JAS_OH1
Forum GOD!
Yeah in the US we grill on the outdoor BBQ...
I wish I had a salamander, though.
I wish I had a salamander, though.
Everything is better with butter! And I would never pan fry a grilled cheese with oil. It might be a "don't knock it until you try it" kind of thing, but I love butter, so why change and be disappointed?Well, I've never tried cooking (frying) bread, spread with mayonnaise. Mayonnaise is mainly oil so in theory it should work. What is the problem?
Only when mayonnaise is banned from sandwiches.The rest of the world will eventually see the errors of their ways and convert to Imperial! "Murica![]()

Fair enough. I was just wondering what it was that folk were finding so bad about the idea. I mean in terms of taste.Everything is better with butter! And I would never pan fry a grilled cheese with oil. It might be a "don't knock it until you try it" kind of thing, but I love butter, so why change and be disappointed?
I didn't even have to click on it to newt what I would see.I've got one:Salamander
It depends, not in a cold sandwich, no. In a hot sandwich, yes. I love to butter buns or bread and get a nice sear on the inside, then use mayonnaise (and mustard) as a condiment inside (on burgers or warm sandwiches)Fair enough. I was just wondering what it was that folk were finding so bad about the idea. I mean in terms of taste.
Do you (personally) use butter in sandwiches then rather than mayonnaise? That tends to be the British style (although increasingly people here are adding mayonnaise as well as butter).
I like mayo in sandwiches, which ones? It depends, I guess, but a nice deli sandwich, meats and cheeses, produce, sure. Those are also great tasting with no mayo and a nice vinaigrette too.It depends, not in a cold sandwich, no. In a hot sandwich, yes. I love to butter buns or bread and get a nice sear on the inside, then use mayonnaise (and mustard) as a condiment inside (on burgers or warm sandwiches)
It depends, not in a cold sandwich, no. In a hot sandwich, yes. I love to butter buns or bread and get a nice sear on the inside, then use mayonnaise (and mustard) as a condiment inside (on burgers or warm sandwiches)
Yeah, pretty much. Now keep in mind that I like only a light smear of mayonnaise and the same amount of mustard.So if you were to make an uncooked sandwich with say ham and cheese, or with roast beef and mustard, you would use mayonnaise inside rather than butter?
Is that like a panini press, then?I put mayonnaise on some sandwiches, but not on others; always in the filling.Grilled sandwiches? I've got this wonderful Oster sandwich press thing, which can actually be used as a hot plate, which will happily accommodate 3 sandwiches (normal sandwich bread).
Come to think of it, however, I very rarely butter the outside of the sandwich; only the inside.
Yeah, probably, but it's so old, they probably hadn't even invented paninis when we bought it.Is that like a panini press, then?
