Monday, April 19, 2010

Of Sandwiches and control

What might buying a sandwich have to do with control issues one might wonder!
A lot, especially if you pay attention.

On one end of the spectrum is Jimmy John's where you in effect, cede all control over how your sandwich turns out. About 120-130 seconds after you uncertainly utter the number of the sandwich you want, and while you were still thinking of the veggies you might request or dressing you might want to hold, to assuage your guilt, the sandwich wrapped up is in your hands. If you start getting proactive and start rattling off your preferences right after choosing the sandwich number, you might as well be talking to the wind. The friendly order taker patiently waits through, what apparently she thinks is your "yadda yadda ... blah blah ...", until you pause to catch a breath, when she yells only your number to the production crew.
It makes you wonder though, somebody must have sat down to decide how much lettuce or mayo should go or not in a sandwich. From the taste of the finished product, that somebody seems less likely to be a chef and more likely a corporate head honcho.
See now what I meant about control? For your lunch, you in effect ceded control to a corporate suit to decide its specifics. I am sure it makes you feel so much better :-)

If it bothers you though, there is the other end of the spectrum in - Subway where the preparer is an artist of a very liberal predisposition and in effect refuses to accept the certainty of anything on her canvas - your sandwich, even bread. So you make choices over every little detail - salad/sandwich/wrap, bread (6 kinds), cheese (no,yes,double out of 5 kinds), toasted or not, meat selection and quantity, veggies out of a dozen choices and finally dressing - out of yet another dozen choices.
You cannot just point to a sandwich off the board and hope to escape the decision-tree that ensues. At the end of which, you have lost all interest in food and just want to pay and escape their clutches. No guarantee of taste here either, but at least it was you in the driver's seat.

If either extreme isn't for you, there is a middle of the road at Potbelly's where you have either choice. Pick a number and let them do it all, or pick a number and customize. They achieved this nirvana by limiting your choices to a handful (again that head honcho, but at least not a micro-manager). But if this were it life would be too simple. I have been there many times, but somewhere they manage to sneak in, what seems like a pint of olive oil into the sandwich, which drips to the wrapper, smears on your fingers and seems to stay with you for at least a week.

Any better suggestions? All I want is a decent sandwich.

3 comments:

Himanshu Gaurav said...

What a wonderfully written piece. You've got talent bro :-)

alok said...

good piece on sandwiches. i checked my way and find that i dont find many choices in sandwich when out of my home and eat what i get (preferably grilled and with cheese).
at home, i just check what i have got and put it all into one to make a maha-sandwich. but in both the cases i find i am happy ceding control. what sandwich i get is not in my control but how i enjoy it is in my hands! or is it ? lemme check.. i take a bite, chew it slowly, let it melt , if it has got masala in indian style take a juice to wash it down, watch it going down, hitting the floor, mingling with the elements which are intent on breaking it down into a pulpy mass and giving me a feeling of 'now back to business as usual for next 3 hrs'. ah! what a feeling!! still it seems, there is little element of control on what happens to the sandwich. not looking for control, however does something good - i feel liberated!!
is there something like 'nirvana sandwich' ?

cdevesh said...

Thanks for your comments guys!
Alok - LOL!! :)))