I’m not going to lie to you: Philly Cheesesteaks are not Health Food.
We all have them: foods that are somehow irresistible—even if their ingredients are sometimes questionable like the “Cheese” in Cheesesteaks or the quality of the beef that’s used for the steak portion of this recipe. I confess to ‘hiding’ the fact that I love Philly Cheesesteaks. I only bought them from the Halal Food cart that was semi-permanently parked in front of the Apple Store half block from our house in New York. And I only buy them at lunch so Andrew won’t find out. But the food cart has been gone for months and I have to wonder if street food will ever return to Manhattan. So when this recipe showed up in my in-box, was there any doubt I was going to learn to make one myself?
The truth about Cheesesteaks: And it’s not all pretty.
This recipe purports to be the real thing. But first a few facts about Cheesesteak sandwiches. They are not really steak sandwiches at all. They are made with beef that has been frozen and sliced really thin. Cooked on a grill top, Philadelphians think in terms of steak sandwiches “wit or without onions”. Without Cheese, the sandwich is referred to as a steak sandwich. The addition of the Cheese makes them Cheesesteaks. Now about that cheese…it’s not really cheese at all. It’s Cheese Whiz. Made by Kraft since 1953, it’s a nutritionist’s nightmare, to begin with. A single serving of two-level tablespoons of lard are a third of a day’s recommended maximum of saturated fat, and a third of the recommended allowance of sodium. The ingredient label lists a staggering 27 items in all. Perhaps most shocking is what’s missing. There is actually no cheese in Cheese Whiz at all. In fairness, you can substitute Provolone for the Cheese Whiz, and Provolone is real cheese. But when you order with or without, in Philadelphia, you’re talking Cheese Whiz. If you want to know more about Cheez Whiz, it’s story is right here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheez_Whiz
Nevertheless, they’re delicious and we have two South Philly Brothers to thank.
In the Italian immigrant section of Philadelphia, brothers Harry and Pat Olivieri sold hot dogs and sandwiches. Tired of hot dogs, Pat got Harry to buy some beef for a change of pace. Harry sliced it up, added some onions, and piled it onto a roll. Their lunch was interrupted by a Cab Driver who stopped for lunch, smelled the beef and onions, and ordered the sandwich. Pat never even got to taste it and charged the cabbie 5 cents. Legend has it that the cab driver told the Olivieris ‘forget about those hot dogs, you should sell these. The Cheese wasn’t introduced to the sandwich until 20 years later when an employee, tired of the original sandwich, added it. Cheese Whiz was truly an afterthought. It didn’t appear on the Cheesesteaks until the 60s. In 1940, the Olivieri’s opened Pat’s King of Steaks at 1237 East Passyunk Avenue. And it’s been frying up cheesesteaks 24 hours a day ever since.
What’s the Beef? The answer may surprise you.
Let’s face it, shopping these days isn’t what it used to be. Strange things are in short supply. When I decided to make Philly Cheesesteaks, I remembered that my mother, arguably the greatest fan of convenience foods in history, fed my son almost exclusively on Steak-Umms. So I headed to the freezer case and there they were. Angus Beef no less! And Steak-Umms were up to the task. Direct from the freezer, they were the perfect beef topping for the mushrooms and onions atop the Hero buns. The Cheese Whiz, heated in the microwave, was carefully doled out. And just because I didn’t want to die of guilt, I served it with a cherry tomato and lettuce salad. It was a perfect guilty pleasure. Here is the recipe: And after it, some sandwiches that are not so guilty pleasures.
My personal guilty pleasure. An iconic sandwich filled with caramelized onions, mushrooms, and thin-sliced beef topped with cheese. The Original Philly Cheesesteak
Ingredients
Directions
THE NOT SO GUILTY PLEASURES…CLICK ON THE LINK OR THE PHOTO TO GO TO THE RECIPES…
It’s National Grilled Cheese Day and here’s “The Diva of Grilled Cheese” from Ruth Reichl
Monte!!! This is a riot! I don’t suppose Whole Foods has ANY of these ingredients!
I am afraid I turned off some readers by posting this. Believe it or not, I had the hardest time finding Cheese Whiz. I guess it’s not exactly a Hamptons sensibility. XOXO
I think Geno’s in South Philly, a competitor of Pat’s, uses Provolone!. Still tasty and easier to find!
I love provolone! It’s such a great melt!
With or without refers to onions not chees.
Dear David, You are absolutely correct! Pardon my error! Thanks to you, I will change it immediately. ” According to The Philadelphia Inquirer, if you want onions on your cheesesteak say “with” and if you have an allergy or don’t need your breath to smell you’d say “without.” You want a cheesesteak with or without onions. All Recipes says that “wit or witout” is not misspeaking, that’s just the Philadelphia accent. “