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ByAmanda CarlisleUpdated on
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Just like you would get in New Orleans. Try this Incredible, Authentic Muffuletta Sandwich Recipe. Plus, read all of the tips to make the perfect sandwich!
Making the perfect sandwich is a skill no matter what anyone says. Finding just the right combination of condiments, meats, cheese, and bread to make your taste buds dance is a talent that creates joy for the person eating it. This Authentic Muffuletta Sandwich Recipe has just the right combination of everything you need to make a fantastic sandwich and has the power to transport you to the streets of New Orleans with a flavor pallet that is one of a kind.
What is a Muffuletta Sandwich?
This sandwich was initially created at the Central Grocery in New Orleans when the enterprising owner suggested that customers place their typical lunch of sliced cured meat and preserved vegetables inside the bread instead of alongside it. Now, this sandwich can now be found all over the city of New Orleans and throughout sandwich shops in the US.
Local bakeries to New Orleans are the only place you are going to find TRUE Muffuletta bread, but for those of us around the country, we have to make do with other delicious breads for this sandwich. Your best bet is looking for a wide, round loaf of ciabatta or Italian bread. Added bonus if you can find one covered in sesame seeds.
Where to Find Olive Salad?
You can find Olive Salad in some delis, but why not make your own? This Simple Olive Salad recipe is perfect for these yummy sandwiches are more. Snag the recipe here.
Tips
Prep Ahead
Muffuletta Sandwiches are one of those foods that gets better as it sits. This fact makes it the perfect party food! Make a few sandwiches, wrap them up, and slice them open as needed. Late-arriving guests will enjoy the best bites. Great for prepping things ahead for a party too!
Mortadella?
Mortadella is not easy to find in typical grocery stores. A cured pork embedded with pieces of fat, the closest substitute is common bologna. But don’t be skeptical. It tastes fantastic in this combination.
Stack it right
Also, it is easier to make this sandwich if you stack everything on one side EXCEPT for the final layer of meat. Place the salami on the opposite side to help hold the olive salad in place as you invert the sandwich half onto the other side.
The right tool for the job
This sandwich is easier to slice with a serrated bread knife. To prepare this for a picnic or potluck, slice into portions and rewrap each part in plastic wrap.
Muffuletta Sandwich
Just like you would get in New Orleans. Try this Incredible, Authentic Muffuletta Sandwich Recipe. Plus, read all of the tips to make the perfect sandwich!
110 to 12 inch loaf round bread topped with sesame seedssliced in half horizontally
2tablespoonsolive oil
1cupolive salad
12 to 24slicesblack forest ham
12slicesprovolone cheese
12 to 24slicesmortadella or bologna
12slicesmozzarella
12 to 24slicessalami
Instructions
Open bread on a large surface like a cutting board. Remove some of the inner bread to create room for the stack of meats and cheeses.
Brush the open sides on each half of bread with olive oil. Spread olive salad over the olive oil on both pieces of bread.
On the bottom half of the sandwich, begin layering the ham, provolone, mortadella or bologna, and mozzarella.
On the opposite (tohalf of the sandwich, place the salami over the olive salad. Using the salami to help hold the olive salad in place, invert the top and place on the bottom.
Press the sandwich down and secure with plastic wrap. Remove plastic wrap before serving.
The sandwich can be stored overnight (covered with plastic wrap needed or sliced and served immediately.
Notes
Mortadella is not easy to find in common grocery stores. A cured pork embedded with pieces of fat, the closest substitute is common bologna. But don’t be skeptical. It tastes amazing in this combination.
Also, it is easier to make this sandwich if you stack everything on one side EXCEPT for the final layer of meat. Place the salami on the opposite side to help hold the olive salad in place as you invert the sandwich half onto the other side.
This sandwich is easier to slice with a serrated bread knife. To prepare this for a picnic or potluck, slice into portions and rewrap each part in plastic wrap.
Author: Amanda Carlisle
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The muffaletta is one of New Orleans' most iconic and identifiable dishes. Made on large rounds of sesame bread and layered with olive salad, genoa salami, ham, mortadella, provolone and Swiss cheese, the muffaletta is clearly Italian in spirit and yet no such sandwich exists in Italy.
A muffaletta is a famous italian sandwich invented in New Orleans with cured meats (ham and salami), provolone cheese, olive dressing and great bread. The olive dressing sports chopped green and black olives with onions and olive oil and spices, and the bread is a round sesame-seed roll big enough for sharing.
Like many sandwiches, muffulettas are best served warm. However, this optimal temperature isn't merely a matter of preference — it also plays a crucial role in bringing the whole sandwich together. Warming your muffuletta melts the cheese, which is most commonly sliced provolone.
ORIGINS. The muffuletta (or muffoletta, moffoletta, muffoletto, muffulietta, depending on the dialect) derives its name from Sicilian dialect that means 'soft and spongy bread'. This soft round bun is so versatile and many locals use it as a sandwich to fill with local hams and cheeses.
The muffuletta sandwich is said to have been created in 1906 at Central Grocery Co. on Decatur Street, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., by its delicatessen owner Salvatore Lupo, a Sicilian immigrant.
This legendary sandwich was invented at one of the city's oldest markets, the Central Grocery. Sicilian immigrants working at the nearby farmer's market would buy salami, ham, cheese, olive salad and Muffuletta bread (a soft round loaf that the sandwich takes its name from) and eat them separately.
True muffuletta bread is a wide, round, flat loaf, covered in sesame seeds, with a soft crust and a texture somewhere between focaccia and ciabatta. It's not commonly made anywhere else in the country (or the world, as far as I know), but your next best bet is to use some good soft ciabatta or focaccia.
In 1971, Don and Dolores Dissman founded the company in a "small, hole-in-the-wall shop" in Austin, Texas, on South Congress. The initial menu consisted of one sandwich, called "The Original," consisting of mixed meats, cheeses and black olives on a freshly made, toasted bun." It was based on the muffuletta sandwich.
Layer olive-salad-laden side of bread with overlapping slices of ham, salami, mortadella, provolone, and Swiss. Top with oil-coated side. Cut loaf into four wedges; serve with Zapp's Cajun Crawtator potato chips and Barq's bottled root beer or mini screwtops of Merlot.
The sandwiches arrive ready-to-eat in temperature-controlled boxes. Upon arrival, place them in the fridge. We recommend serving them within 3 days. Muffulettas can be stored in the freezer for up to 60 days in their original packaging.
Muffaletta is a chopped, relish-like condiment featuring many olives and crisp pickled vegetables. Its texture is more like a bruschetta or tapenade. Giardiniera, on the other hand, is a mix of cauliflower florets, carrots, bell peppers and celery, which may or may not include olives.
This simple muffuletta spread is reminiscent of a classic New Orleans muffuletta sandwich. It can be served on crackers, toasted bagels, or crostini. It's also a nice addition to a pasta salad, a cheese board, or spooned onto grilled fish, pork, or chicken.
The bread: Traditionally in New Orleans, muffaletta is made on a round, soft-crust, medium-dense bread with sesame seeds on top. Since that bread is not found all over, you can substitute a focaccia or a ciabatta bread.
That Pickle Guy CLASSIC Olive Muffalata is our most famous blend of delicious ripe, juicy olives and succulent garden vegetables making it an irresistible mouth watering combination!
Located on Decatur Street in the middle of New Orleans' French Quarter, we're a third generation, old-fashioned grocery store founded in 1906 by Salvatore Lupo, a Sicilian immigrant who is famous for creating the muffuletta.
A po' boy (also po-boy, po boy derived from the non-rhotic southern accents often heard in the region, or poor boy) is a sandwich originally from Louisiana. It traditionally consists of meat, which is usually roast beef, ham, or fried seafood such as shrimp, crawfish, fish, oysters, or crab.
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