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Two halves of a pastrami taleggio pickle sandwich stacked on a plate

Pastrami Taleggio Pickle Sandwich

America isn’t known for its cheese, technically. The two “cheeses” that could rightly be classified as distinctly American are “American Cheese” and “Velveeta Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Product”. Neither of which are, legally, actually what the rest of the world would call cheese. This isn’t a let’s-make-fun-of-the-American-palate post. It’s an appreciation post for the low melting point of American “cheeses” and how long it took me to find something to replicate it here in the UK.

Grilled cheese sandwiches with tomato soup were in regular rotation when I was growing up so I have very fond memories of the specific kind of melted ooziness you get from American cheese or Velveeta in a grilled sandwich. It is so good at that one particular thing that even the magazine bon appetit listed it as the best melting cheese in the world. There is nothing else, anywhere else that gives you the same color, flavor and glorious, stretchy pull. Any of which you could scoff at but, believe me, I’ve worked my way through a lot of cheese looking for a worthy substitute.

Cheddar is good for a lot of things but in a grilled sandwich it gets greasy quickly. Mozzarella melts well and gives you that string thing but it doesn’t really taste of much. Gruyere and Raclette while both very, very melty and appropriate for fondue have a little too much personality when you’re looking for a cheese that’s going to play well with other ingredients. Brie, being French, is best enjoyed on its own merits.

Well, hello taleggio. Where have you been my entire life? When the student is ready, the teacher will appear. I’ve been thinking a lot about Rueben sandwiches lately because I have a jar of sauerkraut to use. There is no concept of “Swiss cheese” here in the UK (the closest would probably be Emmental) so I guess I’ve been ruminating on cheese substitutions in my sleep and Taleggio made it into my conscious brain. How lucky am I? It’s the perfect, more grown up alternative to my beloved American cheese.

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Two halves of a pastrami taleggio pickle sandwich stacked on a plate

Ingredients

Two slices white bread. I use Tiger Bread because I like a softer bread for this sandwich but sourdough would be great, too.
2 Tbsp mayonnaise
1 Tbsp Dijon mustard
100g pastrami
Enough taleggio to cover the pastrami
5 cornichons, diced small (or pickle slices)

Instructions

1
Take your slices of WHITE BREAD and put 1 Tbsp of MAYONNAISE on a side of each piece. You can also use butter if you don’t like mayo for some reason.
2
Flip one piece of bread over and put the DIJON MUSTARD on the other side. Lay your PASTRAMI on top of this and the TALEGGIO on top of the pastrami.
3
I’ve found that the key to a good grilled sandwich is a low enough heat that you give the inside time to melt so that would be the lower end of medium. Start lower rather than high, you can always turn it up. If you have one, a heavy skillet also helps because it transfers the heat more evenly but if you don’t have anything like that, you’re fine. So put your pan on a medium low heat. Let it warm up for a minute.
4
When the pan is warmed, put your bread with the meat and cheese into the pan mayo side down. Put your CORNICHONS/pickles on top of the cheese. Put the other slice of bread on top, mayo side up. Let it cook until you can smell it getting toasty and can see the edge of the bread go golden.
5
Flip the sandwich and press down with your spatula so it all squishes together. Let that side cook until it smells divine and the edge of the bread has gone golden again. Transfer to a plate, cut in half and just appreciate that ooze before your first bite.
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