BACON! It’s the universal food you can enjoy any time of day, breakfast, lunch, dinner, and even on salads. It goes with everything, so it’s no surprise that a sandwich in Missouri is being called the best bacon sandwich in the nation.
Why ‘The Combo’ Stands Out
Love Food recently compiled a list of the best bacon sandwiches in every state, and for Missouri, they chose The Combo at Songbird in St. Louis. This breakfast sandwich features a delicious combination of aged cheddar, smoked bacon, a perfectly poached egg, and a touch of honey on toasted bread. YUM!
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Songbird: In the Heart of The Grove
Like I said, anything with bacon on it is going to be delicious—and knowing this is the only sandwich in the Show-Me State being recognized as worth trying makes me want it even more. Minus the aged cheddar cheese, it sounds absolutely amazing. Songbird is located in the Grove area of St. Louis and is a local favorite among many residents.
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Here’s another St. Louis restaurant to add to your ever-growing food bucket list. If this sandwich is on the menu, can you imagine how good the rest of the food must be? I guess we’ll all just have to find out for ourselves.
LOOK: 20 American foods that raise eyebrows outside of the US
Peanut butter and jelly sandwich
The PB&J is a quintessentially American sandwich, but it’s simply not as ubiquitous in other countries. Part of the reason is that peanut butter has been historically difficult to find in countries like Argentina and the Philippines, where there just isn’t a big appetite for the product.
Chicken-fried steak
Although this dish has roots and similarities to German and Austrian wiener schnitzel or Argentinian milanesa, people commonly identify chicken-fried steak with the American South. The dish, which doesn’t include chicken at all, consists of a breaded and fried beefsteak, typically served with mashed potatoes and gravy.
Sweet potato casserole
It’s either beloved or despised, but a sweet potato casserole will almost always be found at an American Thanksgiving dinner table. The recipe involves roasting sweetened sweet potatoes topped with a gooey layer of marshmallows and was first introduced in 1917 thanks to the Angelus Marshmallows company’s effort to increase sales.
Ambrosia salad
Ambrosia salad is popular in the South, particularly around the holidays. The dish typically includes a variety of canned fruits, marshmallows, coconut, and creamy ingredients like mayonnaise, whipped cream, sour cream, or yogurt. The earliest reference to this sweet salad is in the 1867 “Dixie Cookery” cookbook by Maria Massey Barringer.
Cheez Whiz
Cheez Whiz, a spreadable, processed cheese that comes in a jar or spray can, turns heads in countries like France, where high-quality cheese is a national treasure. While the first commercially processed cheese was made in Switzerland in 1911, the treat has been uniquely American since Kraft patented a formula for processed cheese in America in 1916. It has since been the choice cheese for many dishes, including Philly’s iconic cheesesteak.
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Tater tots
Tater Tots—little, poppable fried clumps of potatoes—were first introduced in 1954 by the founders of the American frozen food company Ore-Ida, F. Nephi and Golden Grigg. The crispy snack gained popularity due to its convenience and tastiness and has since been a staple of the American school cafeteria.
Corn dogs
Corn dogs, hot dogs on a stick coated entirely with fried sweet cornbread, are a sweet and savory on-the-go snack typically found at American recreational locales like theme parks, fairs, and beachside boardwalks. Like a few other items on this list, the origins of the corn dog are widely disputed. Some claim it first appeared at a Texas state fair in 1942, and others claim a version of a corn dog called a Pronto Pup appeared on Labor Day 1939 in Portland, Oregon. Either way, this is a one-of-a-kind iteration of a hot dog that might look strange to anyone outside the U.S.
Chicken and waffles
While neither chicken nor waffles are specifically American delicacies, the combination of the two is very American. The dish pairs savory, crispy fried chicken with sweet and fluffy waffles, often with butter and syrup to boot, and is typically found in the American South. Some have speculated chicken and waffles as a meal has roots in both Dutch and German, as well as African American cuisine.
Cobb salad
The Cobb salad, a giant salad containing practically the whole food pyramid, consists of chopped iceberg lettuce or romaine, bacon, chicken breast, tomato, hard-boiled eggs, avocado, cheese (generally blue), chives, and is tossed with a red wine vinaigrette. The salad was born in 1937 at the Brown Derby restaurant in Hollywood by owner Robert Howard Cobb. Though the ingredients are not particularly odd, the salad is high in calories and salt, which may be considered unhealthy to diners from other countries.
Grits
Grits, a type of porridge made from boiled cornmeal, is not something you’d typically see on breakfast tables in any other country. Though similar to polenta, which can be found globally, the food has roots in Native American cuisine (though it isn’t tied to any one culture). Grits have been largely adopted as a staple in the American South.
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Sloppy joe
People across the U.S. may have their own way of making a Sloppy Joe, but the dishes all end up as some iteration of a sweet, tomato-y, loose-meat sandwich that requires multiple napkins. A staple of school cafeterias, the Sloppy Joe has multiple origin stories, including one where Ernest Hemingway popularized the sandwich in America by way of Cuba.
Egg cream
It may shock people outside the U.S., or perhaps even outside of New York, that an egg cream contains neither egg nor cream. The treat contains milk, chocolate syrup, and seltzer. It originated in New York City’s Jewish community during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Jell-O salad
Once a widely popular American dish, jello salad can perhaps raise American eyebrows just as easily as non-American eyebrows. The now-retro dish, which embeds anything from fruit to tuna in jiggly, sweet gelatin, was once ubiquitous and became particularly popular during the Depression. This was a time when households were encouraged to get the most out of their food by getting creative with gelatin, all through post-World War II.
Biscuits and gravy
These flaky, buttery biscuits smothered in thick, savory gravy would be an odd dish in any Parisian bistro or Singaporean hawker center. The merging of biscuits with gravy is said to have first occurred in the late 1800s in southern Appalachia. This Southern dish can still be found in diners and eateries nationwide.
American cheese
As if the name doesn’t say it all, American cheese is a very American delicacy that comes in convenient little plastic-wrapped squares and is not particularly well respected in the rest of the world. It’s a processed cheese made from cheddar and, like Cheez Whiz, was developed when Kraft patented their way of processing cheese. Also known as yellow cheese, it’s a beloved choice for American staples like grilled cheese and cheeseburgers…