Recipes & Lore • Mill City Classic
Woonsocket Dynamites
Dynamites are to Woonsocket what cheesesteaks are to Philadelphia: long-simmered ground beef with peppers, onions, and tomato — carrying a red-pepper-flake kick — piled into a fresh torpedo roll. The sandwich dates to the 1920s, sold to Woonsocket millworkers by an immigrant vendor whose origin the city still argues about (Italian or French-Canadian, pick your camp — the city's French-Canadian mill heritage claims it either way). Here's the detail locals lead with: the dynamite predates the sloppy joe, which showed up in the 1930s. Rhode Island was first, as usual, and got less credit, as usual.
You need
- 2 lbs ground beef
- 1 large yellow onion, chopped fine
- 1 green + 1 red bell pepper, chopped fine
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 can (28 oz) crushed tomatoes
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 1–2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes, to taste — this is where the "dynamite" lives
- 1 tsp salt, ½ tsp black pepper
- 8–10 fresh torpedo rolls (a soft sub roll is the accepted substitute in exile)
Method
- Brown the beef in a heavy pot, breaking it up fine; drain the excess fat.
- Add onion, peppers, and garlic; cook until soft, about 8 minutes.
- Stir in the tomatoes, paste, pepper flakes, salt, and pepper.
- Simmer low and uncovered for 1½–2 hours, stirring now and then, until thick and deeply savory. The long simmer is not optional folklore — it's the difference between a dynamite and a sloppy joe, and Woonsocket can tell.
- Pile into fresh torpedo rolls. Serve on wax paper. Napkins are structural.
Sources & further reading
- TasteAtlas — Dynamite Sandwich, Woonsocket
- Sandwich Tribunal — Woonsocket's Dynamite
- America's Test Kitchen — Rhode Island Dynamites
- quahog.org — Dynamites
Want a Dynamite Night Kit?
The dynamite isn't in our box lineup yet — the fresh rolls are the challenge — but a seasoning-and-fixings kit is on our candidate list. Join the launch list and tell us to make it, and browse the current boxes meanwhile.
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