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  • 2022-09-02 (xsd:date)
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  • Does 'Club' in 'Club Sandwich' Stand for 'Chicken Lettuce Under Bacon'? (en)
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  • A considerable number of people on the internet appear to believe that a food item known as the club sandwich got its name from the acronym of its most common ingredients: Chicken and Lettuce Under Bacon. While there's a modicum of logic and precedent to this notion (after all, BLT is an acronym for Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato), history doesn't support it. Quite the opposite. Club sandwiches have been around for a long, long time. There are references to the popular lunch item and recipes for making it in published sources dating back to the 1890s. Here, for example, is a club sandwich recipe from Janet McKenzie Hill's Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties, published in 1899: Despite the club sandwich's culinary longevity, however, the theory that it was named for its ingredients appears to be no older than the late 1990s, and may well have originated on the internet. We scoured book and periodical archives and found no references to any version of chicken and lettuce under bacon in any text published prior to 2018. Etymologist Barry Popik reports finding this Chicken Lettuce Under Bacon reference posted in a Google Groups discussion dated Dec. 8, 1998: As of this writing, we've not been able to find any published mentions predating this. In another blog post, Popik flatly asserts that club sandwich is not, in fact, an acronym, but rather a backronym (or back acronym, meaning the claim was made after the fact). Based on our own research, we agree. So, where did the name club sandwich really come from? Popik writes: (en)
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