Pan Bagnat

  1. In a small bowl, whisk together the optional anchovies, the garlic, vinegar, mustard, salt and pepper.
  2. Slowly drizzle in oil, whisking constantly.
  3. If using a country loaf, pull out some soft interior crumb to form a cavity.
  4. If using a ciabatta, you won't need to eliminate anything.
  5. If using a Kirby cucumber, slice thinly.
  6. If using a regular cucumber, peel, halve lengthwise, and scoop out seeds from one half.
  7. Thinly slice seedless half.
  8. Add sliced cucumber to vinaigrette and toss well.
  9. Spread half the cucumbers on bottom of bread.
  10. Top with tomato and onion slices, then with tuna, basil, olives and egg slices.
  11. Top egg with remaining cucumbers and vinaigrette.
  12. Cover with second bread half and firmly press sandwich together.
  13. Wrap sandwich tightly in foil, waxed paper or plastic wrap, then place in a plastic bag.
  14. Put sandwich under a weight such as a cast-iron frying pan topped with a filled kettle, or have a child about 7 years old sit on it.
  15. Weight sandwich for 7 to 10 minutes, then flip and weight it for another 7 to 10 minutes (or as long as you can get the child to sit still).
  16. Unwrap, slice and serve immediately, or keep it wrapped for up to 8 hours before serving.

anchovy, garlic, red wine vinegar, mustard, salt, extra virgin olive oil, country, cucumber, tomato, red onion, tuna, basil, olives, egg

Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/11514 (may not work)

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