[QUOTE]When you slap some meat inside two slices of bread, you have a sandwich, at least according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which enforces the safety and labeling of meat and poultry.
"We're talking about a traditional closed-face sandwich," says Mark Wheeler, who works in food safety at the USDA. "A sandwich is a meat or poultry filling between two slices of bread, a bun or a biscuit."
That excludes items like burritos, wraps or hot dogs. For this definition, Wheeler consulted the agency's 202-page Food Standards and Labeling Policy Book.[/QUOTE]
[URL="https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/06/26/325803580/what-burritos-and-sandwiches-can-teach-us-about-innovation"]Taken from this website's article[/URL]
Sorry friends, a hot dog is not a sandwich. It's a hot dog. Perhaps in its own category of food.. And nothing beats a Costco dog.
When you slap some meat inside two slices of bread, you have a sandwich, at least according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which enforces the safety and labeling of meat and poultry.
"We're talking about a traditional closed-face sandwich," says Mark Wheeler, who works in food safety at the USDA. "A sandwich is a meat or poultry filling between two slices of bread, a bun or a biscuit."
That excludes items like burritos, wraps or hot dogs. For this definition, Wheeler consulted the agency's 202-page Food Standards and Labeling Policy Book.
[QUOTE=Voss;818301]I am a dummy. Anyway. To get things back on track..
According to reddit, and the legal definition of a sandwhich:
[url]https://www.reddit.com/r/legaladvice/comments/6qqnun/what_is_the_legal_definition_of_a_sandwich/[/url]
Yes![/QUOTE]
Reddit is like new-age Wikipedia though, it's hardly the most reliable source of proven fact
For my money, it's NOT
Originally Posted by Voss
I am a dummy. Anyway. To get things back on track..