With a rash of burger-centric openings and a stampede to get the all-American icon onto the menu of what feels like every restaurant in town, can burger burnout be far behind? Combat inevitable burger boredom with these 10 first-class sandwiches.
1"I never thought we'd be a deli," said Clancey's Meats & Fish owner Kristin Tombers, working away at the small sandwich station in her Linden Hills butcher shop, but here she is, turning out some of the city's most distinctive and satisfying sandwiches. The care and feeding that go into her roast beef sandwich ($8.50) is extraordinary. The Minnesota-raised beef is carefully sliced to order. The crisp, chewy Rustica baguette gets a healthy swipe of coarse mustard, followed by plenty of pungent fresh-ground horseradish, house-pickled jalapeños and house-roasted red bell peppers. A dash of vinegar, a spritz of olive oil, a few sprinkles of salt and pepper; yeah, this beauty is stuffed like a chintz-covered sofa.
4307 Upton Av. S., Minneapolis, 612-926-0222, www.clanceysmeats.com
2 It's not easy picking a favorite among the modest grab-and-go assortment ($4.50) at the Salty Tart, especially when owner Michelle Gayer layers roast turkey, skinny cuts of brie, a slash of tart orange marmalade and snappy greens ("fresh from a friend's garden," said Gayer), on robust whole-wheat bread. A close second: Gayer's spin on the chicken club, with juicy, nicely seasoned roast chicken, a few slices of crisp bacon, field greens, avocado and a roasted garlic mayo, pressed between a golden buttermilk bun. On your way out, grab a macaroon for the road.
920 E. Lake St., Minneapolis, 612-874-9206, www.saltytart.com
3 The humble lunch-counter tuna salad sandwich lives on at Yum! Kitchen and Bakery, and it's way better than you remember it. Owner Patti Soskin calls it her "Fancy-Schmancy Tuna" ($7.95), but the formula is simplicity itself, just top-quality albacore tune, kalamata olives, sweet red peppers and "good-old fashioned Hellman's," she said, all generously spooned in between thick, toasted slices of the kitchen's superb challah. Yum, indeed.
4000 Minnetonka Blvd., St. Louis Park, 952-922-4000, www.yumkitchen.com
4Maverick's is to Arby's as Neiman Marcus is to Kohl's, with super-deluxe roast beef sandwiches ($4.49) that carve a new notch on the fast-food bar. Picture rare roast beef, so pink and tender that it practically melts just looking at it, shaved thin and stacked high on a gigantic buttered and toasted bun. There's barbecue sauce and other add-your-own embellishments, but this beef is so good that it's best relished naked.