What subway sandwich should i get




















And who doesn't like ham on bread? The sandwich has muscular appearance, thanks to all the sticky-sweet chunks of chicken. Although, we suggest just asking for bacon to be added to the sandwich anyways. You won't regret it. For a fast-food sandwich, the roast beef cold cuts of this sandwich are hearty. The meat presents a nice juxtaposition to the crisp freshness of the included veggies. Subway has always gotten this lunchbox staple right. The spicy Italian provides an easel for Subways customers to paint however they like, and the most stuff you cram onto it, the better.

The sub will hold up, leaving anyone who grabs it as a 6-inch or footlong at lunch full throughout the rest of the day. From there, we utilized the following criteria to rank each sub: 1. I walked home thinking about how black olives are one of the few foods I genuinely can't stand, and now I'd be eating them in the name of some failed joke.

It is indeed a salad on bread. Taste test: This was a good sandwich, and as hilarious as I thought it was for me to get all of the toppings, I think they worked together. One bite was filled with hot peppers, then sweet peppers, tomato, and cucumber cooled things down in the next.

Underneath everything was delicious spinach my preferred sandwich green. This is probably the only vegetable-based sandwich I've ever eaten because I'd rather just eat salads.

The bread totally counteracts any of the benefits from the vegetables in my mind. This sandwich was super salty. For some reason, I didn't get tomato, so I took a piece from another sandwich to even things out. I also got the basics here, lettuce and onion with mustard. Taste test: It was definitely salty and had a decent bounce, which you want in all processed meats.

Frankly, I couldn't taste a difference between this one and the regular ham. Still, there's a smooth combination with the cheese that was surprisingly good. But this wasn't very good ham — more salt than meat — and as a self-proclaimed ham fiend, this didn't quite cut it. I don't think there was any difference between the ham varieties. First impression: From what I can tell, there is minimal, if any, difference between the Black Forest and traditional ham, except maybe a slight color variation.

Taste test: I started to wonder if the worker gave me the right sandwich. I thought I knew my hams. I tasted nothing. I felt nothing. I looked at the two ham sandwiches and wondered which was which.

There are three kinds of meat on the B. First impression: I was happy to see that this multi-meat sandwich had Genoa salami, spicy pepperoni, and Black Forest ham. I'd been a bit worried that, like the cold-cut combo I'd heard about, it would be three varieties of processed turkey. What it lacked in flavor it made up for in quantity of meat. Taste test: This was a well-rounded sandwich , though the meats weren't great.

With no meat, you have no choice but to load it up with a ton of veggies. At only calories without cheese , this sandwich is a steal.

Subway features teriyaki-glazed chicken in their fat-free sweet onion sauce. Altogether it's calories with some veggies. Oven Chicken Roast is ideal for all the health nuts out there. It consists of only calories on their 9 grain wheat bread but you could also try their honey and oat to mix it up a bit. The Rotisserie Chicken is one of the healthiest Subway sandwiches, with fresh chicken and crispy veggies on wheat bread.

It's just calorie s and 29 grams of protein. Go ham with the Black Forest Ham. Maybe not breakfast-sandwich-on-a-donut delicious. Or even bacon-sandwich-with-fried-chicken-as-bread delicious. That said, it is possible to go into a Subway and walk out with a sub-par sandwich. Here are the ten best Subway sandwiches, ranked. The Turkey Breast Sandwich may be an unorthodox choice for number one, but hear us out.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000