Cheesesteaks: Difference between revisions
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The '''cheesesteak''' (or '''Philly cheesesteak''') is Philadelphia's most famous | The '''cheesesteak''' (or '''Philly cheesesteak''') is Philadelphia's most famous food: '''thinly sliced beef''' and '''melted cheese''' on a '''long Italian roll'''. [[Pat's King of Steaks]] invented it in '''1930'''. Cheese came later, in the 1940s. Since then, it's become an international symbol of the city and a must-visit stop for tourists. Philadelphians obsess over how it should be made, what goes in it, how to order it. They take this seriously. The cheesesteak isn't just food in Philadelphia. It's identity.<ref name="cheesesteak-history">{{cite web |url=https://www.visitphilly.com |title=The Philadelphia Cheesesteak |publisher=Visit Philadelphia |access-date=December 31, 2025}}</ref> | ||
== History == | == History == | ||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
=== Invention (1930) === | === Invention (1930) === | ||
'''Pat Olivieri''' | '''Pat Olivieri''' created the cheesesteak in '''1930'''. Here's what happened: | ||
'''The origin | '''The origin:''' | ||
* Pat | * Pat ran a hot dog stand in South Philadelphia | ||
* | * He grilled some sliced beef on a roll one day | ||
* A cab driver | * A cab driver saw it and wanted one | ||
* Word spread | * Word spread fast. Beef sandwiches became his thing. | ||
No cheese at first. Just meat and onions. | |||
=== Adding Cheese (1940s) === | === Adding Cheese (1940s) === | ||
The '''1940s''' brought cheese into the picture: | |||
''' | '''Nobody agrees on who did it:''' | ||
* Some | * Some say Pat's added provolone | ||
* Others | * Others point to a manager at Pat's | ||
* | * Either way, it transformed everything | ||
* | * The sandwich got its new name | ||
=== The Rise of Geno's (1966) === | === The Rise of Geno's (1966) === | ||
'''Joey Vento''' opened [[Geno's Steaks]] in '''1966''' | '''Joey Vento''' opened [[Geno's Steaks]] in '''1966'''. Right across the street from Pat's. This sparked the rivalry that still exists today. Both places pushed each other to stay great. Both became destinations. | ||
=== National Fame === | === National Fame === | ||
Late 20th century brought the cheesesteak to the rest of the country: | |||
''' | '''How it happened:''' | ||
* Food | * Food writers discovered it | ||
* Presidential | * Presidential candidates started showing up for photo ops | ||
* | * Movies and TV shows featured it | ||
* | * Now the whole world knows about it | ||
== The Sandwich == | == The Sandwich == | ||
| Line 57: | Line 52: | ||
=== Essential Components === | === Essential Components === | ||
''' | '''A real cheesesteak needs these things:''' | ||
'''The meat:''' | '''The meat:''' | ||
* '''Thinly sliced ribeye | * '''Thinly sliced ribeye''' (or rib-eye) | ||
* | * Cooked on a flat griddle | ||
* '''Chopped | * '''Chopped up while cooking''' (that's the Philadelphia way) | ||
* | * Seasoned right | ||
'''The cheese:''' | '''The cheese:''' | ||
* '''Cheez Whiz | * '''Cheez Whiz''' - The classic, the real deal | ||
* '''American cheese | * '''American cheese''' - Melts like a dream | ||
* '''Provolone | * '''Provolone''' - For the traditionalists | ||
'''The roll:''' | '''The roll:''' | ||
* '''Italian hoagie roll | * '''Italian hoagie roll''' | ||
* | * Crunchy on the outside. Soft inside. | ||
* Fresh | * Fresh. Never stale. | ||
* | * The right size to hold the meat | ||
'''Optional | '''Optional stuff:''' | ||
* '''Fried onions | * '''Fried onions''' ("wit" means with, "witout" means without) | ||
* Mushrooms | * Mushrooms | ||
* Peppers | * Peppers | ||
* Hot sauce | * Hot sauce if you want | ||
=== What It Is NOT === | === What It Is NOT === | ||
''' | '''Don't make these mistakes:''' | ||
* NOT | * NOT green peppers (that's a "pepper steak") | ||
* NOT | * NOT lettuce and tomato (that's a steak hoagie) | ||
* NOT | * NOT pizza sauce (that's a "pizza steak") | ||
* NOT thin | * NOT sliced thin like roast beef | ||
* NOT ground beef | * NOT made with ground beef | ||
== The Cheese Debate == | == The Cheese Debate == | ||
| Line 95: | Line 90: | ||
=== Cheez Whiz === | === Cheez Whiz === | ||
'''The | '''The people's choice:''' | ||
* | * It melts perfectly into the meat | ||
* | * Completely integrated | ||
* Most | * Most Philadelphia option | ||
* | * Yeah, it was invented after the sandwich, but it's canon now | ||
=== American Cheese === | === American Cheese === | ||
'''The practical | '''The practical option:''' | ||
* | * Melts smooth and stays mild | ||
* | * Fewer arguments | ||
* Works | * Works great with the meat | ||
* | * Lots of people prefer it | ||
=== Provolone === | === Provolone === | ||
'''The traditional choice:''' | '''The real traditional choice:''' | ||
* Sharp | * Sharp and flavorful | ||
* Italian | * Italian roots | ||
* Doesn't melt as smoothly | * Doesn't melt quite as smoothly | ||
* | * Some purists swear by it | ||
=== The Real Answer === | === The Real Answer === | ||
''' | '''All three work:''' | ||
* | * Personal preference wins | ||
* | * The arguing is part of the whole thing | ||
* Try all three | * Try all three, then decide | ||
* | * Your neighborhood might have a favorite | ||
== Ordering Etiquette == | == Ordering Etiquette == | ||
| Line 129: | Line 124: | ||
=== The Language === | === The Language === | ||
At [[Pat's King of Steaks]], [[Geno's Steaks]], and | At [[Pat's King of Steaks]], [[Geno's Steaks]], and real shops: | ||
''' | '''How it works:''' | ||
1. | 1. Tell them what cheese you want | ||
2. Say "wit" (with onions) or "witout" (without) | 2. Say "wit" (with onions) or "witout" (without) | ||
3. Example: "Whiz wit" | 3. Example: "Whiz wit" means Cheez Whiz and onions | ||
4. Have | 4. Have your money ready | ||
''' | '''Real examples:''' | ||
* "Whiz wit" | * "Whiz wit" = Cheez Whiz with onions | ||
* "American witout" | * "American witout" = American cheese, no onions | ||
* "Provolone wit" | * "Provolone wit" = Provolone with onions | ||
=== The Pressure === | === The Pressure === | ||
''' | '''Heads up:''' | ||
* | * The line moves fast | ||
* Know | * Know what you want before you order | ||
* Don't | * Don't slow things down | ||
* | * Cash in hand | ||
* | * Step aside once you've ordered | ||
=== The Experience === | === The Experience === | ||
The | The rush is '''part of tradition'''. It's not meanness. It's efficiency. Locals respect it. Tourists learn it. It's part of the ritual. | ||
== Famous Cheesesteak Spots == | == Famous Cheesesteak Spots == | ||
| Line 164: | Line 155: | ||
'''[[Pat's King of Steaks]]:''' | '''[[Pat's King of Steaks]]:''' | ||
* The original | * The original from 1930 | ||
* 9th and Passyunk | * Corner of 9th and Passyunk | ||
* | * Never closes | ||
* | * Meat is chopped Philadelphia style | ||
'''[[Geno's Steaks]]:''' | '''[[Geno's Steaks]]:''' | ||
* | * Opened in 1966 across the street | ||
* | * Bright neon | ||
* Slightly different | * Slightly different technique | ||
* | * Also open 24 hours | ||
Trying both is tradition. You decide which you like more. | |||
=== Other Top Spots === | === Other Top Spots === | ||
| Line 181: | Line 172: | ||
'''[[Jim's Steaks]]:''' | '''[[Jim's Steaks]]:''' | ||
* South Street | * South Street | ||
* Art Deco | * Art Deco place | ||
* | * People wait in long lines | ||
* | * Worth it | ||
'''[[John's Roast Pork]]:''' | '''[[John's Roast Pork]]:''' | ||
* James Beard Award | * Won a James Beard Award | ||
* Many | * Many locals say it's the best in the city | ||
* Industrial | * Industrial neighborhood | ||
* Limited hours | * Limited hours though | ||
'''[[Dalessandro's Steaks]]:''' | '''[[Dalessandro's Steaks]]:''' | ||
* Roxborough | * Out in Roxborough | ||
* | * Huge portions | ||
* Worth the trip | * Worth making the trip | ||
* | * Neighborhood favorite | ||
'''[[Tony Luke's]]:''' | '''[[Tony Luke's]]:''' | ||
* South Philadelphia | * South Philadelphia | ||
* | * Famous for roast pork too | ||
* | * Several locations now | ||
* Bobby Flay Throwdown | * Bobby Flay even did a Throwdown there | ||
=== The Local Debate === | === The Local Debate === | ||
''' | '''Real Philadelphians know:''' | ||
* | * Neighborhood spots beat the tourist traps | ||
* | * They might be better | ||
* | * Everyone has their own favorite | ||
* | * Quality varies by area | ||
Pat's and Geno's | Pat's and Geno's pull the tourists. Locals have other places they love. | ||
== The Pat's vs. Geno's Debate == | == The Pat's vs. Geno's Debate == | ||
| Line 217: | Line 208: | ||
=== The Rivalry === | === The Rivalry === | ||
This '''Pat's vs. Geno's''' thing is legendary. It goes deep. | |||
'''Pat's | '''Pat's people say:''' | ||
* | * They were first | ||
* | * The meat is chopped finer | ||
* | * It's the real thing | ||
* | * No fancy neon | ||
'''Geno's | '''Geno's people say:''' | ||
* | * Bigger meat chunks | ||
* Better flavor | * Better flavor | ||
* | * The neon's cool | ||
* | * Better technique | ||
=== The Answer === | === The Answer === | ||
''' | '''Just try both:''' | ||
* They're across the street | * They're across the street from each other | ||
* Get half | * Get half from each one | ||
* | * Make up your own mind | ||
* | * Jump into the argument | ||
=== The Real Answer === | === The Real Answer === | ||
Many Philadelphians: | Many actual Philadelphians: | ||
* | * Don't care for Pat's or Geno's | ||
* | * Think they're just for tourists | ||
* Have their own neighborhood | * Have their own neighborhood spot | ||
* | * Find the whole thing kind of funny | ||
== Cultural Significance == | == Cultural Significance == | ||
| Line 251: | Line 242: | ||
=== Philadelphia Identity === | === Philadelphia Identity === | ||
The cheesesteak | The cheesesteak says everything about Philadelphia: | ||
* Working-class | * Working-class roots | ||
* No | * No pretense | ||
* Messy | * Messy and real and delicious | ||
* | * Everyone can afford it | ||
=== Political Ritual === | === Political Ritual === | ||
''' | '''Running for office? You have to eat a cheesesteak:''' | ||
* | * Every campaign needs the photo | ||
* | * If you order wrong, people notice | ||
* [https://biography.wiki/j/John_Kerry John Kerry] | * [https://biography.wiki/j/John_Kerry John Kerry] ordered Swiss cheese (mistake) | ||
* Locals judge | * Locals judge whether you're authentic | ||
=== National Symbol === | === National Symbol === | ||
Philadelphia's food ambassador: | |||
* | * People worldwide know it | ||
* Tourists must try it | |||
* | * Other cities try to imitate it | ||
* | |||
== Eating a Cheesesteak == | == Eating a Cheesesteak == | ||
| Line 279: | Line 269: | ||
=== Technique === | === Technique === | ||
''' | '''The right way:''' | ||
* Lean forward (it will drip) | * Lean forward (it will drip) | ||
* | * Keep the meat inside the roll | ||
* | * You'll need napkins | ||
* | * Embrace the mess | ||
* | * Both hands | ||
=== Common Mistakes === | === Common Mistakes === | ||
'''What tourists | '''What tourists get wrong:''' | ||
* | * They can't decide | ||
* | * They ask what's in it | ||
* | * They want lettuce and tomato | ||
* | * They take forever | ||
* | * They try to stay clean | ||
== The Best Cheesesteak | == The Best Cheesesteak == | ||
=== The Eternal Question === | === The Eternal Question === | ||
"What's the best cheesesteak?" | "What's the best cheesesteak in Philadelphia?" Get different answers from different people: | ||
'''Tourist answer:''' Pat's or Geno's | '''Tourist answer:''' Pat's or Geno's | ||
''' | '''Hipster answer:''' Jim's Steaks | ||
''' | '''Expert answer:''' John's Roast Pork | ||
''' | '''Local answer:''' "The spot near my house" | ||
=== The Truth === | === The Truth === | ||
'''There | '''There's no right answer:''' | ||
* | * It comes down to what you like | ||
* | * Even the same place varies day to day | ||
* | * Your mood matters | ||
* The | * The whole point is the debate itself | ||
== See Also == | == See Also == | ||
Latest revision as of 17:10, 23 April 2026
The cheesesteak (or Philly cheesesteak) is Philadelphia's most famous food: thinly sliced beef and melted cheese on a long Italian roll. Pat's King of Steaks invented it in 1930. Cheese came later, in the 1940s. Since then, it's become an international symbol of the city and a must-visit stop for tourists. Philadelphians obsess over how it should be made, what goes in it, how to order it. They take this seriously. The cheesesteak isn't just food in Philadelphia. It's identity.[1]
History
Invention (1930)
Pat Olivieri created the cheesesteak in 1930. Here's what happened:
The origin:
- Pat ran a hot dog stand in South Philadelphia
- He grilled some sliced beef on a roll one day
- A cab driver saw it and wanted one
- Word spread fast. Beef sandwiches became his thing.
No cheese at first. Just meat and onions.
Adding Cheese (1940s)
The 1940s brought cheese into the picture:
Nobody agrees on who did it:
- Some say Pat's added provolone
- Others point to a manager at Pat's
- Either way, it transformed everything
- The sandwich got its new name
The Rise of Geno's (1966)
Joey Vento opened Geno's Steaks in 1966. Right across the street from Pat's. This sparked the rivalry that still exists today. Both places pushed each other to stay great. Both became destinations.
National Fame
Late 20th century brought the cheesesteak to the rest of the country:
How it happened:
- Food writers discovered it
- Presidential candidates started showing up for photo ops
- Movies and TV shows featured it
- Now the whole world knows about it
The Sandwich
Essential Components
A real cheesesteak needs these things:
The meat:
- Thinly sliced ribeye (or rib-eye)
- Cooked on a flat griddle
- Chopped up while cooking (that's the Philadelphia way)
- Seasoned right
The cheese:
- Cheez Whiz - The classic, the real deal
- American cheese - Melts like a dream
- Provolone - For the traditionalists
The roll:
- Italian hoagie roll
- Crunchy on the outside. Soft inside.
- Fresh. Never stale.
- The right size to hold the meat
Optional stuff:
- Fried onions ("wit" means with, "witout" means without)
- Mushrooms
- Peppers
- Hot sauce if you want
What It Is NOT
Don't make these mistakes:
- NOT green peppers (that's a "pepper steak")
- NOT lettuce and tomato (that's a steak hoagie)
- NOT pizza sauce (that's a "pizza steak")
- NOT sliced thin like roast beef
- NOT made with ground beef
The Cheese Debate
Cheez Whiz
The people's choice:
- It melts perfectly into the meat
- Completely integrated
- Most Philadelphia option
- Yeah, it was invented after the sandwich, but it's canon now
American Cheese
The practical option:
- Melts smooth and stays mild
- Fewer arguments
- Works great with the meat
- Lots of people prefer it
Provolone
The real traditional choice:
- Sharp and flavorful
- Italian roots
- Doesn't melt quite as smoothly
- Some purists swear by it
The Real Answer
All three work:
- Personal preference wins
- The arguing is part of the whole thing
- Try all three, then decide
- Your neighborhood might have a favorite
Ordering Etiquette
The Language
At Pat's King of Steaks, Geno's Steaks, and real shops:
How it works: 1. Tell them what cheese you want 2. Say "wit" (with onions) or "witout" (without) 3. Example: "Whiz wit" means Cheez Whiz and onions 4. Have your money ready
Real examples:
- "Whiz wit" = Cheez Whiz with onions
- "American witout" = American cheese, no onions
- "Provolone wit" = Provolone with onions
The Pressure
Heads up:
- The line moves fast
- Know what you want before you order
- Don't slow things down
- Cash in hand
- Step aside once you've ordered
The Experience
The rush is part of tradition. It's not meanness. It's efficiency. Locals respect it. Tourists learn it. It's part of the ritual.
Famous Cheesesteak Spots
The Big Two
- The original from 1930
- Corner of 9th and Passyunk
- Never closes
- Meat is chopped Philadelphia style
- Opened in 1966 across the street
- Bright neon
- Slightly different technique
- Also open 24 hours
Trying both is tradition. You decide which you like more.
Other Top Spots
- South Street
- Art Deco place
- People wait in long lines
- Worth it
- Won a James Beard Award
- Many locals say it's the best in the city
- Industrial neighborhood
- Limited hours though
- Out in Roxborough
- Huge portions
- Worth making the trip
- Neighborhood favorite
- South Philadelphia
- Famous for roast pork too
- Several locations now
- Bobby Flay even did a Throwdown there
The Local Debate
Real Philadelphians know:
- Neighborhood spots beat the tourist traps
- They might be better
- Everyone has their own favorite
- Quality varies by area
Pat's and Geno's pull the tourists. Locals have other places they love.
The Pat's vs. Geno's Debate
The Rivalry
This Pat's vs. Geno's thing is legendary. It goes deep.
Pat's people say:
- They were first
- The meat is chopped finer
- It's the real thing
- No fancy neon
Geno's people say:
- Bigger meat chunks
- Better flavor
- The neon's cool
- Better technique
The Answer
Just try both:
- They're across the street from each other
- Get half from each one
- Make up your own mind
- Jump into the argument
The Real Answer
Many actual Philadelphians:
- Don't care for Pat's or Geno's
- Think they're just for tourists
- Have their own neighborhood spot
- Find the whole thing kind of funny
Cultural Significance
Philadelphia Identity
The cheesesteak says everything about Philadelphia:
- Working-class roots
- No pretense
- Messy and real and delicious
- Everyone can afford it
Political Ritual
Running for office? You have to eat a cheesesteak:
- Every campaign needs the photo
- If you order wrong, people notice
- John Kerry ordered Swiss cheese (mistake)
- Locals judge whether you're authentic
National Symbol
Philadelphia's food ambassador:
- People worldwide know it
- Tourists must try it
- Other cities try to imitate it
Eating a Cheesesteak
Technique
The right way:
- Lean forward (it will drip)
- Keep the meat inside the roll
- You'll need napkins
- Embrace the mess
- Both hands
Common Mistakes
What tourists get wrong:
- They can't decide
- They ask what's in it
- They want lettuce and tomato
- They take forever
- They try to stay clean
The Best Cheesesteak
The Eternal Question
"What's the best cheesesteak in Philadelphia?" Get different answers from different people:
Tourist answer: Pat's or Geno's Hipster answer: Jim's Steaks Expert answer: John's Roast Pork Local answer: "The spot near my house"
The Truth
There's no right answer:
- It comes down to what you like
- Even the same place varies day to day
- Your mood matters
- The whole point is the debate itself
See Also
- Pat's King of Steaks
- Geno's Steaks
- Jim's Steaks
- John's Roast Pork
- Tony Luke's
- Hoagies
- Philadelphia Food Culture
References
- ↑ "The Philadelphia Cheesesteak". Visit Philadelphia. Retrieved December 31, 2025