Photography by Ian L. Sitren

Posts tagged “National Hoagie Day

National Hoagie Day was yesterday

My photograph of a Firehouse Subs Hook and Ladder sandwich cut into multiple sections and arranged tightly across a black background. The toasted roll is opened to reveal layers of smoked turkey breast, Virginia honey ham, melted Monterey Jack cheese, lettuce, tomato, and onion. The sections are stacked and pressed together, creating a dense composition that emphasizes the textures of the bread, the sheen of melted cheese, and the layered deli meats. The black background isolates the subject, focusing attention on the structure and detail of the sandwich.

Which is about right. These things never seem to line up with when you actually have the food in front of you. They pass, mostly unnoticed, and then a day later you’re standing there with two Firehouse Subs and a camera thinking… now it’s relevant.

Firehouse started in Jacksonville, built by two former firefighters who turned the concept into something very specific. Steamed meats, soft rolls, a heavier sandwich that doesn’t try to hide what it is. It’s direct, a little excessive, and that’s the point.

So instead of chasing the calendar, I went after the structure.

Cut into sections, stacked, compressed, pushed together until it stops reading as a single sandwich and starts becoming something else. Bread, meat, cheese, all exposed at once. No clean halves, no careful spacing. Just density, texture, and everything competing for attention.

That’s where my photography tends to land. Not documenting the sandwich, but pulling it apart visually and rebuilding it into something more deliberate. Something you look at, not just something you eat.

And in that form, it becomes less about lunch and more about the way it holds the frame. Something to study for a moment.

More of my food photography and much more on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com


National Submarine-Hoagie-Hero-Grinder Day

Today is National Submarine-Hoagie-Hero-Grinder Day — a sandwich with many names and, apparently, many holidays. Depending on where you look, there’s also National Hoagie Day in May, National Submarine Sandwich Day in November, and even separate days for the Italian Sub, the Turkey Sub, and the Meatball Sub. Few foods have this many national observances, which probably says something about how much Americans love a good sandwich.

The submarine sandwich began with Italian immigrants in the Northeastern United States in the early 1900s, layering meats, cheese, and vegetables inside long rolls. The word “submarine” gained popularity during World War II because of its resemblance to the naval vessels, while “hoagie,” “hero,” and “grinder” each found favor in Philadelphia, New York, and New England.

In 1965, a 17-year-old named Fred DeLuca opened a small sandwich shop in Bridgeport, Connecticut — with funding from a family friend — and called it Pete’s Super Submarines. That would eventually become Subway, now one of the largest restaurant chains in the world. The brand helped turn the regional sub into a fast-food staple recognized everywhere.

The photograph here shows two of Subway’s most popular sandwiches, cut in half and photographed side by side on a black background — stacked with meats, cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion, and mayonnaise. Like all of my Food From Bag to Background series, they’re presented as-is, straight from the bag, with no styling or props.

You can find this and more in my Food From Bag to Background gallery at https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000wQ3fbeEezF0