut into shapes. It’s not about the bread, and yet, it is about the bread. Homemade challah is amazing on tea sandwiches. What is your favorite bread for making finger sandwiches? I think off the shelf, I vote Pepperidge Farm.Rule #2: Keep it even, keep it neat, says Claridge’s. Like trimming a hedge. Trim off those crusts! That’s even easier if the bread is frozen. I remember the dazzling tea sandwiches at the Savoy hotel in London as if it was yesterday. In my mother’s kitchen, Claridge’s rule three was the most important: Rule #3: Never let the bread dry out. Keep the slices covered at all times. Claridge’s stacks the sandwiches on top of each other as they make them. My mother taught me to cover the made sandwiches with paper towels you wet and then wring out. Rule #4: No plastic knives or rubber spatulas! You need a proper icing palette knife or spreader to smooth the soft butter or mayo onto the bread. Here is the trick of jazzing up store-bought mayonnaise so it looks homemade: For every 1 cup store-bought mayo, whisk in 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice, and 1/4 teaspoon paprika. Rule #5: This is what you call the one-third rule: the perfect afternoon tea sandwich should be two-thirds bread and one-third filling. Spread my sandwich with love and common senseAttending a service at Fisk University’s historic Memorial Chapel last Friday in Nashville was the least I could do to bring some closure to what’s been happening. The guest speaker was Vice President Kamala Harris. It took over an hour in line to go through security, but to sit in this storied old church next to people whom I had never met, felt intimate. We can’t fight the gun shows with their easy access to assault rifles being staged on weekends in small American towns. Did you know children 6 to 11 are admitted to shows for $2 and younger ones get in free? Do children really need to attend gun shows? Do they need to live in a house with assault rifles? Do they need to be trained in classroom safety by a teacher who is frightened for his or her life every day when they walk into school? We can’t fight ignorance with sandwiches. We need common sense. But if given the chance to speak eye to eye with those state and U.S. legislators—or your cousin or brother or my governor, people who oppose an assault rifle ban, can’t see the merit in red flag laws, and fear gun reform means giving up their second amendment rights, well, I’d happily show up with a boatload of lovely sandwiches in their favorite flavors. I’d bring pimento cheese, chicken with watercress, and tomato-basil, and all the crusts would be removed and the edges cut perfectly even. I’d talk their ears off, but I’d listen, too, and leave my bullhorn at home. - xo, Anne Coming this Thursday!For paid subscribers, a how-to. How to roast lamb and turn those leftovers into the best springtime lamb stew full of carrots and white beans. THE RECIPES: Tea Sandwiches for Friends and FamilyThe choice of bread is up to you, but at least choose a white and a wheat. Use store-bought mayo of your choice, my jazzed-up mayo (see above), or homemade (below). This recipe makes about five dozen tea sandwiches, perfect for taking to a party or to your state Capitol! Feel free to substitute soft Boursin cheese for the mayonnaise. Feel free to add a razor thin slice of onion to the cucumber sandwich and crumbled bacon to the tomato. Use your favorite seasoning salt instead of the salt and pepper. Makes 55 to 66 tea sandwiches Prep: 30 to 35 minutes
Food Processor Homemade MayonnaiseFor tomato sandwiches, to spoon on top of grilled salmon, spread onto BLT’s and fold into Pimento Cheese, you cannot top homemade mayo. And it’s a personal thing because some of us have grown accustomed to mayonnaise a little sweet because we’ve been raised on the commercial stuff. If that’s the case, add a pinch of sugar. And some folks like to make mayo with olive oil, which I think makes it bitter, but a little olive oil, just to flavor it, is nice. So suit yourself! Neutral oils are those that have no flavor to them. Makes about 1 cup Prep: 10 minutes
Julie Osteen’s Pimento CheeseYears ago, Julie Osteen told me she made pimento cheese that was ‘’a cut above.’’ In South Carolina, they spread it on bread, but also pita chips, Triscuits, Ritz crackers, and also hamburgers. It’s all about ‘’the sauce,’’ the mix of half Duke’s mayo and half soft cream cheese. She flavors it with grated Vidalia onion, diced pickled jalapeno peppers, and a little cayenne. And the peppers are roasted red peppers, that are meatier and have more flavor, instead of pimentos. It is phenomenal! Roasting red peppers is a bit messy, but you can do this by cutting the red bell peppers in half and placing them cut-side down on a baking pan. Run under a broiler until the skin blackens. Then cool the peppers, remove the blackened skin, stem and seeds, and dice the pepper itself. A bell pepper isn't a pimento, but it's still pretty close. Makes about 4 cups
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