Tuna fish sandwich explained

Tuna fish sandwich
Alternate Name:Tuna salad sandwich, tuna sandwich
Country:Various
Course:Lunch
Type:Sandwich
Main Ingredient:Tuna salad, mayonnaise
Variations:Tuna boat, tuna melt
Minor Ingredient:Celery, onion, lettuce, tomato

A tuna fish sandwich, known outside the United States as a tuna salad sandwich or a tuna sandwich, is a sandwich made from canned tuna—usually made into a tuna salad by adding mayonnaise, and sometimes other ingredients such as celery or onion—as well as other common fruits and vegetables used to flavour sandwiches. It is commonly served on sliced bread.

Variations include the tuna boat (served on a bun or roll) and the tuna melt (served with melted cheese).

In the United States, 52 percent of canned tuna is used for sandwiches.[1] The tuna sandwich has been called "the mainstay of almost everyone's American childhood."

History

The dish's popularity started to climb in the early twentieth century, but tuna sandwiches were already being served in nineteenth-century homes. In 1893, Dell Montjoy Bradley, a New York socialite,[2] wrote a gourmet cookbook called Beverages and Sandwiches for Your Husband's Friends. She included a recipe for a sandwich made out of imported tuna that she described using the Italian word "tonno."[3] [4]

The sandwich is "emblematic of America’s working-class spirit" and its status "rests on three post–Industrial Revolution convenience foods: canned tuna, presliced wheat bread, and mayonnaise," according to James Beard Foundation Award winner Mari Uyehara.[5] Canning of tuna began in the United States around 1904, and it was increasingly popular as a lower-cost alternative to canned salmon by the 1920s. German immigrant Richard Hellmann began mass-producing mayonnaise, the other major ingredient of tuna salad, in New York City around 1905, for use by commercial food service businesses. By 1912, he was selling wide-mouthed glass jars of mayonnaise to retail customers, under the brand name Hellmann's.[6] Commercial sliced bread was introduced in the United States in 1928, was sold nationally by 1930 and accounted for the majority of U.S. bread sales by 1933.[7]

Reuben Swinburne Clymer was the grand master of Fraternitas Rosae Crucis, an American Rosicrucian organization from 1922 to 1966. He was an advocate of a pescatarian or fish/vegetarian diet. In 1917, he co-authored The Rose Cross Aid Cook Book with Clara Witt. The book included a recipe for seafood sandwiches, including variations for canned salmon, canned shrimp and canned tuna. The seafood was removed from the can, placed on slices of buttered bread spread with a teaspoon of mayonnaise, and a lettuce leaf was added.[8] An institutional cookbook published in 1924 included a recipe for making a batch of 50 tuna sandwiches. The recipe included canned tuna, chopped celery and boiled dressing, an alternative to mayonnaise. The tuna salad was served between slices of buttered bread.[9]

Demand for canned tuna in the 1930s was heavier than supply could keep up with.[10] During World War II, the Office of Price Administration required restaurants in the New York City metropolitan area to prominently post prices of 40 "basic food items". Among them was a "Tuna Fish Salad Sandwich".[11] Canned tuna became more plentiful in the United States in the late 1940s. In 1950, 8,500,000 pounds of canned tuna were produced, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture classified it as a "plentiful food".[12]

Well-known 20th century American chefs including James Beard,[13] Julia Child,[14] Craig Claiborne[15] and comfort food cookbook author Sue Kreitzman[16] were advocates for the tuna sandwich. American chef David Rosengarten is an advocate for a very simple style of finely chopped, easily spreadable tuna salad, almost like a fish pâté, reminiscent of New York City delicatessen food.[17]

In 2021, Subway was sued by two California consumers who claimed that the fast-food chain had sold purported tuna sandwiches that were "completely bereft of tuna as an ingredient". A representative of the company which operates over 40,000 locations worldwide, denied the allegations, saying "These claims are meritless,” adding “Tuna is one of our most popular sandwiches. Our restaurants receive 100% wild-caught tuna, mix it with mayonnaise and serve on a freshly made sandwich."[18] The investigative TV show Inside Edition sent samples of Subway's tuna salad to Applied Food Technologies, a Florida company that carries out DNA testing of seafood. According to that company, "Yes, we confirmed that tuna was definitely in all three samples we received".[19]

Ingredients

A tuna fish sandwich is usually made with canned tuna mixed with mayonnaise and other additions, such as chopped celery, capers, pickles or pickle relish, hard-boiled eggs,[20] [21] onion, cucumber, sweetcorn, and/or black olives. Other recipes may use olive oil, Miracle Whip, salad cream, mustard, or yogurt, instead of or in addition to mayonnaise. The sandwich may be topped with lettuce, tomato, cucumbers, bean sprouts, or avocado in any combination.

Variations

Nutrition

Tuna is a relatively high protein food and it is very high in omega-3 fatty acids. A sandwich made from 100 grams of tuna and two slices of toasted white bread has approximately 287 calories, 96 of which are from fat (10.5 grams fat). It also has 20 grams of protein and 27 grams of carbohydrates.[27] [28]

A larger, commercially prepared tuna fish sandwich has more calories than noted above, based on its serving size. A 6-inch Subway tuna sub of 238 grams has 480 calories, 210 of those from fat, 600 milligrams of sodium, and 20 grams of protein.[29]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tuna Facts . 2021 . AboutSeafood.com . . April 20, 2021.
  2. News: Follows Wife In Death.; A.O. Bradley Expires Two Days After His Wife in Santa Barbara. . . December 22, 1911. April 17, 2021 .
  3. Book: Bradley, Dell Montjoy . Beverages and Sandwiches For Your Husband's Friends: By One Who Knows. . 1893 . New York . 38 .
  4. Book: Smith, Andrew F. . . University of California Press. 8 August 2012. 78 . 9780520261846 . - See profile at Google Books
  5. News: Uyehara . Mari . A Second Look at the Tuna Sandwich's All-American History . Taste . September 11, 2018 . April 18, 2021.
  6. News: Locker . Melissa . The History of Hellmann's Mayonnaise. Southern Living. . May 28, 2021 .
  7. Web site: Bread-slicing Machine . . Smithsonian Institution. May 31, 2021 .
  8. Book: Witt . Clara. Clymer. Reuben Swinburne . The Rose Cross Aid Cook Book: Containing Instructions in the Art of Cooking and the Correct Combination of Foods. Taught by the Rose Cross Aid School While in Session at "Beverly Hall." . Rose Cross Aid School . 1917 . . 128.
  9. Book: Smedley, Emma. Institution Recipes: Standardized in Large Quantities for use in Cafeterias, Schools, Colleges, Hospitals and Other Institutions . Emma Smedley Publisher. Fourth . 1924 . . 228 .
  10. News: Ferdman . Roberto A. . How America fell out of love with canned tuna. . August 18, 2014. April 17, 2021 .
  11. News: Restaurants Told To Post 40 Prices; Lists, Ordered Displayed by OPA by Aug. 16, Must Show Basic Food Items Coffee At 5 Cents a Cup; Only Places That Charged More Before October, 1942, May Continue to Do So . . August 7, 1944 . April 19, 2021 .
  12. News: Casa-Emellosthe. Ruth P. . News of Food: Tuna Provides Tempting Dishes; Canned Fish Plentiful Now and a Good Buy for Budget-Minded . . 30. March 1, 1951 . April 17, 2021 .
  13. News: Burros . Marian . The Tuna Sandwich: However You Like It . . March 2, 1985 . April 17, 2021.
  14. News: Greenspan . Dorie . This Tuna-Salad Sandwich Is Julia Child-Approved Lunch . . October 21, 2020. April 17, 2021 .
  15. News: Sifton . Sam . Welcome to Sandwich City . . July 6, 2020 . April 17, 2021.
  16. News: Logan . Liz. A Tribute To Tuna: The perfect summer sandwich . . April 17, 2021.
  17. News: Reed . Julia . Food; Classic From a Can . . February 22, 2004 . April 17, 2021 .
  18. News: Nanos . Elyria . Subway, in $5M Lawsuit, Is Accused of Tricking Customers Into Buying Sandwiches Filled With 'Anything But Tuna' . . January 28, 2021 . April 17, 2021 .
  19. News: Staff . Do Subway's Tuna Sandwiches Actually Contain Tuna? Inside Edition Investigates . Inside Edition. February 11, 2021 . June 22, 2021 .
  20. Web site: Tuna-Egg Salad Recipe . Taste of Home .
  21. Book: Estimated per capita fish consumption in the United States . DIANE . 9781428905177 .
  22. News: Casa-Emellosthe. Ruth P. . News of Food: Tuna Provides Tempting Dishes; Canned Fish Plentiful Now and a Good Buy for Budget-Minded . . 30. March 1, 1951 . April 17, 2021 .
  23. News: Millman . Noah . The culture war in a tuna fish sandwich . . August 17, 2020 . April 17, 2021 .
  24. News: McCoy. Mary Kate . Ina Garten Shares Modern Takes On Classic Comfort Foods: Taking Something Familiar And Adding A Couple Of Touches To Make It Shine . . January 1, 2021 . April 17, 2021 .
  25. Book: Cindy Pawlcyn

    . Pawlcyn . Cindy . Callinan . Brigid . Cindy Pawlcyn . Mustards Grill Napa Valley Cookbook. . 2012 . 9781607744511.

  26. News: Walker . Allison . Chef's Kitchen: Summer Grillin' Tweaks by Habit Burger Grill . . Orlando. August 15, 2018 . April 19, 2021 .
  27. Web site: Nutrition Facts - Fish, tuna salad. nutritiondata.com.
  28. Web site: Nutrition Facts - Bread, white, commercially prepared, toasted. nutritiondata.com.
  29. Web site: Tuna - nutrition information. subway.com. 2 September 2013. 6 May 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160506173754/http://www.subway.com/Menu/Product.aspx?CC=USA&LC=ENG&ProductId=14&MenuId=35&MenuTypeId=1. dead.