Food Fight: Cheese Steaks
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The World Famous Parrot Lounge in Fort Lauderdale is a sports haven for Philly fans. Every Sunday, the bar is absolutely packed with passionate fans screaming at the top of their lungs, sometimes cheering, sometimes jeering the Eagles. Every square inch of the bar has some piece of Philly paraphernalia, so I assume this place knows how to make a cheese steak. I notice it's not listed as a Philly cheese steak on the menu, so I order one with onions and peppers, knowing the cheese won't come from a can. The cheese steak comes out of the kitchen a few minutes later, and the first thing I notice is the size. It's definitely on the skimpy side. Measuring just a shade over 7 inches and relatively light on the meat, the Parrot's cheese steak won't win any awards for presentation.
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Obviously, the most important thing is the taste. The Parrot's cheese steak is very-well-made: The cheese is melted throughout the entire sandwich, soaking every inch of rib eye and bonding it to the bread. The Parrot's bread is chewy and warm but lacks any kind of crunch to the outer crust. Surprisingly, despite the small stature and underwhelming presentation, the Parrot's cheese steak is tasty. The cheese is tangy and makes the meat even juicier, the bread soaks up the grease without getting soggy, and the onions and peppers are diced thin enough to provide the taste without getting in the way of the meat.
The challenger is Sonny's Famous Steak Hogie. The first time I visited Sonny's was about six months ago, and I found their cheese steak to be subpar. The meat was on the dry side, the cheese wasn't properly melted, and the bread was a little too crunchy. A friend of mine recently visited and told me I was way off, so I decided to give it another shot. I ordered a number 50, which stated it was steak, sauce, and onions. I assumed (incorrectly) that the sauce in question was their newly available cheddar cheese sauce (AKA Cheez Whiz). When I brought the cheese steak home and unwrapped it, it looked like a murder scene. Evidently, the sauce in question was marinara sauce, and it didn't look appetizing. The cheddar cheese sauce and marinara sauce not only drenched every inch of the meat; it also leaked out and coated the outside of the bread. It's hard to blame them for that, as it would not have happened had I eaten it at the restaurant and not taken it on the Mr. Toad's Wild Ride home.
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Sonny's cheese steak is heavenly. It is stuffed with almost three times the meat as the Parrot's cheese steak, the meat is juicier and more flavorful, and the combination of the cheese sauce and marinara sauce bound every ingredient together, and neither sauce overpowered the other one. As a matter of fact, If I hadn't seen the red sauce all over the place, I would have thought the meat was marinated in a tomato sauce rather than covered in it. The bread has a crunchy outer crust, which is amazing due to how much of the cheese had leaked onto it, and it's warm and chewy on the inside. It's clear Sonny's bakes its bread fresh in house every day with great success.
Verdict: It's a landslide in favor of Sonny's. Every ingredient is of higher quality, there is more meat and cheese stuffed between the fresh-baked bread, and it's almost twice the size for the same price (just under $8).




















