An Italian sausage sandwich |
United States
In the United States, sausage sandwiches are widely popular, one variety, colloquially known as a hot
Vendor selling sausage sandwiches |
Sausage sandwiches that come on toast, a bagel, an English muffin, a biscuit, or kaiser roll, and include eggs are generally referred to as breakfast sandwiches.
United Kingdom
In the UK, sausage sandwiches ("sausage sarnie" or "butty" in English slang, or "piece 'n' sausage" in
English sausage and egg sandwich |
Although a breakfast favourite, it may be purchased and consumed at any time of the day. Popular combinations are sausage and bacon, sausage and egg, sausage and fried onions, and sausage and tomato.
Sausages are often served in a bread roll or hot dog bun, especially at barbecues.
In Scotland, a lorne sausage may be substituted and is usually served in a morning roll or bap.
Australia and New Zealand
In Australia and New Zealand, a variety is frequently sold at school fetes and other fundraising activities. The sausage is cooked on a barbecue grill in an outdoor area and served with grilled onions on a single, folded slice of bread with tomato or barbecue sauce. The activity is commonly known as a "sausage sizzle". As well as fetes, fundraisers and markets, in recent years it has become common for "sausage sizzles" to be regularly held outside major retailers on weekends (often for charitable causes) such as Bunnings, The Warehouse or Harvey Norman. In the majority of states of Australia, such as New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia and Tasmania, the sausages sold in a single piece of bread at a sausage sizzle are known as 'sausage sandwiches'. However, elsewhere, such as Victoria and South Australia, these are known as 'sausage in bread' and a sausage sandwich refers to a sandwich made with two slices of bread, a chopped up sausage (often cold), and tomato sauce or chutney.
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