Triangle or rectangle: What is the right way to cut a sandwich?

Picture this: The final piece of bread is placed on top of the sandwich of your dreams—all the toppings and trimmings your heart desires.The next question is…Are you a triangle person or a rectangle person?Sandwich-gate is back; this time, it’s not about the bites you take, but the direction you slice it before eating that makes all the difference.For some, one way tastes better.“It seems the preferred agreed upon way to cut a sandwich is diagonally but I think a horizontal cut is much more appealing and satisfying,” one Redditor starts his post in the subgroup @/unpopularopinion. “It gives more of a full bite every time instead of starting with a small point and working into a fuller middle.”“It also holds a sandwich together better if you have a lot of ingredients that may otherwise slip out from the points of a diagonally cut sandwich,” he mic drops and leaves it up to the internet to agree. Spoiler alert: not everyone did!Commenters were quick to share their preferred methods with each claiming their choice was superior. “I’ve always thought of that being the main benefit of the triangle cut, that I can carve away easy-to-fit-in-my-mouth bites from the corners rather than trying to negotiate with a flat surface,” one shares. “Grew up with the horizontal cut,” writes a sandwich lover.

“Hubs was against the first time I made him a sandwich.He came from a diagonal home.

We had conversations! LOL.” “Yeah, no.Aesthetically, it’s better looking.

Practically, it’s easier to eat because past bites don’t get in the way.I also don’t want a full bite every single time,” shades a diagonal fan. “The diagonal cut is typically known as the fancy cut, whereas the straight vertical is called the standard cut,” wrote another in favour of the diagonal.Then, one brave commenter said, “Sandwiches should not be cut.

I swear there’s less sandwich when it gets cut.”This caused another outrage from commenters, “THIS ...

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Publisher: New York Post

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