Some
events are lost to history. They remain mysteries, forever shrouded by
speculation and conjecture. In 1937, pilot Amelia Earhart disappeared
during an attempt to circumnavigate the globe in her Lockheed Model 10
Electra; something happened over the central Pacific Ocean that was
known only to Earhart, and for nearly a century, her vanishing act has
been the subject of debate. Similarly, it remains unknown what freakish
natural force turned Donald Trump’s hair from a ho-hum set of everyday
follicles to a rabid animal that feeds on the scalps of gasbag
nincompoops. The parallels are uncanny.
And so it is with the World’s Greatest Sandwich.
Its
origins are an enigma. Not even a full list of its ingredients remain.
All I know is that, one ordinary day in college, I walked over to the
sandwich bar and concocted a lunch so breathtaking, so utterly perfect
in its conception, that time has transformed it into legend. To me,
anyway. Actually, I may be the only one who knows about it. But still.
They
say college is all about experimentation, and they’re right. Trying new
things is what led to the World’s Greatest Sandwich. At my college, the
sandwich bar was a cornucopia of all the standard fair, mixed in with a
few oddities: deli meats, various salads, and a handful of trays
brimming with what I can only assume were droppings from the sphincter
of an extremely large and unhealthy cat. Somehow I took these simple
foods and cobbled together a masterpiece, which statistically speaking
should never have occurred. The fact that it did happen is some kind of miracle, on a
par with witnessing a shooting star while sitting on the shoulders of a
flying leprechaun.
That’s
how it is sometimes with sandwiches, though. What an amazing concept
they are. “Sandwich” is one of those words that doesn’t mean just one
thing; one can be drastically different from the next, varying in
quality, content, and its tendency to make our breath smell like a moldy
rag dipped in bear saliva. You take two slices of bread, throw some
random culinary detritus between them, and voila! Their adaptability is
what makes them such a perfect food item. Not like meatloaf, which is
generally consistent, or pineapple, which sucks.
Every
sandwich is an opportunity to be creative, which is why there are
roughly 10.3 bazillion amazing and ridiculous concoctions out there –
like the baked bean French toast sandwich. Featured on Today.com, this
dripping, oozing affront to health is basically a shovelful of baked
beans and cheese shoehorned into a French toast bun, which altogether
promises to stop the heart of a sub-Saharan elephant. While the beans
are a nice nod to the human body’s need for protein, the rest is
specifically designed to promote diabetes and cause breathless huffing
during pilates. Any more calories and this beast would represent a full
100 percent of the average Victoria’s Secret model’s annual intake.
Yet
it pales in comparison next to the Double Down. Anyone remember the
launch of this bad boy? KFC unleashed this epic abomination just a few
short months ago. It’s for people who love sandwiches but consider bread
to be a pesky and unnecessary detail. Instead of bread, two fried
chicken fillets are wrapped around a slimy wet ball of bacon and two
kinds of cheese; this is considered so deleterious to one’s well-being
that conspiracy theorists surmise it’s an extremist group’s attempt at
subversive biological warfare. And by conspiracy theorists, I mean me.
Seriously, airdrop a few dozen Double Downs into a small village and in
short order it’ll be as void of life as a Martin O’Malley political rally.
(You: “Who’s Martin O’Malley?” Me: “Exactly.”)
Luckily,
not all sandwiches have to be unhealthy to represent a creative and
artistic triumph. I encourage you to fire up your device of choice and
Google “The Rubik’s Cubewich,” a culinary take on – what else? – the
Rubik’s Cube. The history of this impressive dish is unfortunately
another of our irksome mysteries, but the inventor was no doubt some
sort of glasses-wearing, crazy-haired genius in the mold of an Einstein
or a Doc Emmett Brown. (Google that reference, while you’re at it.) Like
many genius-level ideas, this sandwich is simple enough. You cut up
various meats and cheeses into cubes, and then cobble them together into
the familiar 3x3x3 arrangement of the popular puzzle toy, bookended by
bread as a stabilizer. Preparing it is probably a huge pain in the butt.
Eating it is doubtless a huger
pain in the butt – how do you keep the cubes from popping out? But
sometimes we put up with a little inconvenience in order to bask in
awesomeness. Whoever conceived this sandwich deserves a key to the city,
unlimited free Swedish massage for a year, and the full list of cheat
codes to “NBA Jam” for Super Nintendo.
Whoa. Nerded out there for a second.
If
I had known on that fateful day that I’d be achieving new heights of
sandwich superiority, I’d have written the ingredients down so its
legacy could still be enjoyed. Whole wheat bread sounds about right.
Iceberg lettuce was somewhere in the mix. I think egg salad may have
been involved. Maybe ham. Skittles? Not sure. The rest is as gone as
Earhart; which mystery has left the more painful scar is debatable.
What’s
not debatable is that the sandwich is to perfect precisely because it’s
such a chameleon, shifting and morphing to fit our wants and needs. I
may make one today. No idea what’s going to be on it yet, but I’m sure
whatever makes the cut will be fantastic.
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