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History of Cuban Sandwich



Filed under : Keys History

1870s Since Cuba is only 90 miles from Key West, Florida, many Cubans moved to Key West Florida in the late 1800s to avoid Spanish Rule. The Cuban cigar manufacturers also wanted a safer place to manufacture. There were twenty-nine factories with twenty-one hundred employees producing 171,000 cigars a day in Key West. This marked the beginning of a significant Cuban influence in Key West and the rest of Florida that continues today.
 

1886 – Among the first of the large factories to come to Key West was “El Principe de Gales” owned by Vincente Martinez Ybor. In 1886, Mr. Ybor’s cigar factory was destroyed by a fire. After the fire, Mr. Ybor, induced by a committee that came from Tampa, moved his factory there. This was the beginning of Tampa’s competition as a cigar manufacturing center. It was also the beginning of Ybor City in Tampa and the end of the cigar industry in Key West.

From the opening of the first cigar factory in 1886 until the 1930’s, Ybor City was a flourishing Latin community and was the “Cigar Capital of the World.” As a result of severe depressions in Cuba, thousands of Cuban immigrants, both black and white, came to the Tampa, Florida area. In fact, Ybor City would later be called the “Havana” of America by the Florida Branch of the Federal Writers Project Archives in 1941.

The sandwiches were popular with the Cuban immigrants who worked in cigar factories, selling for 15 cents each. Somewhere in time, Italian Genoa salami was added to the Cuban sandwiches of the Tampa area.  In the late 1800s, the major ethnic groups of Ybor City were Cubans and Italians.

1896 – The first bakery, La Joven Francesca Bakery, to bake Cuban bread in Tampa was established by an Sicilan, Francisco Ferlita in 1896. The bakery was a major source of the community’s daily bread with bread selling for 3 and 5 cents a loaf.

In 1922, a fire destroyed the bakery, leaving only the brick oven standing. Ferlita rebuilt with a larger bakery, and each morning delivery boys distributed fresh bread throughout the community. A nail was placed on the outside wall of houses, and the delivery boys would slap the Cuban bread again the nail. The wall-hung bread would be waiting for the customer to retrieve. Firefighters used to come and get free hot Cuban bread to take back to the fire station. People used to congregate at the bakery to catch up on local news and drink some Cuban coffee. It was not unusual for this to happen in the middle of the night, while the bakers were kneading and baking the bread. During the peak years, the bakery could produce 1500 loaves of bread per day.

The bakery closed in 1973, and reopened as the Ybor City State Museum in 1974 as part of the museum complex, now known as the Ferlita Bakery.

Frank Garces Jr. sent me the following information me about his father, Frank Garces of Miami, Florida:

I read your article on the Cuban sandwich and was impressed with such detail on how where and how it started. The Cuban sandwich is dear to my heart because my father was the first person to sell the original Cuban sandwich in Miami.

My fathers name was Frank Garces, but everyone called him by his nickname Paco. I can attest that my father made and sold the first Cuban sandwich in Miami in 1947. My father was born in Palma Soriano, Oriente, Cuba, and he went to New York in 1927. Our family moved to Miami in 1947 when he bought his first bar called Do Drop Inn in northwest Miami, where he also sold sandwich’s, one of them he called the  “Cuban Sandwich.” He made his Cuban sandwiches using cut ham, roasted pork, Swiss cheese, sliced pickle, butter, and yellow mustard. He then pressed the sandwich to heat it. He never used mortadella or salami in his Cuban sandwiches as they do in Tampa.

In 1949 he sold that bar and bought a bigger one at a better location (N.W. 7th Ave and 26 Street) and converted it into a Spanish/American restaurant called the Knife & Fork. There were not many Cubans in Miami at that time and most of his customers were Americans. They ordered mostly Spanish food. By 1951, his Cuban sandwich became so popular and famous in Miami that he painted a large sign “Home of the Cuban Sandwich” on face of his restaurant. He owned this restaurant until he retired in 1969.

This photo is from 1950 from the inside of the restaurant with a sign in the background saying “Cuban sandwich $.60.

1947 – The oldest Cuban sandwich shop in Tampa, Florida, that is still in business today, is The Silver Ring Cafe. This cafe started as an Ybor City longshoremen’s bar in 1929. According to the story or legend of the cafe, in 1947, the owner smelled his staff’s preparation of Cuban sandwiches for their lunch. They smelled and tasted so good that they were put on the menu as a featured item. In 1997, the cafe moved to downtown Tampa and continues to served their award-winning Cuban sandwiches.

 

1959 – In Miami, the community known as Little Havana hosts a large Cuban population that fled to the United States after the 1959 Cuban revolution. The community keeps alive the rich culinary traditions of Cuba and has altered the eating style of South Florida. As stated above, the Cuban sandwiches in Miami do not have any kind of salami on them as the Tampa ones do.

Information from: http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/Sandwiches/CubanSandwich.htm



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