The Sandwich Cheatsheet For People Who Cook By Vibes Not Rules

Tomato Sandwich

tomato sandwich
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

The Tomato Sandwich is the purest expression of cooking by instinct. There’s no right ratio of mayo to bread—just your gut telling you when it’s right. It rewards the lazy, the experimental, and everyone in between.

Banh Mi

A close-up of a banh mi sandwich on a wooden board, packed with grilled meat, cilantro, sliced cucumber, pickled vegetables, and fresh herbs layered inside a crispy banh mi baguette.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

A Banh Mi works for anyone who treats recipes like suggestions. Pickled carrots, herbs, and protein are all flexible players—you just build until it looks right. Chaos never tasted so balanced.

Sloppy Joe

Close-up of a sloppy joe sandwich on a wooden surface, featuring a soft, golden bun filled with classic sloppy joe seasoned ground meat, diced onions, green peppers, and a layer of creamy mayonnaise.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

The Sloppy Joe is pure vibe cooking. It doesn’t care how neat you are, only that it’s saucy enough. You measure with your heart, then mop it up with a bun. That’s the entire philosophy.

Grinder Sandwich

grinder sandwich
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

A Grinder Sandwich doesn’t demand precision—it rewards excess. Layer meats, pile shredded lettuce, drown it in dressing, and bake until the cheese knows its job. If it looks messy, it’s perfect.

Chicken Spiedie

A close-up of a Chicken Spiedie sandwich on a wooden surface, filled with grilled chicken, lettuce, tomato slices, onions, and banana peppers in a soft hoagie roll.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

The Chicken Spiedie is for people who treat marinating as a suggestion, not a rule. A few hours or a few minutes—it all works. Just grill, stack, and call it dinner.

Runza

A white bowl filled with freshly baked golden brown runza bread rolls sits on a white cloth on a dark wooden table.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

Nebraska’s Runza was built for improvisation. Stuff whatever you have—ground beef, cabbage, onion—inside bread and bake it. It’s what happens when “cleaning out the fridge” turns into a plan.

Fried Bologna Sandwich

Fried Bologna Sandwich
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

The Fried Bologna Sandwich celebrates happy accidents. A hot skillet, butter, and a few minutes later you’ve built something nostalgic and loud—no recipe card in sight.

Albuquerque Turkey

A close-up of an Albuquerque Turkey Sandwich with sliced turkey, melted cheese, avocado, roasted green chilies, and tomato on whole grain bread, resting on a wooden surface.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

With the Albuquerque Turkey, there’s no wrong move. Add avocado if it’s around, skip it if not. It’s Southwest personality built from whatever the fridge offers.

North Shore Beef

Two North Shore Beef sandwiches with thick slices of meat, melted cheese, onions, and barbecue sauce overflowing from sesame seed buns are served on a baking sheet.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

The North Shore Beef doesn’t care for precision—just personality. Order it “three-way” with mayo, cheese, and sauce, or just wing it at home. Either way, it’s all instinct and no measuring cups.

Olive Burger

A Primanti Brothers Sandwich on thick white bread is filled with tomato slices, coleslaw, French fries, melted cheese, and grilled meat, all stacked high on a wooden cutting board.
Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

Michigan’s Olive Burger thrives on impulse. Mix mayo, olives, and whatever spice jar your hand hits first. It’s proof that great sandwiches happen when you stop caring about the rules.

Benedictine

Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

Kentucky’s Benedictine Sandwich works best when you eyeball everything. A swipe of cucumber spread, a bit of crunch, and you’re done. It’s the kind of sandwich that forgives every shortcut.

Primanti Bros. Sandwich

Maddy Alewine/Them Bites

Pittsburgh’s Primanti Bros. Sandwich is the freestyle anthem of lunch. Fries and slaw inside the bread? Why not. It’s what happens when “no rules” becomes an identity.

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