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Getting spicy with the beef

Salt beef is the traditional favourite here, but in the US, pastrami is king

September 2, 2016 08:45
01092016 Micah Wexlers  OG  pastrami sandwich credit  Vanessa Stump Wexlers Deli

ByAnthea Gerrie, Anthea Gerrie

3 min read

Micah Wexler has good looks and a celebrity following - but what he's best known for is pastrami.

This deli staple, far preferred to salt beef in the US, is a big deal to American Jews and non-Jews alike, even though it's underappreciated and hard to find properly made in the UK.  The fondness our Stateside brethren have for it could be because it was brought to America by a 19th century wave of Romanian-Jewish immigrants who settled on New York's Lower East Side rather than London's Spitalfields, creating a market for it in the Big Apple. As their descendants headed west, the spiced-meat treat spread to Chicago and California.

British Jews never got the same exposure to the real thing in the early days, and mass-produced attempts at popularising pastrami have done it no justice: "There are too many poor, industrially made versions circulating here; people don't get the access to properly made pastrami they do in the States," explains Ben Tish of London's Salt Yard group, who makes his own pastrami for home consumption.

Justin Davies also makes pastrami for patrons of the north-west London Delisserie chain as does Mark Ogus, whose pastrami sandwiches are a staple at Monty's Jewish Deli in Bermondsey. Yet it doesn't always sell out: "The Brits are much more used to salt beef," says Ogus, while Davies adds: "Pastrami is better understood in South Africa, where we Delisserie owners come from. In the Delisserie, it sells most successful as thinly sliced pastrami 'bacon' to serve with fried eggs."