Tripleta
● Puerto RicoThe tripleta emerged from Puerto Rico's food truck culture in the late 20th century, likely in the 1970s or 1980s. It was designed as a maximalist sandwich, combining three meats on a long roll — a response to the question 'which meat do you want?' with the answer 'all of them.' The pan sobao (a soft, lard-enriched Puerto Rican roll) is essential.
The tripleta is the Puerto Rican party sandwich — substantial enough for a meal, versatile enough to adapt to whatever meats are available, satisfying in the way that only something with three types of protein can be. It is made and sold from cuchifrito stands, food trucks, and roadside stands across the island.
Warm sliced pernil (slow-roasted pork shoulder), grilled chicken breast slices, and thin beef steak on a hot griddle. Mix mayonnaise with ketchup and garlic powder into a sauce (mayo-ketchup, or moya). Split a pan sobao roll and toast cut-side down. Spread the moya on both sides, layer all three meats, add French fries, and sliced cheese. Close and press.