52 writers share their personal best sandwich experiences
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 10
52 writers share their personal best sandwich experiences
7 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 10
The article gathers first-person memories from contributors including Zoe Williams, Katharine Viner and Felicity Cloake, spanning sandwiches eaten in London, New York, Beirut, Senegal, Mexico and elsewhere.
Selections range from crab stick baguettes and tuna melts to bánh mì, falafel wraps and cheese toasties, with nostalgia, travel, family rituals and hangovers shaping why each sandwich stood out.
Rather than ranking recipes, the feature presents a broad, subjective celebration of sandwich culture, showing how place, circumstance and personal memory can matter as much as ingredients.
Why has the simple sandwich become a universal vessel for our most profound memories of comfort, adventure, and connection?
As food tourism becomes a $4.7 trillion market, how are local food cultures being reshaped to meet global demand?
Can the comfort foods we cherish for their memories actually harm our brain's ability to remember?