PANINI
SANDWICHES GET HOT IN THE US.
NEW YORK — The
latest thing heating up the U.S. is thin, hot and
Italian. No, it's not the sexy new "It" girl.
It's grilled panini. Panini, which means "sandwich" in
Italian but in the U.S. refers to a hot, pressed
sandwich, is quickly becoming a lunchtime favorite
at delis and cafes around America.
"Just like cappuccino and pasta in the '80s, granita in the '90s, panini
is the food of the new millennium." Indeed, the warm sandwiches seem to
be popping up everywhere. At Liberty Deli in midtown Manhattan, the panini sandwiches
were brought in only three months ago, said manager Sam Chand. And Caffe de l'Universite
at New York University started serving panini just three weeks ago, said manager
Dony Ravi."They're the talk of the town now."
Most U.S. delis offer set combinations on a menu that almost always includes
the Copenhagen, made of turkey, cole slaw, Swiss cheese and Russian dressing,
and the Monte Cristo, which consists of ham, smoked turkey, Swiss cheese,
cheddar cheese, tomato and honey mustard on European flat bread. Frank
Soto, manager of Café Baci in Chicago, agrees with Seminara that
these bulging sandwiches break the thin-and-simple panini protocol. "We
haven't conformed to recent trends. We serve real panini," he said.
But what is "real panini"? Seminara described it as something
that will please a woman. "Let's say a lady from your office comes
to my place to eat. When she comes back, her co-workers will say, "What
did you have?" If she says, "I had a sandwich," the conversation
ends right there," he said.
"But if she says, "I had a panini," people will say, "Oh
what's that?" And she'll say, "Oh it's so wonderful, toasted and hot
with nice ridges on the bread. "But the sandwiches don't technically need
to be hot, he added. "You can just grill a boneless piece of pork or chicken
and put it in bread," he said. Despite the larger American versions, Seminara
speculated that one reason for panini's popularity is its delicate size compared
to sandwiches at certain chain shops. "A Subway sandwich is a big mother.
At Subway you fill it up at the lowest price like at the gas station -- you fill
your belly without caring for the taste," he said. "Panini has slimmer
pieces of meat and cheese in the middle." Yet New York City resident Emily
Kramer, seen eating a prosciutto-and-mozzarella panini at Liberty Deli, said
it was the sandwich's slenderness that sold her on it. "I don't feel as
guilty," she said. In the end, Seminara said, Americans will be seduced
by panini just as they have been by other Italian delicacies.
"It's a sandwich with romance, just like cappuccino is coffee
with romance." |