Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (2024)

Since we are having some fun, festive snacks for Christmas Eve, I thought I would re-run this sandwich with the hopes that this will spark some Christmas memories out there for some reader. Tell us, is this Christmas Eve food? I’m guessing it was, but I would love to hear from you if you can remember eating this beauty. Have a great Christmas!

December is here and Christmas is coming up fast, so I thought I would make a little something to get us all into the holiday spirit. Because nothing says “Christmas” to me more than ground bologna on an English muffin!

This is Christmas Sandwich!

Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (2)AuthorRetroRuth
Rating

Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (3)

From Christmas Recipes from Consumer's Power, 1972

Tested Recipe!

1 ½ cups ground bologna or ham

1 cup shredded sharp cheese

¼ cup sweet pickle relish

½ cup salad dressing

1 tbsp grated onion

3 tbsp ketchup

¼ tsp salt

6 hamburger buns or English muffins, split

1 can jellied cranberry sauce

1

Combine the first 7 ingredients and spread on buns. Place on broiler rack and broil about 4 inches from heat until lightly browned, about 6 minutes (*Ruth's note: Mine took 3 mins). Garnish with cutouts of cranberry jelly.

Garnish

2

Slice canned cranberry jelly into ½ inch thick slices. Use small cookie cutters to cut out desired shapes.

Note:

3

Sandwiches may be arranged around the rim of a large plate and decorated with a green bow to resemble a wreath.

CategoryChristmas, Main Dish, Sandwich, Cooking MethodBake, BroilTags#bologna, #cranberrysauce, #englishmuffins, #ham, #ketchup, #onion, #saladdressing, #sharpcheese, #sweetpicklerelish

Ingredients

1 ½ cups ground bologna or ham

1 cup shredded sharp cheese

¼ cup sweet pickle relish

½ cup salad dressing

1 tbsp grated onion

3 tbsp ketchup

¼ tsp salt

6 hamburger buns or English muffins, split

1 can jellied cranberry sauce

Directions

1

Combine the first 7 ingredients and spread on buns. Place on broiler rack and broil about 4 inches from heat until lightly browned, about 6 minutes (*Ruth's note: Mine took 3 mins). Garnish with cutouts of cranberry jelly.

Garnish

2

Slice canned cranberry jelly into ½ inch thick slices. Use small cookie cutters to cut out desired shapes.

Note:

3

Sandwiches may be arranged around the rim of a large plate and decorated with a green bow to resemble a wreath.

Christmas Sandwich

IngredientsDirections

Of course, I chose the bologna over the ham. Ham would have been a bit more Christmas-y, butsinceI already know what ham salad tastes like I decidedto skip it.I was interested in seeing what “bologna salad” would taste like.

And I wanted to see if it felt more or lessfestive eating bologna ratherthan ham.

And this is the part that was the biggest pain in the butt. Do you know how long I had to dig through my cabinets to find appropriate-sized cookie cutters?But at least it gave me time to think about the sandwich. I mean, really think about it. Things like: Is it supposed to be party food, like an appetizer? It is something you are supposed to feed your family while they are waiting for Christmas dinner? Is it supposed to be a Christmas Eve snack?

Or is this supposed to be an After Christmas sandwich, to use up leftovers?

In theend, I didn’t come up with anyanswers, but I came out with some pretty okay cranberry shapes.

I forgot to take a shot of the pre-broiled sandwiches due to a hungry toddler running around my legs and begging for food, but this shot of what was left in the bowl should give you a pretty good idea of what they looked like.

So, like dog food on a bun.

All finished! What do you think? Festive?

Okay, maybe if you cut the cranberry sauce smaller so the sandwiches look like ornaments and then put them in the shape of a wreath on a large plate they might look like holiday-appropriate food.

Maybe.

They kinda just look like pizza with a star on it to me.

Merry Christmas, Tom! Have a pizza star!

“How are they?”

“Sweet.”

“Are they bad?”

“Not bad, just sweet.”

The Verdict: Not Bad

From The Tasting Notes –

The filling on these was surprisingly edible, especially if you like everything you eat to taste like sugar. The best part was actually the broiled English muffin, and since the base was good the rest of this could probably be saved with some tweaks. To make this less sweet, I would suggest using ham instead of bologna, mustard instead of ketchup, mayo instead of Miracle Whip and cranberry relish instead of cranberry sauce.

  1. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (13)

    The Atomic Momon December 24, 2016 at 8:16 am

    My great grandmother used to make this exact sandwich growing up, but we’d eat it on regular days. She was Mabel, and we called these Mabelburgers.

  2. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (14)

    Aliemakon December 24, 2016 at 10:21 am

    Reminds me of the sandwiches my mother made. She would grind Spam and sweet gerkins, then add mayonnaise to make a sandwich spread. She was so proud of the tasty mixture! Garden Club ladies thought it was a fancy ham salad. Cut off the crusts, cut the sandwich into 4 triangles, or use a cookie cutter for more dramatic shapes.

  3. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (15)

    Katrion December 24, 2016 at 5:37 pm

    Ruth,
    My Dad keeps asking about hamloaf. He is from Ohio and he is 83. I have never even heard of hamloaf, and my mother and I hate ham! Maybe this could be mid century menu test! LOL

  4. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (16)

    Danon December 26, 2016 at 3:49 pm

    Minus the cranberries, my grandmother made these and called them Ham Dreams. They were (at least to a kid) pretty tasty.

  5. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (17)

    Teddi Carbonneauon December 28, 2016 at 1:42 pm

    My grandmother also made a version of these. No sweet pickle or cranberry. She used catsup and a little mayo. She put the mixture on hot dog buns, wrapped them in foil and put them in the oven. Very tasty!

  6. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (18)

    Starla Walterson December 29, 2016 at 11:17 pm

    My mom would make this every year for New Years Eve. It was always one of my favorites growing up because I only got to have it once year. I was just thinking about this recipe the other day, now I know what to put in b it. Thank you.

  7. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (19)

    Alan Christensenon December 31, 2016 at 4:52 pm

    We never had these, but I thought your comment was awesome because my grandmother was also named Mabel.

  8. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (20)

    Jenn Smithon January 20, 2017 at 11:00 am

    I remember my mother making something like these when I was a kid, my sisters and I eventually developed more refi

  9. Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (21)

    Mike Kohnon May 23, 2017 at 2:05 pm

    Reminds me of the sandwich spread Mom used to make. Dad still makes this and I actually called him for the recipe as I was feeling a little nostalgic.

    Grind up some bologna, mix in some relish, a little finely chopped onion and some Miracle Whip, spread on bread for sandwiches.

    Another variation would be to use Spam, add black olive and grated cheddar and broil on hot dog bun halves in the oven.

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Christmas Sandwich, 1972 - A Mid-Century Holiday Recipe Test Re-Run - Mid-Century Menu (2024)

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