Photography by Ian L. Sitren

Posts tagged “Jewish food history

National Hot Pastrami Sandwich Day

Today is National Hot Pastrami Sandwich Day, and this is the photograph I chose to mark it.

I’ve photographed classic pastrami sandwiches before, the kind wrapped in paper, stacked high, and eaten leaning forward so nothing ends up on your shirt. This time I wanted to look at something I see more and more often: the pastrami cheeseburger.

Pastrami began as a method of preservation, rooted in Eastern European Jewish traditions, before becoming a defining part of American food culture. In delicatessens, especially in New York and later Los Angeles, it settled into a familiar form: sliced hot, piled high, and served with little interference. The meat was the point.

The pastrami cheeseburger feels like a distinctly American evolution of that idea.

This photograph features pastrami cheeseburgers from P&G Burgers in Colton, California, a long-running Southern California fast-food restaurant with indoor seating, outdoor tables, and a drive-thru. You order at the counter beneath a wall of menu boards and pick up your food when your number is called. It’s not a deli and not just a roadside shack. It’s a full-scale fast-food operation built around burgers, fries, shakes, and pastrami.

Their claim, “Home of the Best Pastrami Cheeseburgers in the World,” is printed right on the building. Whether taken literally or as confident fast-food bravado, it suits what they’re serving. These burgers are large, heavy, and unapologetically loaded. Thick beef patties stacked with grilled pastrami, cheese, and a soft sesame seed bun, wrapped tight and meant to be eaten with commitment.

The cheeseburger version shifts pastrami away from its deli roots and places it squarely in American fast-food culture. Beef layered onto beef. Cheese added. Rye replaced by a burger bun. It’s less about tradition and more about appetite. Less about restraint and more about scale.

That’s what drew me to photograph it.

This image shows the burgers exactly as they’re served, straight from the counter, still wrapped, still spilling out. No styling, no cleanup. Just weight, texture, and excess. In that way, it still respects pastrami’s history, even as it pushes it into something louder and distinctly American.

On National Hot Pastrami Sandwich Day, that evolution feels worth acknowledging.

More of my fast food photographs on my website in the gallery “Food From Bag To Background” at https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000wQ3fbeEezF0