Meatball Sub
Juicy beef and pork meatballs in marinara sauce, smothered in melted mozzarella on a toasted sub roll.
Origin Story
The meatball sub emerged from Italian-American red-sauce restaurant culture in New York in the mid-20th century. What began as a way to use leftover meatballs from Sunday gravy became a category-defining American sandwich. Subway's menu made it globally recognisable in the 1970s–80s.
Cultural Context
The meatball sub occupies a special place in American comfort food — it's messy by design, impossible to eat without dripping, and beloved precisely for those qualities. It's a stadium staple, a late-night craving, a food that nobody eats delicately.
Recipe
Simmer beef-pork meatballs in marinara sauce for 20 minutes. Toast a 30cm sub roll under the broiler until crisp. Arrange 4–5 meatballs on the roll, spoon sauce generously over them, layer thick slices of mozzarella, and return to the broiler until the cheese is bubbling and browned in spots.