The origin of the
ham and cheese sandwich has been debated for a number of years by culinary intellectuals. The leading theory as to who first started to produce a ham, cheese and bread dish is mentioned in
The Larousse Gastronomique 1961. Here it notes that Patrick Connolly, an 18th-century Irish immigrant to England, sold a bread dish which: combined the remains of pig, cured and sliced with a topping of Leicester cheese and a kiss of egg yolk sauce (a form of mayonnaise) in a round bread roll. The dish was rather unimaginatively known as a Connolly and is still sometimes referred to as this in some parts of the Midlands in the UK. In the United Kingdom a common addition to a ham and cheese sandwich is
pickle (a sweet, vinegary chutney originally by
Branston); the snack is then known as a ham, cheese and pickle sandwich. As recalled by Harry Stevens, a ballpark concessionaire, in a 1924 interview, in 1894 ham and cheese sandwiches were the only food sold in New York
baseball parks;
frankfurters were introduced in 1909. An Englishwoman, writing in 1923 of her passage through
Ellis Island on a trip to the United States, noted: I was in fear and trembling, having heard so many tales of the abuse aliens receive there.... The attendants were very kind and not at all rough with us. It was the noon hour... in a little while porters came along with baskets of very good ham and cheese sandwiches and coffee for the grown-ups and milk for the babies.
Richard E. Byrd took ham and cheese sandwiches on his 1926 polar flight, as did the 1927
transatlantic fliers Chamberlin and Levine. == Consumption ==