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Near as Dean Young can recall, Dagwood Bumstead started creating colossal sandwiches in his modest cartoon kitchen around 1936. Through the years, the overstuffed works of edible art built by the ...
The true recipe, spelled out by Dagwood Bumstead in the “Blondie” comic strip published on March 10, 1939, is: Ham – “the base,” Dagwood called it. Cheese – “to give it tang.
After building his first skyscraper sandwich in a 1936 Blondie comic strip, Dagwood Bumstead - well, at least the man behind him - is finally making his daydream of venturing into the food ...
Long may we devour the Dagwood sandwich, layered with sardines, onions, cheese, cold baked beans and whatever Dagwood Bumstead could find in the fridge. Urp! We gorge ourselves today on the Big ...
After building his first skyscraper sandwich in a 1936 Blondie comic strip, Dagwood Bumstead — well, at least the man behind him — is finally making his daydream of venturing into the food ...
Dean Young and Lamar Berry started the chain with the license to use the Dagwood Bumstead character in the 75-year-old comic strip, playing off his famous love of sandwiches. The company's Web site ...
We had a chicken sandwich ($12) with crispy-fried chicken that hit the spot. But, hey. There are those who just don’t want a sandwich and I respect that, even if I don’t understand it.
Then again, Dagwood Bumstead — that founding father of our comic-strip nation — has always marched to the beat of his own eccentric drum. And who wouldn't like to think of the Dagwood sandwich ...
Among the favorites is a create-your-own Dagwood option, named after the Dagwood Bumstead cartoon character’s enormous sandwich creations. Popular sub options also include its cheesesteaks and ...
Hold them side by side. The "Blondie" comic strip created by Chic Young for Sept. 8, 1930 is told in four frames. A well-dressed playboy, Dagwood Bumstead, with a wiry body and dark, plastered ...