This entire video's sources are literally hippie tourists taking photos/vids on instagram If india gets chutney sandwich, then America should get peanutbutter and jelly featured
Not scary at all. Colonialism civilized the world and left behind high standards like education, sanitation, medicine, transportation and advancements in science. Not to mention cuisine. I do love baguettes.
Just to be clear, Taiwan is not part of China. Taiwan has its own government, president, work visa laws and policies, health insurance program and social infrastructure.
Really??? My dad used to make chutney sandwich all the time at home. It used to be one of my favorites growing up. I grew up in Mumbai and sure vada pav is a staple but sandwich stalls in Mumbai also makes these chutney sandwiches. You should try it some time 😊
My mom makes them all the time. Grew up eating that on mornings when she had to leave early for work 😅 she adds tomatoes, potato, onion, cucumber , carrot and beetroot slices . I love chutney sandwich. It's amazing, and healthy too
They probably picked grilled cheese for the U.S. because it’s the most widely recognizable. We have a metric f&%!-ton of regional sandwiches throughout the U.S. - lobster roll, French dip, Runza, loose meat sandwich, cheesesteak, horseshoe, pork tenderloin, Italian beef, pit beef, crabcake sandwich, pastrami on rye, baconeggncheese, Poboy, muffaletta… I could go on and on and on (but I don’t know if my stomach has enough room 😉).
except most of those originate from other cultures and were simply appropriated in American culture. at least the grilled cheese has some historical grounding in the country
You could’ve also included Tortas Ahogadas from Mexico. For those who don’t know: it’s a birote (baguette-like) with a bed of fried beans stuffed with pork and “drowned” in tomato and chile sauce. It can be topped with marinated onion, shredded cabbage and horseradish
@@EdJonesVideos lol i cant judge since ive never tried, turns out its popular in a few former British colonies but they do add salami and sausages like Afghanistan. Anyways i was just quoting one of his most famous insults in his shows.
Openfaced sandwiches are not just Danish, they're Scandinavian. And having all that stuff on them, is a restaurant/cafe thing. In private homes, you simply put on anything you like, ie cheese, ham, jam, caviar, salami, egg, etc, or whatever combination you like. But rarely stacked high. And for most people, it's everyday food. Btw, in the US you use the expression "smorgasbord", which is Sweedish. "Smörgås" means openfaced sandwich and "bord" means table in Sweedish, so the full word literally means a table with a variety of them. But the word is mostly used about a cold buffet. So you actually refer to Sweedish sandwiches in your own language, not Danish.
The video did call them Smørrebrød, which is the correct danish term for them. But they're not sandwiches. Off the top of my head, Bøfsandwich is a real danish sandwich.
She's sitting between two ~40kg wheels of Pecorino Romano and Parmigiano Reggiano, yet there is not a single mention of italy in this video. Ridiculous.
@@visveshnarayan7964 well they'd have better used one than saying that all we have for a sandwich is chutney bread because than that's like saying that bread butter is a Sandwich But it's not bread butter is bread butter and chutney bread is chutney bread they're not exact sandwiches...
Our polish type of sandwich is called zapiekanka. Zapiekanka (from polish word Zapiec meaning "to roast") is, in fact, not a roasted dish. It's an open sandwich served on baguette and topped with butter, sauteed onions and common mushrooms, cheese (grated meltable one) and whatever do you want (e.g. other, non-meltable cheeses, ham, vegetables, sauces, etc.).
I'm really surprised by some of these sandwiches presented as iconic. For the US I would say burgers are pretty iconic. For India, I would say vada pav. I'm certain the UK, has something more iconic than the chip butty too. It's a shame that struggle meals like plain grilled cheese and chip butties were chosen and simple chutney on bread , rather than the colorful, wonderful options we have in these places too.
@@georgeprchal3924 it's a type of sandwich. What makes you think it isn't a sandwich? It has items between or rolled up in bread. If hot dogs and wraps count and "open faced" sandwiches count as sandwiches, why not burgers?
In Turkey we make use of grilled cheese sandwiches as well, in fact the word "tost" coming from "toast" in English does not mean toast. It's the style of grilled cheese sandwich which includes sucuk (spicy sausages), salami, tomatoes, etc. Together with cheese of course.
because they really are not that good. In fact, most Mexican food that the Mexicans want to rave about just isn't that great, they just like to hype pretty average food
@@matthewhunter6421 and grilled cheese is the shit no? Dude Arepa is not even a sandwich and is fking there (ask a Colombian, they don't think in Arepas as a sandwich) At least Mexican tortas have bread. And maybe you have this opinion in Mexican cuisine b/c you never did cook any Mexican dish in the right way (also a lot of ingredients in other country's gastronomy are Mexicans like tomato, chile peppers, Vanilla, cacao, etc. It is normal then that we now how to use them better than others) I said all this b/c I work in a ""Mexican"" restaurant, and as a Mexican I can say that most of the time no body really cook "Mexican" food, even when they use the right ingredients.
@@matthewhunter6421 bad experiences? Everyone has their own taste and likes what they like, just because others like it doesnt mean you should too. Im Mexican and i love Russian and Ukrainian food and my family thinks it isnt good and i have no idea why. My favorite is Mexican food though of course
Actually, I’m sad that “chlebíčky” from Czech Republic weren’t mentioned. It is an openfaced sandwich which has some deli mayo salad (i don’t have better explanation), deli meat, salami, hard-boiled egg, pickle and cheese, it is delicious😍
hi from turkey! actually, the döner you have showed in the video is how they do it in germany (and europe), in turkey there are not that many ingredients in the sandwich. it’s usually meat, tomato, and sometimes onion or french fries. there no grilled vegetables, sauces or lemon juice (of course there are exceptions). but thanks for featuring döner in the video!
the döner video they showed even is from their episodes on maustafars gemüse kebap, a shitty tourist döner place in the most disgusting shithole this country has to offer. (for everybdody from outside germany, that is berlin)
As a brazilian, the most popular sandwich is the X-Tudo. Translating, is like Cheese-All (all what u can found on fridge). The popular version is Bread, Hamburger, Ham, cheese, Onion, Tomato, Lettuce, Bacon, Calabresa, sausage, Ketchup, Mayo, green Mayonese... (the limit is your imagination 🙂)
Thukarama Rai I have lived half of my life in South India, but I have never found chutney sandwich to be that popular. Probably it’s just popular in your area. I would rather suggest the Bombay sandwich and it also has chutney in it 😜
One very important sandwich was definitely forgotten, the Swedish Sandwich cake or Smörgåstårta as we call it :) also, in Nordic countries we love good dark and whole meal bread in general :)
For the francesinha, he wasn’t French! He was Portuguese who lived in France, he returned and was influenced by the croque-monsieur. Whoever wrote the facts needs to do more research, so many people are correcting the ‘facts’... if you’re going to ‘educate’ people on things, at least learn about it first. Properly, not some scan and go research.
I was wondering how the croque monsieur didn't make this list, and that weird Portuguese one made it in. The croque monsieur/madame get me excited when I see them on a brunch menu, they're amazing.
@@turtlepowersf That weird Portuguese thing is much better than a stupid croque-monsieur. And you are pretty weird to get excited about a Sandwich. 4Weird
@@puma6747 that Portuguese thing would have never been created if it weren't for it being directly influenced by the croque monsieur. Also, probably 1% of the amount of people have eaten that thing compared to the croque monsieur, which is served in many more countries and somehow didn't make the list. If you've never gotten happy/excited over a food that you really like, then you're just a miserable piece of shit. Literally everyone gets excited over good food sometimes.
@@turtlepowersf it's not a video about the most influential or the most popular sandwiches obviously. If it was, the hamburger would be on top of the list. Croque-monsieur is hardly popular in Paris and Grilled cheese is pretty much its late american version
They all look so tasty. Never had a Francesinha before. This Portuguese sandwich with meat, a fried egg and covered with melted cheese and a hot and thick spiced tomato and beer sauce served with french fries looks amazing. I love to try it someday.
@@andreblock6028 That's true. I guess they were really impressed with the meal, but didn't know which genre it belonged to so they shoehorned into the video.
@@bm-oy7oz Pastéis de Nata was actually introduced into Macau, which only stopped being Portuguese in 1999. From there Portuguese food had a heavy influence on many areas of Asia. Pastéis de Nata is the most popular though as it was easily made using their ingredients.
The Turkish immigrant Kadir Nurman did not invent the döner but opened the first döner place in Germany. Evliya Çelebi (an ottoman traveller) who lived during the 17th century speaks about döner in his work called the book of travels (Seyahatname). Döner means "spinning" in Turkish and in fact, shawarma comes from the word "çevirme" which means "to turn" (which is also a synonym of döner). Döner used to be laid horizontally until the 19th century and there are still places in Turkey that make this original old-fashioned döner. So döner has definitely been around way before the 1960s and it is definitely a Turkish dish
That's America for you. "I know, let's include some British food in the video. HEY LARRY! YOUR GREAT GRANDMOTHER WENT TO ENGLAND ONCE RIGHT!? WHAT DID SHE EAT THERE!?"
@@lamarmadriaga237 well, we won't if they get their shit right!!! nobody here eats chutney sandwich. if anything it's called a cheese chutney sandwich :)
It’s not really the most popular or most requested sandwich though. Many people would rather have a burger or pbj than a grilled cheese. Plus you would typically eat something else with grilled cheese, or you would dip it in tomato soup.
Bauru from Brazil is a specialty from Sao Paulo city. It is delicious and loved by many, but far from being "the most popular" in Brazil. Unfortunatelly it is described poorly since the preparation requires 3 diferent kinds of cheese melted and hot, the roastbeef very cold, pickles, in a crispy portuguese bread. The combination of flavours, textures and the ingredients at different temperatures do the trick. It is unforgettable....
No, but not venturing out more than necessary and no longer browsing in grocery stores. Getting my shopping done and go back home. I've never appreciated the internet and YT food videos as much as in the last couple of weeks.
Kinda sad that they didn't talk so much about the brazilian sanduiches. I am Brazilian and baurú is kinda famous in São Paulo, but not in the entire country. For us, the most famous sanduich is "misto quente", which is bread, ham, cheese and maybe some tomatoes and lettuce. We also add a thing called "requeijão" to make our sanduich even better!
@@cryingattheclub5150 Oh I just meant the English getting miffed about their inventions so they got into a grump and refused to play with the kids in the same steeet.
@@piyush629 Well, it's like this. The British have invented lots of things and feel quite pleased with themselves about it. Understandable. But every nationality gets touchy when criticised, and some people over-react. Saying the British DIDN'T invent the sandwich could upset some British people, and make them cross, therefore some might get in a huff and become hostile towards others. Leave Europe for example. Gee, it was just a throwaway comment.
We can still venture outside to shop for groceries to make some of them at home. Videos like these provides ideas for creative sandwich variety much more than hopping a plane to eat abroad.
So? Kebab common in Germany bc of Turks. Turks living in Germany are quite a lot and they usually run kebabs or ice cream shops. By the way, Mustafa is a Turkish name.
5:28 OMG 😯! Of all the Brazilian sandwiches I didn't expected them to show the Bauru! I'm so happy, I'm from Bauru (city in 🇧🇷) so I felt so represented! Fun fact: Bauru means "fruit basket" in an native language. The city have this name because of its geography (valley). The sandwich has the same name as the city because the dude who invented it was from Bauru, so his friends called Bauru, and thus his sandwich received his name. The sandwich got so popular that it is now our city's mascot 😋
Honestly, Berlin may offer the biggest variety of Döner, but this food can be found literally EVERYWHERE here in Germany. Even the smallest towns usually have at least one Döner shop. I come from a fairly small town and we have at least three places that sell Döner. But also especially in the south of Germany the go to sandwich is a Leberkässemmel. Or Leberkäswecken or whatever you call rolls in your particular part of the country. It's a white roll filled with a thiiiccc slice of Leberkäs, a sort of... Meat loaf, but made of more of a sausage filling kind of base? It's hard to explain. But it's a staple here and we love it.
@@godlyoblivion cucumber sandwich is a joke that someone from the UK would get. We also mostly don't eat chip sandwiches it's one of those tired outdated easy stereotypes. Like with most countries food and tastes are regional here.
As a Guyanese, I'm so happy to see my country on this list. Also a side note, I live in Barbados and we also do cheese paste, as well as most Caribbean countries.
@@Maryam-go3yq I'm Indian , living here since birth, never had that sandwich..... the popular sandwich is vada pav which is staple breakfast especially in North.
The steam bun from “China” showed in the video is actually from Taiwan. The video clip was obvious filmed in Taipei, Taiwan. It would be appreciated if changes can be made.
I think that the reason is that in Italy we don't really have a "national sandwich". We have like 300 different types of bread, nearly 500 different cheeses and countless other cold cuts and condiments. The combinations are countless. There are however different regional typical sandwiches like "panino co i' lampredotto" from Florence (lampredotto is the abomasus, the fourth stomach of the cow). Or "pani câ meusa" from Sicily: a sesame soft bread filled with chopped veal lung and spleen (boiled and then fried in lard). Or the "piadina" from Romagna: a flat bread, with the most traditional filling being prosciutto crudo and squaquerone (a creamy cheese).
@@damianolanzoni9583 Yeah, worth mentioning that "panino" is just "sandwich" in Italian, and not a particular combination of fillings/style of making it.
Here in Canada, we have our own version of the doner kebab, called a donair. Instead of lamb, its beef, served on a pita and wrapped up with your choice of additions, but usually tomatoes, onions, lettuce, and donair sauce, a sweet garlic sauce. Tastes vaguely of a Big Mac, but I love it, my favourite Canadian dish!
We have choice of Lamb, beef and chicken in Vancouver. Sometimes it's called shwarma and sometimes Gyro. And there are many slight variations. Sometimes you get pickled cabbage.
Korean street toast(ed sandwich)...and not just Isaac's. Before Isaac's Toast, there were many many many varieties of Korean market/street toasted sandwiched, typically with egg, pork+beef patties and shredded cabbages.
I had searched "the history of sandwiches" about an hour ago on Google for an article, and now with the help of internet people spying on me, I was recommended this video. Okay.
Indians generally put these ingredients in sandwich (All these ingredients or some of these) - tomato and cucumber slices, spicy mashed potatoes, cheese, chutney, chaat masala Then toast it.
Artuuuuuuur HAHAHAHAHA não sei que algoritmo nos recomendou isto aos dois, mas que grande coincidência! Também gostava de saber em que mundo uma francesinha é uma sandwich lol... É verdade que tem pão.... mas é só isso
@@maheenshahzad7369 We do have a range but something thats classicly english is a chip butty! The only other 'british' sandwich I can think of is cheese ploughmans or something but I feel like chip butty is classic uk
@@johnjay7650 in total India u can always find veda pav sold comercially as its popular where as chutney sandwich is only used by busy house holds who dont have any time to prepare breakfast plus they didnt include the things we always add on chutney sandwich
In Puerto Rico we have a spread sandwich called “Sandwichitos De Mezcla”. I wish I would’ve seen them on here. They’re typically made with cheez whiz (or a cheese spread of preference), cream cheese, spam and red pimentos blended together, slapped between white bread and cut into triangles without the crust. Very popular for parties as a snack or to take to beach.
As a norwegian it hurts my soul to say this but the swedes have made the greatest contribution to the world of sandwiches: the sandwich cake! Its a shame it wasn't included on this list
I make sabikh (pronounced with phlegm sound) all the time, it's so good!!! Freshly fried eggplant and a hard-boiled egg, salad, tangy tahini and some amba (a spicy mango chutney) - all in a fresh pita pocket.
Yeah, it's delicious. It's funny how people who don't know Hebrew mispronounce words, thinking that the ch is pronounced like in English... 🙄. I'm glad that someone else also noticed this.
All countries: Puts different kinds of vegetables, meat, eggs etc. in their sandwich.
USA: cHeEsE
UK: cHiPs
India: CHUTNEY
Bruh. Chutney does contain different kinds of vegetables.
MUSICAL DESTiNATION#2018 it was ireland that started crisps not the uk
@@rebeccaconroy5882 we aren't talking about crisps a chip butty has fries lol
Chip butty for life
Can’t travel around the world when you’re quarantined 😔
or even have a life ( ಠ‿ಠ)
I mean travelling not that you can't have a life because you are quarantined (ಠ_ʖಠ)>⌐■-■
we can travel if we have enough hand sanitister
Or poor
Or if your country has stopped all flights
@@haihai9022 yuP.
This entire video's sources are literally hippie tourists taking photos/vids on instagram
If india gets chutney sandwich, then America should get peanutbutter and jelly featured
Wise man.
Bro I'm indian and I've had a lot of chutney sandwiches, but vada pav would be better
same for UK
@@faisalfarooq4124 Tesco's finest is shit am i right?
@@meetyomaker2396 never had chutney sandwich, am Indian. Thanks for saying it
it’s both amazing and scary how you can so easily see france’s colonial holdings through which sandwiches use baguettes
Not scary at all. Colonialism civilized the world and left behind high standards like education, sanitation, medicine, transportation and advancements in science. Not to mention cuisine. I do love baguettes.
@@peternesbitt Jesus christ dude. Massive and rich societies did exist before the white man came.
@@peternesbitt not entirely
@@ReplyGuy22345 U don't like baguettes?
@@peternesbitt I don’t like colonialism.
Just to be clear, Taiwan is not part of China. Taiwan has its own government, president, work visa laws and policies, health insurance program and social infrastructure.
Yea right
The official name of Taiwan is "Republic of China."
Alex Boskov And the official name of China is the People’s Republic of China
That's not how the one-China policy works.
Well Kurdistan has all of those too but people still consider in part in Iraq
The world: we got some good looking sammichs that show off local culture and culinary diaspora...
The UK: You fockin wot?
I had a feeling they'd show the worst from us. :(
@@MagikGimp ikr
So many other great sandwiches you could of picked from UK but I still love a chip cob
Yeah. I was like the same with that grilled cheese from USA. Like... WTF!!! Exactly as disturbing as deep fried mars bar or corn dog.
Jellied eels
I'm indian and I've never really had "chutney sandwich"😂
I guess our favourite sandwich is vada pav
Really??? My dad used to make chutney sandwich all the time at home. It used to be one of my favorites growing up. I grew up in Mumbai and sure vada pav is a staple but sandwich stalls in Mumbai also makes these chutney sandwiches. You should try it some time 😊
Vadapav for the win
For me, it was pav bhaji or an aloo tikki sandwich
Potato sandwich is what we have all over North. First time seeing the "chutney sandwich" 😅
My mom makes them all the time. Grew up eating that on mornings when she had to leave early for work 😅 she adds tomatoes, potato, onion, cucumber , carrot and beetroot slices . I love chutney sandwich. It's amazing, and healthy too
They probably picked grilled cheese for the U.S. because it’s the most widely recognizable. We have a metric f&%!-ton of regional sandwiches throughout the U.S. - lobster roll, French dip, Runza, loose meat sandwich, cheesesteak, horseshoe, pork tenderloin, Italian beef, pit beef, crabcake sandwich, pastrami on rye, baconeggncheese, Poboy, muffaletta… I could go on and on and on (but I don’t know if my stomach has enough room 😉).
Here in my state, we have a sandwich called the hot brown. One of the best sandwiches I have ever had in my life.
except most of those originate from other cultures and were simply appropriated in American culture. at least the grilled cheese has some historical grounding in the country
0:39 Vietnam
1:17 Laos
1:38 Turkey
2:43 Cuba
3:24 Japan
3:53 Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia
4:25 United States
5:23 Brazil
5:38 China
5:56 Portugal
6:23 Guyana
6:47 India
7:06 Uruguay
7:43 Chile
8:00 Senegal
8:22 Israel
8:54 United Kingdom
9:15 South Africa
9:38 Finland
9:56 Venezuela Colombia
10:20 Denmark
10:43 Trinidad and Tobago
11:03 Pakistan
Thank you so much ! 😊
Thank you !!
Ilyyyyy
Tysm
Thanks bro
Im sad they didnt mention "shawrma"
Only a few will understand lol
Living Mylife ikr shawarma is my LIFEEEEEEE
Well they mentioned Turkish dish. Ain't both the same ?
@@sacchin1271 girl u got it all wronge lol
Shawrma life 😔✊
@@riyarobert631 yaass
"grilled cheese is the most popular American sandwich" _laughs in burger_
I thought a burger was a burger, not a sandwich?
He's burger is sandwich 's team
Ham Mafia a burger is a type of sandwich :)
A burger is a sandwich but it was not invented in the US? Dont know where you got that from lol
Hamburgers came from Hamburg Germany, and are eaten across the world
You could’ve also included Tortas Ahogadas from Mexico. For those who don’t know: it’s a birote (baguette-like) with a bed of fried beans stuffed with pork and “drowned” in tomato and chile sauce. It can be topped with marinated onion, shredded cabbage and horseradish
Gordon Ramsay to UK people: what are you? “An idiot sandwich”
As a brit I 100% agree
@@Weezer_Prince yes me too
THEY ARE ALL POTATOES!!!
this is someone who has never eaten a chip sandwich. it's carbs on carbs! what more do you want in a comfort food?
@@EdJonesVideos lol i cant judge since ive never tried, turns out its popular in a few former British colonies but they do add salami and sausages like Afghanistan. Anyways i was just quoting one of his most famous insults in his shows.
“crispy baguette” a baguette is supposed to be crispy on the outside... the soft baguettes are an American invention
apparently also Vietnamese
soft baguettes are awful imo
@@mooseyexists same. I can't imagine an un-crispy baguette
@@indranilbose9454 they sell them in the grocery store and just.. they FEEL WRONG. they taste wrong.
No baguettes are crispy here (USA) too, hoagies/subs are made with a soft bread but if you are buying baguette it's crispy.
I’m convinced they just search “famous sandwich around the world” and just copy and paste then just made some fancy animations and footage
@@notressa they could or they could ask people who actually live in those countries.
youtube user googling is literally research, sorry they didn’t fly there and take a survey
Claire Indigo then don’t make the damn video if that’s all the research you’ll do, especially if it’s “around the world”
Exactly, anyone who know the basics because actually likes sandwishes could have done a better video
@@claireindigo1200 no but if you ask most peopoe they probably wont say the sandwiches they give
Openfaced sandwiches are not just Danish, they're Scandinavian. And having all that stuff on them, is a restaurant/cafe thing. In private homes, you simply put on anything you like, ie cheese, ham, jam, caviar, salami, egg, etc, or whatever combination you like. But rarely stacked high. And for most people, it's everyday food.
Btw, in the US you use the expression "smorgasbord", which is Sweedish. "Smörgås" means openfaced sandwich and "bord" means table in Sweedish, so the full word literally means a table with a variety of them. But the word is mostly used about a cold buffet. So you actually refer to Sweedish sandwiches in your own language, not Danish.
The video did call them Smørrebrød, which is the correct danish term for them. But they're not sandwiches. Off the top of my head, Bøfsandwich is a real danish sandwich.
I was disappointed at America's selection, then it got to the UK. Jesus christ.
wot u say about are butties!?
@@Jellygamer0 libtard
Excuse me
Have to agree sadly Walter, though I do love Chip Butty.
🤣
insider: mentioning 2937 sandwiches using baguette
also insider : not even talking about sandwiches in France
They didn't mention Spanish bocadillos either, so welcome to the club.
México was forgotten
Jambon-Buerre... How can that not be mentioned? 😭
She's sitting between two ~40kg wheels of Pecorino Romano and Parmigiano Reggiano, yet there is not a single mention of italy in this video. Ridiculous.
Its france's fault why they baguettes tho
6:50 you are wrong
True Indian Sandwich is either Vada pav or Bombay sandwich.
It is Food Insider mate. They use any chance to get things wrong.
i was genuinely expecting the bombay sandwich smh
Actually there are a lot more indian sandwiches but chutney sandwich.... definately not
That is just us Indians improvising when we are lazy and don't wanna cook
@@visveshnarayan7964 well they'd have better used one than saying that all we have for a sandwich is chutney bread because than that's like saying that bread butter is a Sandwich
But it's not bread butter is bread butter and chutney bread is chutney bread they're not exact sandwiches...
Our polish type of sandwich is called zapiekanka. Zapiekanka (from polish word Zapiec meaning "to roast") is, in fact, not a roasted dish. It's an open sandwich served on baguette and topped with butter, sauteed onions and common mushrooms, cheese (grated meltable one) and whatever do you want (e.g. other, non-meltable cheeses, ham, vegetables, sauces, etc.).
Nobody cares dude
@@notgadot also 20 people liked their comment, you must be blind
@@michaelhawkins7389 what are you? A polish? Lol
@@notgadot No , But you are clearly racist or xenophobic towards Polish people
Nobody cares dude
Me a South African: I wonder what our sandwich is
Them: Gatsby
Me eating one at the moment: Touché
Boerewors rolls 😂
Xander Visagie 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Haven't had one in a while 😩
I’ve never even had one man😂😂I’ve only had boerwors and never heard about that till now lmao
@@Beksiee 🤭
I'm really surprised by some of these sandwiches presented as iconic. For the US I would say burgers are pretty iconic. For India, I would say vada pav. I'm certain the UK, has something more iconic than the chip butty too. It's a shame that struggle meals like plain grilled cheese and chip butties were chosen and simple chutney on bread , rather than the colorful, wonderful options we have in these places too.
Burgers are not sandwiches, they are their own category.
Ploughmas 😍
@@georgeprchal3924 it's a type of sandwich. What makes you think it isn't a sandwich? It has items between or rolled up in bread. If hot dogs and wraps count and "open faced" sandwiches count as sandwiches, why not burgers?
@@PrettyH8Mach1n3 because it's in a category of it's own.
The UK should have egg mayo sandwiches, they're literally everywhere!
India: we put vegetables in between our bread along with the chutney too. But our ACTUAL sandwich is the Vadapav.
All hail Vada Pav I love it
YES!!!!!
I never tried it so don't mind me
yessss thankyouuu
Yes
In Turkey we make use of grilled cheese sandwiches as well, in fact the word "tost" coming from "toast" in English does not mean toast. It's the style of grilled cheese sandwich which includes sucuk (spicy sausages), salami, tomatoes, etc. Together with cheese of course.
I died inside when they mentioned chutney sandwich instead of vada pau
ikr i was also thinking about pav bhaji
Yes i was expecting that.
@Nostalgia for Infinity noboday eats chutney sandwich they could have just mentioned bombay sandwich
@Nostalgia for Infinity ha but staple is vada pav na, it’s popular all over India? If like that, then each state will have its own SANDWICH
Me to bro
They could've had Philly Cheese Steak as an American sandwich. Those are so yummy!
Indeed!! That Gatsby sandwich looks good!!!
I love those. Especially when my mom makes it
Agree I said the same thing, a cheese steak or at minimal a cheese burger, but for goodness sake not a grilled cheese
Or Po'Boy
Nah cheeseburger, cheesesteak isn’t popular all over
The fact that you put the grilled cheese on here but didn’t touch tortas is disappointing. Mexico deserves better.
I know right?
because they really are not that good. In fact, most Mexican food that the Mexicans want to rave about just isn't that great, they just like to hype pretty average food
Joshua's Animations you only eat mayonnaise wit yo pale salt and pepper ain’t the only seasonings ass
@@matthewhunter6421 and grilled cheese is the shit no?
Dude Arepa is not even a sandwich and is fking there (ask a Colombian, they don't think in Arepas as a sandwich)
At least Mexican tortas have bread.
And maybe you have this opinion in Mexican cuisine b/c you never did cook any Mexican dish in the right way (also a lot of ingredients in other country's gastronomy are Mexicans like tomato, chile peppers, Vanilla, cacao, etc. It is normal then that we now how to use them better than others)
I said all this b/c I work in a ""Mexican"" restaurant, and as a Mexican I can say that most of the time no body really cook "Mexican" food, even when they use the right ingredients.
@@matthewhunter6421 bad experiences? Everyone has their own taste and likes what they like, just because others like it doesnt mean you should too. Im Mexican and i love Russian and Ukrainian food and my family thinks it isnt good and i have no idea why. My favorite is Mexican food though of course
Actually, I’m sad that “chlebíčky” from Czech Republic weren’t mentioned. It is an openfaced sandwich which has some deli mayo salad (i don’t have better explanation), deli meat, salami, hard-boiled egg, pickle and cheese, it is delicious😍
Yeah
A shitload of mayonnaise though, at least the ones I had at party buffets. But hey, good drunk food.
@@shrinkhh79 yeah, some bad buffets really do serve this shit and call it chlebíčky, but real chlebíčky are sooo different from these
They can't put everything on this list
"Chutney Sandwich is the most eaten sandwich in India" laughs while eating Vada Pav 🤣😂
😂😂 true
Well to be honest i have grown eating vada pav and never tried chutney sandwich
myiesha Barouliya me too
Me= laughs eating dabeli
Sameeee
hi from turkey! actually, the döner you have showed in the video is how they do it in germany (and europe), in turkey there are not that many ingredients in the sandwich. it’s usually meat, tomato, and sometimes onion or french fries. there no grilled vegetables, sauces or lemon juice (of course there are exceptions). but thanks for featuring döner in the video!
Almost every child in germany could've told them, the döner they showed was founed in berlin from turkish migrants.
@@irgendeinname9256 we do that as well! you can choose the way you want to eat when you’re ordering (plate, wrap, sandwich etc.)
@@irgendeinname9256 yes, the options are usually veal or chicken
I came for this! Thank you. ☺
the döner video they showed even is from their episodes on maustafars gemüse kebap, a shitty tourist döner place in the most disgusting shithole this country has to offer.
(for everybdody from outside germany, that is berlin)
Damm they didnt even touch mexico with their tortas broo saddd
They come under Wraps. I guess they come in different category than Sandwiches.
Incredibly disappointing
It’s sad
Tortas ahogadas, cemitas, pambazos o tortas cubanas
Looks Like a carb coma.
As a brazilian, the most popular sandwich is the X-Tudo. Translating, is like Cheese-All (all what u can found on fridge). The popular version is Bread, Hamburger, Ham, cheese, Onion, Tomato, Lettuce, Bacon, Calabresa, sausage, Ketchup, Mayo, green Mayonese... (the limit is your imagination 🙂)
Lmao, "chutney sandwich"
Just missed a huge opportunity to mention vada pav
Exactly, I've never even heard of a chuntny sandwich, she could have also mentioned an aloo tikki sandwich
@@smitgupta6256 yeah same I haven’t ever heard of chutney sandwich
Vada Pav is more like a burger, Bombay sandwich is "The" Sandwich of India
I LOVE VADA PAV IS SO GOOD
@@Slay963 burgers are sandwiches
5:15 "...and then sandwiching it between CRISPY bread."
You mean toast?
Chef level 100 lmao
No, they mean CRISPY bread.
Looking for this comment
When you are from 'India' and know they had wrong Indian sandwich.
"*lol*"
in south india, chutney sandwich is pretty popular. So, technically it wasn't wrong.
@@johnjay7650 really omg!!! I really want to visit South India😍😍
Thukarama Rai I have lived half of my life in South India, but I have never found chutney sandwich to be that popular. Probably it’s just popular in your area. I would rather suggest the Bombay sandwich and it also has chutney in it 😜
@@johnjay7650 I’m tamilian and never heard of a chutney sandwich lol
frick i kinda like the sandwich though
One very important sandwich was definitely forgotten, the Swedish Sandwich cake or Smörgåstårta as we call it :) also, in Nordic countries we love good dark and whole meal bread in general :)
wuhu
let us talk
i feel personally attacked for not taking into account mexican tortas! lol
Ralph Lores that’s what I’m saying!!!!!
Pambazos!!
Yeeeeeesssssss
The guajolota
FOR REAL LIKE WHAT THE HECK
For the francesinha, he wasn’t French! He was Portuguese who lived in France, he returned and was influenced by the croque-monsieur. Whoever wrote the facts needs to do more research, so many people are correcting the ‘facts’... if you’re going to ‘educate’ people on things, at least learn about it first. Properly, not some scan and go research.
Same with Bauru, it's made mainly in São Paulo, not in the whole country...
I was wondering how the croque monsieur didn't make this list, and that weird Portuguese one made it in. The croque monsieur/madame get me excited when I see them on a brunch menu, they're amazing.
@@turtlepowersf That weird Portuguese thing is much better than a stupid croque-monsieur. And you are pretty weird to get excited about a Sandwich. 4Weird
@@puma6747 that Portuguese thing would have never been created if it weren't for it being directly influenced by the croque monsieur. Also, probably 1% of the amount of people have eaten that thing compared to the croque monsieur, which is served in many more countries and somehow didn't make the list. If you've never gotten happy/excited over a food that you really like, then you're just a miserable piece of shit. Literally everyone gets excited over good food sometimes.
@@turtlepowersf it's not a video about the most influential or the most popular sandwiches obviously. If it was, the hamburger would be on top of the list. Croque-monsieur is hardly popular in Paris and Grilled cheese is pretty much its late american version
and now im craving sandwich .. sadly cant go out
Are u an Army
@@ramishaamir658 yes. are you an army too??
Sxrra JsJyM Hi,Army
Luko Mabasa in the uk we can’t even order anything
ARMY
As an Englishman, bacon butties are so much more iconic than chip ones.
or crisp sandwiches.
Or mushroom pate sandwiches
They all look so tasty. Never had a Francesinha before. This Portuguese sandwich with meat, a fried egg and covered with melted cheese and a hot and thick spiced tomato and beer sauce served with french fries looks amazing. I love to try it someday.
It's not a Sandwich, but it's nice to be appreciated. It's from my hometown.
Picky
@@djjorjinho i think bifana or prego would make more sense for portugal
PORTO CARALHO!!!!!
@@andreblock6028 That's true. I guess they were really impressed with the meal, but didn't know which genre it belonged to so they shoehorned into the video.
During European exploration, the Portuguese introduced bread “pan” to Japan and many other popular Japanese dishes.
Yeh, also those egg tarts
"Pão", not "pan".
@@leoa4c Bread is called パン (pan) in Japan
Same happened with panko and tempura
@@bm-oy7oz Pastéis de Nata was actually introduced into Macau, which only stopped being Portuguese in 1999. From there Portuguese food had a heavy influence on many areas of Asia. Pastéis de Nata is the most popular though as it was easily made using their ingredients.
Love how the British be like: Oi mate give me some chips and two slices of bread I'm going to make lunch.
Yeah pretty much u should try it
To be honest it isn’t that bad, you can find it all over London ( I’m from London).
As a Londoner, I've never seen anyone eat that. It looks quite disgusting to me. People just eat normal sandwiches, man
that's how i like my sandwich though lmao
The ACTUAL British sandwich is a bacon butty. It's a British back bacon sandwich.
The Turkish immigrant Kadir Nurman did not invent the döner but opened the first döner place in Germany. Evliya Çelebi (an ottoman traveller) who lived during the 17th century speaks about döner in his work called the book of travels (Seyahatname). Döner means "spinning" in Turkish and in fact, shawarma comes from the word "çevirme" which means "to turn" (which is also a synonym of döner). Döner used to be laid horizontally until the 19th century and there are still places in Turkey that make this original old-fashioned döner. So döner has definitely been around way before the 1960s and it is definitely a Turkish dish
Wow every country has their cool interesting sandwich then my homeland uk out here with a chip butty
lol
That's America for you. "I know, let's include some British food in the video. HEY LARRY! YOUR GREAT GRANDMOTHER WENT TO ENGLAND ONCE RIGHT!? WHAT DID SHE EAT THERE!?"
And America to just cheese and bread
Nothing better than a fresh buttered chip butty
Yeah, I was actually thinking a ploughman's before they said a chip sambo
Me Seeing chutney Sandwich For India:- *Laughs in Vada Pav And Dabeli*
Vada Pav and Dabeli: Are we a joke to you?
How could thet forget vadapav. Like maharashtra could be named vadapav and i won't even notice any change ffs.
Bruh what is it with you indians commenting on every food insider video containing indian foods
@@lamarmadriaga237 well, we won't if they get their shit right!!! nobody here eats chutney sandwich. if anything it's called a cheese chutney sandwich :)
nah vada pav is better
I'm Indian and I've never once seen anyone eat a chutney sandwich.
Who TF eats just 2 slices of bread just with chutney, I’m offended they did not touch the Bombay sandwich or any other sandwiches
lol i eat chutney sandwiches 😂😂
@@armaanjacob7477 Exactly!! I'm so disappointed, they could've chosen ANY other Indian sandwich
I'll give you a sandwich with my special sauce in it 😎
I'm Indian and I have chutney sandwiches all the time lol
Really enjoyed to see around the world having their sandwiches with so much love! Especially I love that Turkey boy enjoying the every bites!
México's tortas no appears such a shame
Ikr!
J. Antonio Rangel ye
J. Antonio Rangel what a shame! Cause I could go for a torta de milanesa right now 🇲🇽😩🤤
Rare that not appears I want to try tortas :3
Mexican food is overrated
The whole other world’s sandwiches :
Dressing , sauce, protien, salad, egg,meat, vegetables
America:
C H E E S E
ua-cam.com/video/MRN38gkXw3U/v-deo.html
Hey, its cheap and fast, perfect college meal
It’s not really the most popular or most requested sandwich though. Many people would rather have a burger or pbj than a grilled cheese. Plus you would typically eat something else with grilled cheese, or you would dip it in tomato soup.
I would say the bacon egg and cheese is probably most famous but idk
Philly cheese steak with peppers onions and mushrooms....my fav
I was seriously waiting for them to mention tortas from Mexico. They're iconic with sooooo many variations but always a core set :(
Oh yes! Tortas, like Mexican food in general are absolutely spectacular. The bread used is light and the fillings are spicy and satisfying.
N0
I love tortas! I live in Southern California & we have a wide variety of delicious totras!! Yum! 💞💞💞
@@jabujolly9020 the bread used is called bolillo, not trying to be a smartass just saying if you wanted to know
Yes! Tortas de jamón, de carne asada, de pollo asado, de carnitas, tortas ahogadas...🤤🤤🤤 Tortas de lo que nos de las ganas.
Bauru from Brazil is a specialty from Sao Paulo city. It is delicious and loved by many, but far from being "the most popular" in Brazil. Unfortunatelly it is described poorly since the preparation requires 3 diferent kinds of cheese melted and hot, the roastbeef very cold, pickles, in a crispy portuguese bread. The combination of flavours, textures and the ingredients at different temperatures do the trick. It is unforgettable....
The Portuguese Francesinha sandwich should be renamed to "artery killer"
Yea it contain 2000 calories if u dint know
Has a Portuguese, that is duckin true.
But its good , you should try it .
And we eat it 6 or 7 times per year
@@mikmj how do you not get a heart attack or something?
@@hughmungus7015 we are just built different
It's Ramadan and I'm watching this video.
Same
SAME '^'
Oof
Poor you bro. My culture has fasts too, so I can relate.
It's all pork... So u couldn't pray that you had that in iftaar 😀😖 why so much pork
Anybody here in self quarantine?
😷 Yes.
Yes, in Italy we are all in quarantine
@@FreshSushii take care, bro👋🏻
Right here
No, but not venturing out more than necessary and no longer browsing in grocery stores. Getting my shopping done and go back home. I've never appreciated the internet and YT food videos as much as in the last couple of weeks.
Kinda sad that they didn't talk so much about the brazilian sanduiches. I am Brazilian and baurú is kinda famous in São Paulo, but not in the entire country. For us, the most famous sanduich is "misto quente", which is bread, ham, cheese and maybe some tomatoes and lettuce. We also add a thing called "requeijão" to make our sanduich even better!
FoodInsider: The English didn't invent the Sandwich.
The English: Dammit! That's it! We're leaving Europe.
How does that have anything to do with europe
@@cryingattheclub5150 Oh I just meant the English getting miffed about their inventions so they got into a grump and refused to play with the kids in the same steeet.
The Earl of Sandwich
I didn't get the joke
Can you please explain it
@@piyush629 Well, it's like this. The British have invented lots of things and feel quite pleased with themselves about it. Understandable. But every nationality gets touchy when criticised, and some people over-react. Saying the British DIDN'T invent the sandwich could upset some British people, and make them cross, therefore some might get in a huff and become hostile towards others. Leave Europe for example.
Gee, it was just a throwaway comment.
Rest of the world:fancy sandwiches with meat, vegetables, spreads etc.
America: let’s shove cheese between two bread slices. Voilà
Lol have ya seen Russians? We just slap either butter or mayo, boiled sausage and cheese onto cheap bread.
@@LinlinSparks BUTTERBROD
Great video, knowledgeable and quality, sound, voice, clear
CNN: Stay at home to prevent Covid-19
Insider: *Sandwiches all over the world*
Edit: WOW! I didn’t realize I got that many likes! Thanks.
We can still venture outside to shop for groceries to make some of them at home. Videos like these provides ideas for creative sandwich variety much more than hopping a plane to eat abroad.
This is the food channel, you asked for it 🤷🏼♀️
My thoughts exactly... And it's almost dinner time here in Lisbon Portugal! I would go out for a Fancesinha...
384 likes is nothing, 1k is something to be proud off. I get 10k likes on a daily basis noon 🤪
They say Turkey but show a clip of “mustafas gemüse Kebab“ and say ,,berlin“ grüße gehen raus an food insider 👌
muscle Mac I noticed that too, was like: damn this is Mustafas Gemüse Kebab...
Und jetzt ?
İskender kebap
So? Kebab common in Germany bc of Turks. Turks living in Germany are quite a lot and they usually run kebabs or ice cream shops. By the way, Mustafa is a Turkish name.
5:28 OMG 😯! Of all the Brazilian sandwiches I didn't expected them to show the Bauru! I'm so happy, I'm from Bauru (city in 🇧🇷) so I felt so represented!
Fun fact: Bauru means "fruit basket" in an native language. The city have this name because of its geography (valley). The sandwich has the same name as the city because the dude who invented it was from Bauru, so his friends called Bauru, and thus his sandwich received his name. The sandwich got so popular that it is now our city's mascot 😋
ACHEI UMA BAURUENSE FINALMENTE. Tambem sou de bauru kkkkkkkkk eu achava q eles iam falar do sanduiche de mortadela
No one cares
E dos meus
@@dhnsnensnd4035 about you
@@thiagoprofili4806 Ou do cachorro quente podrão kkkkkkkkkk
Honestly, Berlin may offer the biggest variety of Döner, but this food can be found literally EVERYWHERE here in Germany. Even the smallest towns usually have at least one Döner shop. I come from a fairly small town and we have at least three places that sell Döner. But also especially in the south of Germany the go to sandwich is a Leberkässemmel. Or Leberkäswecken or whatever you call rolls in your particular part of the country. It's a white roll filled with a thiiiccc slice of Leberkäs, a sort of... Meat loaf, but made of more of a sausage filling kind of base? It's hard to explain. But it's a staple here and we love it.
No, no, no Mam.
There is nothing more British than a cucumber sandwich. 🇬🇧
Holyfox never even heard of it, sounds like a shit thing to represent the UK
That's supposed to make it better?!
Is it just cucumbers and bread? That sounds disgusting.
@@godlyoblivion cucumber sandwich is a joke that someone from the UK would get. We also mostly don't eat chip sandwiches it's one of those tired outdated easy stereotypes. Like with most countries food and tastes are regional here.
true that, or a pork apple and stuffing sammich
Francesinha as the thumbnail
*Proud portugueses noises
Select language: Português-Br
As a Guyanese, I'm so happy to see my country on this list. Also a side note, I live in Barbados and we also do cheese paste, as well as most Caribbean countries.
Pimento cheese spread on bread used to be quite popular ın the U.S., too.
Bruh their "indian sandwhich" is borderline offensive we put stuff like cucumber,tomato and chese in that sandwhch not just chutney wtf
Bad research
It’s like with the U.K. one they didn’t do any research and just guessed
I mean we don't eat many crazy sandiwches. So chip butty wasn't a bad suggestion.
@@jimmythechimp2 yeah we just have like ham and tuna
@@lukeclayton9683 Cucumber sandwiches for afternoon tea and ploughman's lunch are great British classics though.
@@jimmythechimp2 what about pulled pork bap with stuffing. Its a staple of outdoor events
Sandwich originates in the Netherlands 1670 made famous by the naturalist John Ray
Insider: 30 foods you should try before you die
Me: we have time
Corona: hold my beer
All the countries making amazing sandwiches with great fillings
India: *C H U T N E Y*
😅
yo at least they didn't put in chips with mayo and ketchup 🤦🏻♀️
unfair representation, india's true sandwich is the vada pav.
@@Maryam-go3yq I'm Indian , living here since birth, never had that sandwich..... the popular sandwich is vada pav which is staple breakfast especially in North.
I love these kind of videos!
I'm a simple man, I see Francesinha on the thumbnail I click.
Can't wait to go to portugal again. Super good dish.
As a portuguese I couldn't be more proud of that tumbnail
I'm from India & honestly, I've never heard about chutney sandwich.
Same lol I would've put vada pav instead
I've heard of Bombay sandwich, vada pav but never chutney sandwich
You forgot about Shawarma from the Middle East
I'm so proud that VietNam's bread is included in this video
The steam bun from “China” showed in the video is actually from Taiwan. The video clip was obvious filmed in Taipei, Taiwan. It would be appreciated if changes can be made.
That’s right! Gus Bao is from Taiwan. Food Insider, please get your facts checked!!!!!
most probably they just found a list on tumbler and used free footage to put together this video lol
Taiwan is part of China. Deal with it.
@@AVWUVU And that is exactly what I am doing. :)
@@AVWUVU its annoying though
Imagine needing a cook book on how to make grilled cheese sandwiches.
How could you not include the Italian panino?! That’s what so many people eat for lunch in Italy!!
They also forgot to add the Mexican torta
Panino or focaccia ripiena, either works.
I think that the reason is that in Italy we don't really have a "national sandwich". We have like 300 different types of bread, nearly 500 different cheeses and countless other cold cuts and condiments. The combinations are countless.
There are however different regional typical sandwiches like "panino co i' lampredotto" from Florence (lampredotto is the abomasus, the fourth stomach of the cow). Or "pani câ meusa" from Sicily: a sesame soft bread filled with chopped veal lung and spleen (boiled and then fried in lard).
Or the "piadina" from Romagna: a flat bread, with the most traditional filling being prosciutto crudo and squaquerone (a creamy cheese).
@@damianolanzoni9583 Yeah, worth mentioning that "panino" is just "sandwich" in Italian, and not a particular combination of fillings/style of making it.
PB&J will forever be the best sandwich IMO. It’s just so convenient, easy to make, and tasty
My sweet young lady you have forgotten THE Sandwich by reference: The Famous French Baguette Ham Cheese and butter.
carlos le dagobert (in Belgium)
1:15 It's funny how far the plane travel even through Laos is just next to Vietnam
Here in Canada, we have our own version of the doner kebab, called a donair. Instead of lamb, its beef, served on a pita and wrapped up with your choice of additions, but usually tomatoes, onions, lettuce, and donair sauce, a sweet garlic sauce. Tastes vaguely of a Big Mac, but I love it, my favourite Canadian dish!
We have choice of Lamb, beef and chicken in Vancouver. Sometimes it's called shwarma and sometimes Gyro. And there are many slight variations. Sometimes you get pickled cabbage.
Korean street toast(ed sandwich)...and not just Isaac's. Before Isaac's Toast, there were many many many varieties of Korean market/street toasted sandwiched, typically with egg, pork+beef patties and shredded cabbages.
I had searched "the history of sandwiches" about an hour ago on Google for an article, and now with the help of internet people spying on me, I was recommended this video. Okay.
Its the first time I'm seeing my country 🇬🇾 GUYANA on anything wow!
What about falafel or the taouk sandwich?the arabian world deserves some recognition right?❤
They think Isra-hell counts as an arabian country.
Indians generally put these ingredients in sandwich (All these ingredients or some of these) - tomato and cucumber slices, spicy mashed potatoes, cheese, chutney, chaat masala
Then toast it.
The UK one is soooooooooooooooooooo PLAIN and SO UK'ish I can't even.
Of all the sandwiches the country loves, they just HAD to choose the blandest and most fattening, next to the BLT.
Artuuuuuuur HAHAHAHAHA não sei que algoritmo nos recomendou isto aos dois, mas que grande coincidência! Também gostava de saber em que mundo uma francesinha é uma sandwich lol... É verdade que tem pão.... mas é só isso
trust me we have better ones, they chose to show us in a bad light this time round.
@@AnamyTH HAHAHAHA aiiiiiiiiiii! Apanhaste-me! Sim... tipo que video tosco hahah
@@maheenshahzad7369 We do have a range but something thats classicly english is a chip butty! The only other 'british' sandwich I can think of is cheese ploughmans or something but I feel like chip butty is classic uk
Netherlands: Every other meal than supper is a sandwich.
Extremely poor representation of Indian Sandwich
Same as brazilian
I am an Indian and I agree with ua
Yeah our favorite is Vada pav I never had that one
Ansh Srivastava that’s the south tbf in the north it’s aloo tikka sandwich with chutney on it
@@johnjay7650 in total India u can always find veda pav sold comercially as its popular where as chutney sandwich is only used by busy house holds who dont have any time to prepare breakfast plus they didnt include the things we always add on chutney sandwich
In Puerto Rico we have a spread sandwich called “Sandwichitos De Mezcla”. I wish I would’ve seen them on here.
They’re typically made with cheez whiz (or a cheese spread of preference), cream cheese, spam and red pimentos blended together, slapped between white bread and cut into triangles without the crust. Very popular for parties as a snack or to take to beach.
So, we're not talking about the chilean and latin american obsession with avocado (even in sandwiches)?
i dont blame them, avocado is delicious
UK invented sandwich yet they have the most uninteresting one.
Nah they just showed a sucky one
Phoenix Force idk man cheese between bread sounds pretty boring to me
I swear to god these videos always find me when I start dieting
As a norwegian it hurts my soul to say this but the swedes have made the greatest contribution to the world of sandwiches: the sandwich cake! Its a shame it wasn't included on this list
WHERE IS MY VEGEMITE SANDWICH!!!!!!!!!!
Honestly offended that arepa is considered a “sandwhich”
stuff between bread, seems like a sandwich.
Yea, you're offended over food? Lmao
Dont care
Well, you could un-offend yourself by regarding the term "sandwich" as a concept instead of purely a tangible noun
@@Kianglekable unoffend
Looks good. Request: what does BBQ look like around the world?
I make sabikh (pronounced with phlegm sound) all the time, it's so good!!! Freshly fried eggplant and a hard-boiled egg, salad, tangy tahini and some amba (a spicy mango chutney) - all in a fresh pita pocket.
Yeah, it's delicious. It's funny how people who don't know Hebrew mispronounce words, thinking that the ch is pronounced like in English... 🙄. I'm glad that someone else also noticed this.
Should've had a torta on there from Mexico! Mmm delicious!
I think they’re just trying to make a video about sandwiches that aren’t as commonly known or aren’t mentioned as often no biggie