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Cuban Sandwiches Recipe

Cuban Sandwiches
Difficulty: Easy | Total Time: | Makes: 4 to 6 servings

Rumored to have originated in Cuba or Key West, the Cuban sandwich migrated to Tampa, Florida, and eventually to Miami, growing in popularity along the way. It’s traditionally made with Cuban bread, but Italian or ciabatta bread is an easy-to-find substitute. Ham, roasted pork loin, Swiss cheese, pickles, and yellow mustard are the nonnegotiable layers in a proper Cuban sandwich, but mayo and salami are also common additions. For ease of preparation, the assembled loaf is cut in half here, each piece is wrapped in foil, and a heavy pot or pan is placed on top to compress the sandwich while it’s toasting.

Game plan: If you can, use this rotisserie pork loin recipe for the roasted pork loin; the dried-oregano marinade adds a ton of flavor.

INGREDIENTS
  • 1 (1-pound) loaf Italian or ciabatta bread
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise (optional)
  • 8 ounces thinly sliced cooked ham
  • 8 ounces thinly sliced roasted pork loin
  • 8 ounces thinly sliced Swiss cheese
  • 4 whole dill pickles, thinly sliced lengthwise
  • 1/4 cup yellow mustard
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter (1/4 stick), melted
INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Heat the oven to 200°F and arrange a rack in the middle.
  2. Cut the loaf of bread in half horizontally and open it up like a book. Spread the mayonnaise, if using, on the bottom piece of bread.
  3. Evenly place the ham and roasted pork on top of the mayonnaise. Evenly arrange the cheese and pickles on the meat.
  4. Spread the mustard on the top piece of bread and close the sandwich. Press gently on the top to compact the sandwich slightly. Cut it in half crosswise; set both halves aside.
  5. Lay 2 (20-inch-long) sheets of aluminum foil on a work surface. Brush half of the melted butter on the tops of the sandwiches. Place each sandwich butter-side down on the sheets of foil. Brush the bottoms of the sandwiches with the remaining butter. Fold the foil around the sandwiches to completely encase them.
  6. Heat a large frying pan on low heat until hot, about 4 minutes. Place 1 wrapped sandwich in the pan. Place a cast-iron skillet, Dutch oven, or heavy pot on the sandwich, push down on the skillet or pot to further compact the cubano, and cook undisturbed for 10 minutes.
  7. Remove the skillet or pot (careful: It may be hot). Flip the sandwich and place the skillet or pot back on top of it. Cook undisturbed until the cheese has melted and the sandwich is warmed through, about 10 minutes more. Remove to the oven and repeat with the second sandwich. When both are ready, remove the foil, cut into pieces, and serve.
    Write a review | 7 Reviews
  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    5

    I use a panini press to toast the sandwich. A panini press has an independently swivelling top unlike those cheap copies that only have a hinge.

  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    5

    Sparky, I noticed the same thing when I went to Cuba. When I asked the people I was with about the sandwich, they laughed. They said the food situation on the island was so bad that the new Cuban Sandwich was bread and cheese because the pork, ham and pickle had run off to Miami...a joke, of course, but still no sandwich to be found. Did you find any decent places to eat there? If so, please share!

  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    5

    Worlds best Cuban sandwich is at 5 Brothers in Key West. Also their breakfast sandwich with egg, ham and cheese, and mustard. Great with a cafe Conleche to start the day.

  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    5

    There is really a good bread made in Tampa. They actually bake under a palm frown. they mix mustard and mayo. In tampa they always use salami I have seen sandwiches toasted in Parchment paper. Helps with not burning. The midnight sandwich is made with carnitas pork. Living in Southwest Florida we love cuban sandwiches.

  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    5

    Best cuban in NYC has grilled salami added!And mustard & mayo, I think.

  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    5

    the pork is the heart of the sando. It's much easier and cheaper to keep with tradition -use a pork shoulder or picnic roast and marinate with Mojo and slow roast. Then make the sando. http://www.daisymartinez.com/recipes/RoastPork1206.htm I also use mayo on mine and occassionally some roasted red peppers sacrilegious I know but thats the way I like it (the pork is done pure cuban however). For the bread I get the biggest softest loaf I can find (usually the cheapest too) dig out some of the bread and build an the sando from there. Brush with butter cover with foil and use a cast iron frying pan with some additional weight to and bake in the oven. I do this for a crowd (like superbowl party). Interestingly enough I was in cuba this winter and I couldn't find a cuban sandwhich to save my life (belive me I tried).

  • Cuban Sandwiches Recipe
    4

    Thank you for making the mayonnaise optional. As a rule, in Miami the mayo is a no-no. (In NJ or Tampa's Cuban communities they include it. I, personally, find the texture of hot mayonnaise monumentally unappealing.) If Cuban bread is unavailable (VERY likely the case) a variation would be to make the sandwich with an egg-bread, which then become's the Cuban sandwich's alter-ego "The Medianoche" (i.e. Midnight sandwich) which is equally delicious. All those crusty, rustic loaves are the wrong texture. Oddly enough, the Philly cheesesteak roll is VERY close to Cuban bread, so if you can get that, try it.

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