Mojo-soaked roast pork, sweet ham, Swiss, pickles, and mustard, pressed in buttered Cuban bread until it crackles like a secret — the sandwich two Florida cities still fight over.
A proper Cubano is architecture under pressure: five fillings in strict proportion, flattened between hot iron until the bread shatters, the cheese welds, and the pickle’s vinegar cuts a clean line through all that pork. It was built by and for cigar workers — a whole lunch in one hand — and it remains one of the great pressed sandwiches on earth. The keys are real mojo pork and a merciless press; everything else is assembly.
Before You Press
- The Cubano grew up in the cigar factories of Key West and Tampa’s Ybor City in the late 1800s, fed by Cuban immigrant lunch counters.
- The eternal feud: Tampa adds Genoa salami; Miami calls that heresy. (This recipe is Miami-orthodox; salami optional.)
- Mojo pork is the soul — shoulder marinated in sour orange, garlic, and oregano, roasted until shreddable.
- The order is law: mustard, pickles, pork, ham, Swiss — never lettuce, never tomato, never mayo.
- No plancha needed — a cast-iron pan plus something heavy presses just fine. Total: 15 min (with leftover pork) or a lazy afternoon (roasting it fresh).
A Sandwich Built by Cigar Smoke
The Cubano’s story runs through the cigar industry: when Cuban tabaqueros migrated to Key West and then to Tampa’s Ybor City in the 1880s, lunch counters sprang up beside the factories selling a “mixto” — roast pork and ham pressed in Cuban bread, portable, filling, and cheap enough for a roller’s wage. Ybor City’s immigrant mix left fingerprints on the sandwich: the Swiss cheese, the German-style pickle, and — in Tampa’s telling — a few slices of Genoa salami from the neighborhood’s Italians.
That salami is now the border of a cold war. Tampa claims the original with salami; Miami, whose Cuban community exploded after 1959, insists the true Cubano never met an Italian deli. Both cities have declared it their signature sandwich; family arguments have outlived the factories. What no one disputes: the bread must be Cuban-style — lard-enriched, thin-crusted, cottony inside — and the press is not optional. An unpressed Cubano is just a ham sandwich with ambitions.
Tampa says salami, Miami says never — the press says nothing and settles everything.
The Five Layers (and the Two Impostors)
| Layer | Job | Non-negotiable? |
|---|---|---|
| Yellow mustard | Sharp baseline on both faces | Yes — and only yellow |
| Dill pickles | The vinegar knife through the richness | Yes |
| Mojo roast pork | The soul — citrus, garlic, oregano | Absolutely |
| Sweet ham | Salt-sweet counterpoint | Yes |
| Swiss cheese | The weld that holds it together | Yes |
| Genoa salami | Tampa’s addition | Optional — pick your city |
| Lettuce / tomato / mayo | — | Never. Walk away. |

Mojo First, Mercy Never
Mojo (mo-ho) is Cuba’s citrus-garlic marinade: traditionally sour orange, approximated perfectly by half orange juice, half lime. Let pork shoulder sit in it overnight with crushed garlic, oregano, and cumin, then roast low (325°F, about 3 hours) until it pulls apart into juicy shreds with crackly edges. Yes, it’s a project — and yes, it’s the difference between a Cubano and a pressed ham-and-cheese. Make extra: mojo pork over rice is tomorrow’s reward.
The press is the second signature. Butter the outside of the bread, load the layers in order, and press under real weight on medium heat — a plancha if you have one, a cast-iron pan topped with a foil-wrapped brick (or a second pan plus canned goods) if you don’t. Three to four minutes a side, pressing steadily, until the bread is glassy-crisp and the Swiss has fused every layer into one. Rest it one minute, then the diagonal cut — tradition, and the best view in sandwich-making.

Good to Know
Cubano Law
- Bread ruling — Cuban bread first; a soft French loaf or bolillo second. Crusty baguette and ciabatta press wrong and fight back.
- Shortcut with honor — good deli roast pork brushed with warm mojo (citrus + garlic simmered 2 minutes) rescues a weeknight.
- Butter outside, mustard inside — butter is for the crust, never the filling.
- The medianoche — same fillings on sweet egg bread; Havana’s midnight-club sibling, worth knowing by name.
- Pressed and rich by design — half a Cubano with black beans is the traditional full lunch, and it’s plenty.
Watch It Made
Sometimes one minute of watching beats a page of reading — see the technique in motion, then scroll on for the full recipe card.

Video walkthrough via YouTube — tap to play (nothing loads until you do).
The Continental Table Recipe
Cuban Sandwich

Ingredients
The mojo pork
- 2 lbs pork shoulder
- ½ cup orange juice + ¼ cup lime juice
- 6 garlic cloves, crushed
- 1 tbsp oregano, 1 tsp cumin, 1½ tsp salt
- 2 tbsp olive oil
The build (per sandwich)
- Cuban bread (or soft French loaf), 8-inch length
- Yellow mustard, both faces
- Dill pickle slices
- Mojo pork + 2 slices sweet ham + 2 slices Swiss
- Softened butter for the crust
Method
- Mojo overnight. Blend the marinade, coat the pork, refrigerate overnight.
- Roast low. 325°F about 3 hours, covered for 2 then uncovered, until shreddable. Rest and pull.
- Build in order: mustard on both faces, pickles, warm pork, ham, Swiss. Close.
- Butter the outside of the bread, top and bottom.
- Press without mercy — medium heat, heavy weight, 3–4 minutes per side until glassy-crisp and fused.
- Rest one minute, cut on the diagonal, and serve — black beans or plantain chips alongside.
Pressed by History
The Cubano has survived a century of factory closings, city feuds, and salami disputes because the formula underneath is bulletproof: citrus pork, salt ham, melting Swiss, vinegar pickle, sharp mustard, crackling bread — every element pulling in a different direction, the press pulling them into one. Roast the mojo pork on Sunday and the rest of the week owes you sandwiches. Cut it on the diagonal. Admire the layers. Take the first half; negotiate the second.
Quick Answers
What is a Cuban sandwich?
A pressed sandwich of mojo roast pork, sweet ham, Swiss cheese, dill pickles, and yellow mustard on Cuban bread — born in the cigar-factory lunch counters of Key West and Tampa.
Does a real Cubano have salami?
In Tampa, yes — Genoa salami is the Ybor City tradition. In Miami, absolutely not. Both cities are certain; choose your side.
What is mojo?
Cuba’s citrus-garlic marinade — traditionally sour orange with garlic, oregano, and cumin. Half orange juice, half lime juice is the faithful substitute.
What bread do you use for a Cuban sandwich?
Cuban bread — thin-crusted and soft inside. A soft French loaf presses acceptably; crusty baguettes and ciabatta don’t.
How do you press a Cubano without a plancha?
Cast-iron pan on medium with a heavy weight on the sandwich — a second pan pressed down, a foil-wrapped brick — 3–4 minutes a side.
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