Scott’s answer to “What is more important in a sandwich: the bread, or the meat?” > Likes and Comments
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It has to be the bread. A sandwich is defined as two or more slices of bread or the like with a layer of meat, fish, cheese, etc., between each pair. The bread (or the like) is the constant, whereas the innards are variables based on individual preference. Although you can't have a sandwich without both bread and innards, a sandwich requires the presence of bread no matter what. I could place a piece of cardboard between two slices of rye and call it a sandwich, yet cannot place said cardboard between two slices of olive loaf and call it the same. The bread wins hands down.
@Matthew: Sir, I disagree. If I say the words "cardboard sandwich on rye," you immediately think of a piece of cardboard between two slices of bread. DO NOT JUDGE THE SANDWICH INNARDS OF OTHERS, SIR!
Fair point but I see you did not subconsciously think to form an opinion on whether or not cardboard between two slices of olive loaf could be considered a sandwich. Your subconscious is telling you that you needed to decide if the first option was a sandwich, but automatically told you the second was not. Therefore the inclusion of bread is what's most important.
Did I at least sound intelligent as I was talking out of my ass?
it's an important question and unfortunately Plato 's editor made him drop that chapter from The Republic, fortunately it was a favorite for monks to copy so we know this now. What has been lost is his thoughts on bean-less chili but I think we can extrapolate on the balance of sandwich and say he would have come down on this as being only meat soup.
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Matthew
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Jul 15, 2015 10:33AM
It has to be the bread. A sandwich is defined as two or more slices of bread or the like with a layer of meat, fish, cheese, etc., between each pair. The bread (or the like) is the constant, whereas the innards are variables based on individual preference. Although you can't have a sandwich without both bread and innards, a sandwich requires the presence of bread no matter what. I could place a piece of cardboard between two slices of rye and call it a sandwich, yet cannot place said cardboard between two slices of olive loaf and call it the same. The bread wins hands down.
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@Matthew: Sir, I disagree. If I say the words "cardboard sandwich on rye," you immediately think of a piece of cardboard between two slices of bread. DO NOT JUDGE THE SANDWICH INNARDS OF OTHERS, SIR!
Fair point but I see you did not subconsciously think to form an opinion on whether or not cardboard between two slices of olive loaf could be considered a sandwich. Your subconscious is telling you that you needed to decide if the first option was a sandwich, but automatically told you the second was not. Therefore the inclusion of bread is what's most important. Did I at least sound intelligent as I was talking out of my ass?
it's an important question and unfortunately Plato 's editor made him drop that chapter from The Republic, fortunately it was a favorite for monks to copy so we know this now. What has been lost is his thoughts on bean-less chili but I think we can extrapolate on the balance of sandwich and say he would have come down on this as being only meat soup.


