 
                
                    Please fave and comment on the original submission here:  http://www.furaffinity.net/view/5695294/
A tower of delight that takes a mighty bite to eat from the kitchens of lawrencexviii
 lawrencexviii 
Ingredients:
4 Thick Plain Slice Bread
A slice of ham
A Egg
2 German Sausages Cut in Half Makes it into 4
3 Cheese
Cucumber
Tomato slice
Mayonnaise
Ketchup
Note:For Those Who Had Huge Mouth That Can OM NOM NOM That 4 Big Bread Sandwich,I Dont Mind ^^
How To Make Sandwich
1:Cut 4 Slice Of Bread (Thick Size Slice Bread)
2:And Then Put a Sliced German Frankfurter On The Below First.
3:Add A Mayo on a Bread
4:Toppings on The Cheese (Put Cheese First Then Cucumber and Tomato Slice)
5:Put A Bread Again.
6:add a Egg
7:Repeat The Step 3 and 4
8:Add A Bread Again.
9:add a Ham
10:Repeat again step 3 and 4
11:and lastly put the bread on the top
12:There You Have It a 4 Layer Sandwich
Please fave and comment on the original submission here: http://www.furaffinity.net/view/5695294/
Allergy warning – recipe contains dairy products
Note from yelleena
 yelleena
I love this because it brings back memories of my childhood when my family would get together and make challenging sandwiches called mini-dagwoods. I guess my age slip is showing but we had a hell of a lot fun, usually on a Saturday for lunch. My dad seemed to have the biggest mouth ever as he would let one of us make his for him as a challenge (either that or he was just being lazy and getting away with it).
Thankyou lawrencexviii for rekindling a treasured memory for this lioness.
 lawrencexviii for rekindling a treasured memory for this lioness.
A little history: A Dagwood sandwich is a tall, multi-layered sandwich made with a variety of meats, cheeses and condiments. It was named after Dagwood Bumstead, a central character in the comic strip Blondie, who is frequently illustrated making enormous sandwiches. The first drawing of this type of sandwich has been dated back to 1936
            A tower of delight that takes a mighty bite to eat from the kitchens of
 lawrencexviii
 lawrencexviii ******************************Ingredients:
4 Thick Plain Slice Bread
A slice of ham
A Egg
2 German Sausages Cut in Half Makes it into 4
3 Cheese
Cucumber
Tomato slice
Mayonnaise
Ketchup
Note:For Those Who Had Huge Mouth That Can OM NOM NOM That 4 Big Bread Sandwich,I Dont Mind ^^
How To Make Sandwich
1:Cut 4 Slice Of Bread (Thick Size Slice Bread)
2:And Then Put a Sliced German Frankfurter On The Below First.
3:Add A Mayo on a Bread
4:Toppings on The Cheese (Put Cheese First Then Cucumber and Tomato Slice)
5:Put A Bread Again.
6:add a Egg
7:Repeat The Step 3 and 4
8:Add A Bread Again.
9:add a Ham
10:Repeat again step 3 and 4
11:and lastly put the bread on the top
12:There You Have It a 4 Layer Sandwich
******************************Please fave and comment on the original submission here: http://www.furaffinity.net/view/5695294/
Allergy warning – recipe contains dairy products
******************************Note from
 yelleena
 yelleenaI love this because it brings back memories of my childhood when my family would get together and make challenging sandwiches called mini-dagwoods. I guess my age slip is showing but we had a hell of a lot fun, usually on a Saturday for lunch. My dad seemed to have the biggest mouth ever as he would let one of us make his for him as a challenge (either that or he was just being lazy and getting away with it).
Thankyou
 lawrencexviii for rekindling a treasured memory for this lioness.
 lawrencexviii for rekindling a treasured memory for this lioness.A little history: A Dagwood sandwich is a tall, multi-layered sandwich made with a variety of meats, cheeses and condiments. It was named after Dagwood Bumstead, a central character in the comic strip Blondie, who is frequently illustrated making enormous sandwiches. The first drawing of this type of sandwich has been dated back to 1936
Category Photography / Tutorials
                    Species Unspecified / Any
                    Size 600 x 800px
                    File Size 81.7 kB
                 
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