Now That is a Sandwich!

Alex


Photo: NYC Food Guy

Now that's a sandwich! Lawrence of NYC Food Guy blog snapped this pic of a brisket and pastrami sandwich from Katz's Deli.

For more, check out the aptly named Flickr Pool Serious Sandwiches - via Serious Eats

Previously on Neatorama: Secret of Food Stylists

Comments (20)

Newest 5
Newest 5 Comments

What's up everyone?

This is NYC Food Guy, the person who actually took the picture in question and ate the food you see.

The food is from Katz's Deli in New York. It is two sandwiches. Both were delicious. Here's the link to my review:

http://nycfoodguy.com/category/kosher-kosher-style-delis/katzs-delicatessen/

I can understand where everyone's coming from with their respective opinions. All I can say is that Katz's is a NY institution and a must try. Pastrami and Brisket are delicious albeit unhealthy.

And if you want to see more great food please check out my website, I'd love to get your feedback.

Thanks,
NYC Food Guy
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Only on the internet can you read a blog article which is a reprint of a magazine article which is a summary of a television episode.

The meta, it hurts!
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Um, apologies for picking on your spelling, but I think you meant to use the word 'dexterous' (or 'dextrous'; both spellings are okay). That is, unless 'dexterious' is some terrible new hybrid word that people are using.
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One thing to remember about McGyver is that the producers and writers tried to make everything that was explosive or potentially dangerous -not- work if tried in reality. When McGyver would create a chemical mixture to explode out of this or that trap, at least one component would always be off so that kids couldn't blow up their bedrooms at home.

:D
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I think it was in the pilot episode of the A-Team, they escaped a prison with "traaaash baaaaygs" attached to chairs, inflated with frickin' hair dryers! It was an amazing bit of TV.
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My dad told me about an incident in the 1950's on an aircraft carrier where a disgruntled sailor flushed a pound of sodium metal down the toilets and blew them up, disabling them. Needless to say, the sailor was court-martialed, and my dad had a seat on the court. It seems that the key part of getting a major reaction from sodium metal and water is to constrain the reaction, much like the way that gunpowder will burn when unconstrained but explode when constrained.

The problem with Mythbusters is that they often don't think through how to really reproduce a situation and have terrible experimental procedures, such as when they used a bolt-action rifle to test the effects of blocking the barrel of a gun, rather than testing on a semi-automatic like a Colt .45 pistol (which was the original of the myth that they were trying to bust), or when they were testing whether on gets better fuel economy to driving with the windows down on a car or with the air conditioning on - they changed the conditions of the experiment halfway through on that one.
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