Best sandwich?

Best Sandwich?

  • PB&J

    Votes: 8 4.6%
  • Club

    Votes: 9 5.1%
  • Bacon Cheeseburger

    Votes: 30 17.1%
  • Tuna salad

    Votes: 3 1.7%
  • Reuben

    Votes: 52 29.7%
  • PB&bacon

    Votes: 2 1.1%
  • Philly cheesesteak

    Votes: 24 13.7%
  • Leftover turkey

    Votes: 11 6.3%
  • Meatloaf

    Votes: 12 6.9%
  • Sub, Hoagie, Grinder

    Votes: 17 9.7%
  • Grilled cheese

    Votes: 6 3.4%
  • Folded pizza

    Votes: 1 0.6%

  • Total voters
    175
Ruthie's Aunt Judy is a hamburger tartare fan. Raw hamburger, sliced onion, salt, pepper on bread. Her kitchen, her rules, she wins.

On the subject of raw hamburger I feel the need to edgumakate y'all on hamburger meat. I expect many of you already know but this for the one(s) that don't. I feel qualified to post this because for the past year of high school (class of 1962) I worked i the meat market of a large chain grocery store. to this day this is how things were done. (Pretty much)

My official job title (description) was clean-up boy. Every night I would clean all the knives, pans, and, the meat grinder, and the band saw. Then sweep all the old blood soaked sawdust out of the cooler and put down fresh. sweep and mop the market, turn out the market lights, clock out, and go home.

But after few months I got unofficially promoted to what amounted to assistant butcher. Cutting up/splitting chickens, pork loins, beef ribs, and most things using the band saw.

But most often and my favorite task was making hamburger meat. First I would cut up 25# block of frozen bull meat on the band saw. This made up about half of the meat. Then I wold pull all the steaks, roasts, stew meat, etc that had not sold and was turning dark from the meat case. next I would de-bone all this. This was the rest of the meat that went in to it.

Here's where it gets really interesting. To all that I mentioned above I would add all the fat that the butchers trimmed from all the steaks, roasts, briskets, etc.

Then I would add all the suet trimmed from the beef kidneys. There was a surprisingly large amount of this. :eek:

The butchers would sort out all these ingredients and fill tubs with the correct proportion for lean, fat, or more fat accordingly and label them accordingly and set them on a rack next to the meat grinder. I did all the grinding and filling Styrofoam trays for the ladies to wrap.

From the first tub of meat and fat I ground I made SURE my hamburger was the leanest available and cooked to well done.

Raw hamburger? Ughh! FUGGEDABOUDI. ;)
 
Ruthie's Aunt Judy is 82 years old and still with us.

Yep. I get it. A family friend from my early childhood smoked 2 packs a day since he was 17 years old. he lived until 3 weeks from his 101st birthday. I don't know if he ate raw hamburger. some people get away with "bad behavior and some don't.

Anyway I guess I know that the suet around beef kidneys is not harmful. To me its a psychological issue. and there is the risk of eating uncooked meat. I kind of take after my grand father. He always said that if meat had any other name than meat (ie, organ meats...liver, kidney, tongue, etc) he would have to give it a pass. Just couldn't get passed the psychological issue.
 
It's hard to beat a hot pastrami with deli mustard and slaw from 42nd St Deli in NYC. A half (new) dill pickle and Dr Brown's Cream Soda and a bag of chips to top it off.
Of course now that NYC has basically become a "No Go Zone", it's been a while since I've had that culinary delight.
 
On the subject of raw hamburger I feel the need to edgumakate y'all on hamburger meat. I expect many of you already know but this for the one(s) that don't. I feel qualified to post this because for the past year of high school (class of 1962) I worked i the meat market of a large chain grocery store. to this day this is how things were done. (Pretty much)

My official job title (description) was clean-up boy. Every night I would clean all the knives, pans, and, the meat grinder, and the band saw. Then sweep all the old blood soaked sawdust out of the cooler and put down fresh. sweep and mop the market, turn out the market lights, clock out, and go home.

But after few months I got unofficially promoted to what amounted to assistant butcher. Cutting up/splitting chickens, pork loins, beef ribs, and most things using the band saw.

But most often and my favorite task was making hamburger meat. First I would cut up 25# block of frozen bull meat on the band saw. This made up about half of the meat. Then I wold pull all the steaks, roasts, stew meat, etc that had not sold and was turning dark from the meat case. next I would de-bone all this. This was the rest of the meat that went in to it.

Here's where it gets really interesting. To all that I mentioned above I would add all the fat that the butchers trimmed from all the steaks, roasts, briskets, etc.

Then I would add all the suet trimmed from the beef kidneys. There was a surprisingly large amount of this. :eek:

The butchers would sort out all these ingredients and fill tubs with the correct proportion for lean, fat, or more fat accordingly and label them accordingly and set them on a rack next to the meat grinder. I did all the grinding and filling Styrofoam trays for the ladies to wrap.

From the first tub of meat and fat I ground I made SURE my hamburger was the leanest available and cooked to well done.

Raw hamburger? Ughh! FUGGEDABOUDI. ;)

Thanks for the info, but nothing in your post sounds unsanitary or off-putting.

In fact, it sounds rather appetizing!

John
 
Ruthie's Aunt Judy is 82 years old and still with us.

My hat is off to Aunt Judy (another raw hamburger fan)!

I'll be 70 in 3 months and have been eating raw meat since I was 14 years old.

I'm almost never sick (haven't had a cold or flu in years), I have no aches and pains or chronic illnesses.

I feel great (like I'm 17 years old), and do nearly all of my own work, inside or outside.

I think the fear of raw meat is mostly psychological for most folks.

John
 
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