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Salade Niçoise, but Make It a Sandwich

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Here is something I’ve never heard in my life:

“I prefer my pasta deconstructed, with plain noodles next to each individual sauce component so I can assemble the perfect bite exactly as I wish.”

Frankly, I’m not sure I’ve heard a comment like that about any dish. Yet when it comes to Niçoise salad, many remain stuck on the idea that serving all the components separately with the seasonings and dressing on the side is the best way to do it, as if such extreme customization is the logical highest priority.

This is a classic case of confirmation bias—people prefer the salad served this way because that’s how they’re used to seeing it. But, as I’ve written before, there is neither clear historic precedent nor culinary rationale for that approach. It is much better dressed, seasoned, and at least somewhat combined, just like any other good salad would be. Sure, you can artfully arrange the components in the salad bowl, but there is nothing exceptional about a Niçoise that makes it better in an unfinished state.

Why am I starting a piece about pan bagnat, the famous Niçoise tuna and tomato sandwich, with a return to my years-old polemic about the salad? Mostly because I’m a stubborn SOB who can’t let go of an argument. But also because it’s directly relevant here: Pan bagnat is really just a Niçoise salad sandwich. We need to agree about what a Niçoise salad can (and arguably should) be if we want to make a great sandwich out of it.

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

The first step to achieving that is doing exactly what I argued for in my Niçoise salad recipe—it must be seasoned, dressed, and assembled thoughtfully.

Now, I’ll admit, I took some liberties in my salade Niçoise recipe. I added potatoes and green beans because they’ve become common in many renditions outside of Nice, even if not considered to be “authentic.” I won’t be adding those ingredients here, because I don’t think the sandwich benefits from them.

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

That’s just as well, because there’s plenty else to add to the sandwich, and some important technical details for how to make it great. Follow these guidelines and you’ll get a superlative pan bagnat that is both light and fresh thanks to the many seasonal vegetables in the filling, and also rich and satisfying with its generous serving of hearty boiled eggs, plenty of briny olives and fragrant olive oil, meaty tuna, and salty anchovies.

Pan Bagnat’s Essential Ingredients and Its Optional Ones

Just as with a Niçoise salad, there are some ingredients one would expect to find in just about any pan bagnat, and some that you can add or leave out depending on your preference and the season. Please don’t take this division between “required” and “optional” too rigidly, it’s not an official list printed and framed by the Société Historique pour la Préservation et la Défense du Pan Bagnat Traditionnel*, but more a rough guideline intended to help you think about what the core ingredients are versus the nice-to-haves.

[*This is not real, though I would not be shocked to learn that such an organization existed.]**

[**Update: There IS a real organization because of course there is! HT to David Lebovitz for that little tidbit.]

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Essential Ingredients

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Optional Ingredients

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost
Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

The Key Techniques for Pan Bagnat Success

Some of my tips, like making sure to use very ripe, in-season tomatoes, seeking high-quality oil-packed tuna (ventresca in particular) and anchovies, and scooping out some of the tender crumb from the rolls to pack in more of the fillings are in the ingredients rundown above. There are a few more technical details that will make a big difference in your results, and they include:

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost
Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Bring 3 quarts (2.8L) water to a boil in a large pot and prepare an ice bath. Carefully lower eggs into pot and continue to boil for 30 seconds. Cover tightly, reduce heat to low (water should maintain a bare simmer), and continue cooking for 9 minutes for jammy yolks or 11 minutes for hard-cooked yolks. Immediately transfer eggs to ice water and allow to cool for at least 15 minutes, then peel under cool running water. Quarter eggs lengthwise and set aside.

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Meanwhile, if using fava beans, open up fava bean pods and remove individual beans. Discard pods. Bring a medium pot of salted water to a boil and prepare an ice bath. Add fava beans to pot and cook until just tender, about 2 minutes. Transfer fava beans to ice bath and allow to chill for 1 minute. Carefully peel off and discard the outer skin from each bean and set aside.

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Core and slice 3/4 pound (340g) of tomatoes into 1/4-inch-thick wedges; set aside. Split remaining 1/2 pound (230g) tomatoes in half horizontally. Set a box grater into a large bowl. Rub cut faces of split tomatoes over the large holes of a box grater, using the flattened palm of your hand to move the tomatoes back and forth. The flesh should be grated off, while the skin remains intact in your hand. Discard skin and season tomato pulp with kosher salt to taste.

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

In a large mixing bowl, combine fava beans (if using), green pepper rings, artichoke heart (if using), breakfast radish (if using), olives, scallions, and basil leaves. Drizzle generously with olive oil and season with salt to taste, and toss to coat evenly (if desired, you can also mix in a light splash of red wine vinegar).

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Split rolls in half horizontally and, using your fingers, scoop out and discard some of the tender crumb from both the top and bottom halves. Rub smashed garlic cloves all over cut sides of top and bottom halves of each roll to infuse the bread with garlic flavor. Discard any remaining garlic,. Spoon grated tomatoes all over cut sides of rolls and drizzle with olive oil (you may not need to use all the grated tomatoes).

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Lightly season sliced tomatoes with salt, then layer the sliced tomatoes, boiled egg quarters, flaked tuna, anchovy fillets, and dressed vegetables onto the bottom halves of each roll. Drizzle generously with additional olive oil, season with pepper (if desired), then close sandwiches, wrap tightly in parchment, foil, or reusable wrappers and let stand at least 20 minutes or up to 1 hour. Serve.

Serious Eats / Jordan Provost

Notes

Depending on where you live, fresh fava beans may not be available at the same time that tomatoes are at their best. If you can find them and want to include them, please do; if not, it’s okay to skip.

This is a sandwich meant to highlight the best of what’s in season, most importantly the tomatoes, along with high-quality canned or jarred tuna and eggs. Much of the rest is optional and up to what your local shopping conditions and personal preferences support. Fava beans come in large pods, but how many beans are in each pod and how large those beans is variable, making it difficult to offer an exact volume.

You can use many types of tomato in this sandwich, including plum tomatoes, heirloom tomatoes, garden tomatoes, and more. What is most important is that they are high-quality summer tomatoes at the peak of ripeness. This sandwich will suffer from under-ripe supermarket tomatoes or ones that are out of season.

While canned tuna often comes in a 5-ounce can size, not all tuna comes in that size. Ventresca tuna, which is the fattier belly cut that I highly recommend in this sandwich, is sold in a wide range of sizes, from 4.5-ounce tins to 7-ounce jars. Any of these will work as even the smaller size packaging will have enough tuna for the sandwiches.

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