Served on my own sourdough that was toasted in the bacon grease and smothered with homemade mayo.

I only make this sandwich during peak tomato season. My arteries couldn’t do this year round.

  • @Alteon
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    41 year ago

    You know, I used to always add mayo as well, but I found that with a toasted sandwich like that. It’s honestly better without and tastier. I did breakfast sandwiches like this with homegrown jalapenos and tomatoes, with sausage, egg, and pepper jack. Your tomatoes and eggs are already very wet ingredients, the mayo just makes it over the top, and heart attack inducing. Didn’t think it was worth it. I did toast with a little bacon grease though.

    • @ShakeThatYam
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      31 year ago

      IMO, Mayo is a must on a standard BLT. A fresh ripe tomato pairs amazingly with mayo and the fat layer keeps it’s juices from soaking into the bread.

      • @Alteon
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        11 year ago

        On a standard BLT? 100% agree.

        It just depends on how many 'moist ingredients are on a sandwich for me though. Like, I can’t stand when a sandwich is just absolutely soaked with wet ingredients.

    • @LoneGanselOP
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      11 year ago

      That sounds like another tasty sandwich! I forego cheese in mine since the egg and mayonnaise end up providing that same sort of creamy richness. I can see how the cheese might end up helping to keep everything better combined, though. Thanks for the insight!

      • @Alteon
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        11 year ago

        Mind if I ask how you do your sourdough? I had a starter that I tended to for months, but my sourdough always came out super dense and not risen. It was almost like the yeast didn’t work as hard as they should…any ideas to what I could be doing wrong?

        • @LoneGanselOP
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          11 year ago

          So I do a very odd setup for my sourdough (3 hour bulk ferment at close to 100°F, with a brief 9 hour cold retard), but if you’ve got a crumb picture I can help you figure out what led to your dough behaving that way.