Fried Bologna & Other Southern Sandwiches
Southern Plate is more than just me typing and chatting away. In fact, YOU are the most important part of SouthernPlate.com. With that in mind, I hope you’ll take time to leave a comment and share your favorite sandwich from your childhood. See bottom of this post for more details! Gratefully, Christy 🙂
When my mama was a girl they had a tradition of going out riding through the countryside on Sunday afternoons. They’d stop off at a little store to have thick slices of bologna cut off and made into bologna and cheese sandwiches. Pair that with a bottled drink and they were living high on the hog! “There just wasn’t anything like getting to ride in that car and look out the window while you ate a bologna sandwich!”.
This treat was passed down to my generation when we often sat down for lunch with a big loaf of bread and a stack of cheese slices in the middle of the table while Mama fried up bologna in a skillet. We’d each make our own sandwich and I’d make mine just like my brother did: Fried bologna, cheese, and potato chips settled in between two pieces of “loaf bread”.
Bologna sandwiches, sometimes referred to as “the poor man’s steak”, are such a part of our culture, they’re even used to gauge a person’s character. On the day we got married, my husband’s best man, Jim, had driven in a ways and was planning on staying overnight before heading back. He stayed with my Grandmother, who lived across the road from what was to be our new home. It had been quite a day with the wedding and reception and that evening Grandmama and Jim went out on her porch to relax and look out over the river.
For supper, Grandmama made the two of them bologna sandwiches.
To Grandmama, Jim and my husband represented a new generation, with a huge divide between folks her age and them. Grandmama had grown up dirt poor and picking cotton all of her life and here was this young man newly graduated from college with an engineering degree whose experience with her world had been nothing more than glancing at the cotton as the car went by. Its sometimes a little intimidating for folks who come from such humble backgrounds in situations like this, but when Jim accepted that bologna sandwich, it spoke volumes to Grandmama about the type of person he was at heart. Even now whenever he is mentioned she always chimes, in,
“That Jim is just a real good boy, he sat out there on the porch and ate a bologna sandwich with me”.
To make the sandwich from my childhood you’ll need: Bread, cheese, mayo…
and potato chips 🙂
My brother taught me the wonders of a potato chip sandwich over thirty years ago.
I think it almost made up for him cutting the entire side of my hair off a few years later.
Now we have to fry out bologna. I always cut a slit halfway through to keep it from curling up into a bowl as it fries.
I prefer Zeigler bologna because it is made in Alabama. I try to buy as close to home as I can because last thing we want is to end up relying on a company halfway across the country for our food supplies. I think it’s best to support local suppliers to ensure that you have local suppliers. Zeigler’s has been around for over seventy five years. Their main plant is in Tuscaloosa and our own highly respected Coach Paul “Bear” Bryant was once an owner of the company as well.
Reminder to all: I am not into football but Alabamians take their football very seriously.
So whatever team you are for, GO THEM!
You don’t need to spray your pan or anything, just put your bologna in it and cook it on medium, turning after it browns on one side. Some folks like there is just barely heated but I actually like a wee bit of black on mine 🙂
Note to myself: You use the word “actually” too much, stop it. Now. Seriously.
~sighs~
Oh lawd, that’s some good eatin’!
I always smoosh it a bit to crunch the chips down some 🙂
Grandmama, I’m a real good girl because I still eat bologna sandwiches!
A few posts back we got into a comment discussion on strange sandwich combinations we grew up on. It was a fascinating comment section and we all really got a hoot out of reading it. I’d like to devote this comment section to those sandwiches. What did you grow up on? What brands do you insist on and why?
Mayonaise sandwich? Mustard sandwich? PB and banana? Tell us all about it! Also, why do you think Southerners eat such strange sandwich combinations-ketchup sandwich, anyone?
I think it is due to lack of food. When food was scarce, you could put something between two slices of bread, call it a sandwich and then it suddenly seemed like a meal. What do you think?
If there is anything else you wanna talk about in the comments section, feel free to do that, too.
See someone else’s comment you wanna reply to? Go right ahead!
I consider this to be my big old porch and we’re all just a standing around visiting with each other.
Y’all keep the conversation going and I’ll keep the tea glasses filled!
We’re all family here anyways. 🙂
“The happiest of people don’t necessarily have the best of everything; they just make the most of everything that comes along their way.”
Submitted by Rebecca Hall. To submit your quote or read more, please click here.
I just love getting new positive quotes so thank you in advance!
You know we love our BBQ sandwiches with sweet vinegar slaw, but I would make my second bun with just slaw and lots of juice to soak into the bun. This would be my dessert.
We were poor and couldn’t afford ham but my Mom used to grind up bologna and add miracle whip and relish. YUMMO!!! To this day it’s still one of my favorites. I can buy ham now but I prefer the bologna.Some days we just had a butter and sugar sandwich and we loved it! (we never really knew we were poor)
I used to do this, too, but I no longer have my old fashioned food grinder, and people tell me that the smaller food processors won’t do the job, so I haven’t ever bought a food processor.
My mom used to fry bologna and we’d have it for a meal with mashed potatoes :0) She also made “nanner sammiches” – sliced banana with mayo or “mater sammiches” garden fresh tomatoes sliced thick on white bread with mayo. The other thing she made that everyone else thought was weird was BLT with fried egg… she also put a packet of peanuts in every Coke she drank :0)
I agree it was because of lack of food but look how creative we are!
My mother drank Dr Pepper with peanuts. I thought is was cool but I didn’t like the peanuts so I put redhots in my Mt Dew! Also I love my fried bologna with mustard. YUM!
One year (not that long ago actually) my daddy went with us to the state fair and he took his own huge thing of “slice your own bologna”! Every time he got hungry he’d go out to the car to make him a bologna and tomato and mayo sandwich out of the cooler…. You can really get thick sliced like that! 🙂 Only my daddy…
My wife thinks I am crazy when I tell her my favorite meal is a bologna sandwich and glass of milk. My mouth is watering right now, just thinking of thick Zeigler’s bologna on fresh bread with mustard. Anyone want to trade some lobster mac and cheese that I brought for lunch for a bologna sandwich? I know you would be getting the bad end of the deal, but worth asking anyway.
I love fried bologna sandwiches on soft white bread, plain! I cut small slits all the way around the edge so it doesn’t pop up! My mom served it that way since I was a kid and my hubby and kids love it that way as well. Just Sunday, we fried some bologna to throw into some omeletes we made! Now if the bologna isn’t fried, I like it on soft white bread with miracle whip, sliced tomatoes and potato chips! I also love cheese sandwiches with miracle whip and sliced tomatoes on white toast! Yummy! My kids love peanut butter and banana soft tortilla sandwiches wrapped up!
We had a little country store down the road and we would walk to eat and get some bologna and cheese sliced also. They would wrap it in the white butcher paper. I still love bologna sandwhiches! I’m also from North Alabama (Moulton). I live in Mississippi now and I fry bologna for the men at the deer camp and they love it.
the bologny they slice in the store is always better. i used to put a slice of bologny on a paper plate, lay a slice of cheese on top and ‘nuke’ i for about a minute. the bologny would make sort of a cut with cheese in it-my kids called it bologny cups and loved them.
it would make sort of a cup-excuse the typo