mtgl wrote:[Edited to add: I'd post a picture, but it's become far too tedious to post from Google Photos, a major reason I post less frequently...]
budrichard wrote:I suspect it really goes back earlier to the 1950’s where companies sought to reduce housewife’s time by using prepared foods in various recipes.
budrichard wrote:The use of Chicken Gumbo Soup appears as early as 1970 in a Campbell’s cook book
Cathy2 wrote:mtgl wrote:[Edited to add: I'd post a picture, but it's become far too tedious to post from Google Photos, a major reason I post less frequently...]
Why not upload a picture directly to LTH. Initially I could not get it to work, though I have since been able to make it work.
G Wiv wrote:Chicken Gumbo Sloppy Joes
wesuilmo wrote:My CSB about Sloppy Joes.
1971 or 2, Northern Bavaria in Germany. Went to small place on an American family housing complex near a large American base. Most of the people who ate there were young officers, early 20’s. The cooks were German, the bartenders was Polish but they all tried to cater to American tastes. Come in one day for lunch and the special was Sloppy Joes. Almost everyone ordered it. Out came chopped ham and pickles, held together with a sauce that seemed combo of Mayo and Miracle Whip on a brochen (hard roll). Many refused to eat it. I did and it was OK.
Seems the cook was named Joe and it was sloppy so he named it after himself.
A notable exception is the 'wild boar sloppy joe' at Longman & Eagle that has been on the menu as long as I can remember.David Hammond wrote:A lunch counter or diner seems like the right place to look for Sloppy Joes, yet one rarely finds Sloppy Joes on any menu, anywhere.
Wild Boar Sloppy Joe, Crispy Onion & Sage, Jalapeno, Fries
David Hammond wrote:When you're dealing with a food item so drenched in nostalgia as this one is, you have to stick pretty close to the paradigmatic preparation (ground beef, BBQ sauce, at least) or people will object. I totally get that.
David Hammond wrote:Like many homemade classics, the Sloppy Joe is open to infinite variation; a neighbor of ours uses chicken gumbo in hers, which I find hard to imagine but am eager to try.
Rene G wrote:Panther in the Den wrote:Cathy2 wrote:D.G.Sullivan wrote:I admit to being a tad over the skeptical line when told the area's best cooks use a can of Chunky Chicken Gumbo soup passed through a blender as their binder.
Just to be clear, is this Chunky Chicken Gumbo used with the Loosie sandwiches? Campbell's Chunky Chicken Gumbo?
I couldn’t believe it so I did some research…
Gumbo burgers – as much a sloppy joe variant as loosemeat sandwich – were discussed earlier in this thread.germuska wrote:FWIW, this morning on the train I was reading the chapter on loose meat sandwiches in John Edge's Hamburgers and Fries and he cites Iowa church cookbooks which include chicken gumbo in the ingredients.
John T Edge doesn't go so far as to claim an Iowa origin for gumbo burgers, but he mentions the recipe's appearance in two older Iowa church cookbooks. That D.G.Sullivan encountered the sandwich in Iowa – in Iowa churches, I'm guessing – is probably more than mere coincidence. Both cookbooks cited by Edge were published within 200 miles of Marion, where D.G.Sullivan is now. In any case, it seems to be a fairly old recipe. If you read the comments at the end of Campbell's recipe for Chicken Gumbo Sloppy Joes (also known as Gumbo Souperburgers or Spoon Burgers), you'll find folks fondly remembering them from the 1950s. I wonder how many of the commenters grew up in Iowa.
Kid Charlemagne wrote:I lived in France (west 'burbs of Paris) from age 8 to 13, and I would get my mom to make sloppy joes on fresh french baguette from the boulangerie
Rene G wrote: I think the cheaper and squishier the bun, the better.
David Hammond wrote:What really set this hot dog apart was the bun; it was no poppy-seed-flecked envelope of white smoosh bread, so maybe points off for that on the authenticity scale, but it was by far the densest, best-tasting hot dog bun in memory. It was almost “too good.” One of my many unsubstantiated beliefs is that some foods (macaroni n’ cheese, gyros, tater tots) must hit the right level of crappiness to satisfy on all the expected levels.
David Hammond wrote:...One of my many unsubstantiated beliefs is that some foods (macaroni n’ cheese, gyros, tater tots) must hit the right level of crappiness to satisfy on all the expected levels.
Binko wrote:The only alternate name of those I'm familiar with is "barbecues," of which I'd be really curious to learn the etymology. I haven't the faintest clue what "barbecue," even in its most expansive definition has to do with the dish. The best I could come up with is maybe the sauce is supposed to be a barbecue sauce? I guess maybe I could see that.
David Hammond wrote:Regarding Sloppy Joe bun/bread:Kid Charlemagne wrote:I lived in France (west 'burbs of Paris) from age 8 to 13, and I would get my mom to make sloppy joes on fresh french baguette from the boulangerie
There is probably no bread I long for more intensely than a French baguette, but I understand what ReneG means when he says:Rene G wrote: I think the cheaper and squishier the bun, the better.
Luckyguy wrote:Silver Cloud on Damen used to make a pretty respectable Sloppy Joe back in the day, which, paired with their tater tots, made for an unholy lunch. As David suggests, it's not very common to find a Sloppy Joe on a restaurant menu (especially in the city) so the one at Silver Cloud always scratched an itch.