Philadelphia Cheesesteak
The Philadelphia cheesesteak is the city's signature sandwich. Thinly sliced beef, melted cheese, long hoagie roll. That's it. Invented in Philadelphia in the early 1930s, the cheesesteak has become an international symbol of the city, inspiring passionate debate about proper preparation, cheese choices, and which establishments serve the best version. The sandwich's simplicity—just meat, cheese, and bread in its purest form—belies the intensity of devotion it inspires.[1]
Origins
Back in 1930, Pat Olivieri was running a hot dog stand near South Philadelphia's Italian Market when he grilled some beef and threw it on an Italian roll. A cab driver passing by asked for one, the word got out, and before long Olivieri ditched the hot dogs in favor of steak sandwiches. Cheese came later. Some say his manager Joe Lorenza added provolone in the 1940s, though accounts vary.[1]
Pat Olivieri opened Pat's King of Steaks at 9th Street and Passyunk Avenue in 1940. Then in 1966, Geno's Steaks opened directly across the intersection. Two shops facing each other with neon signs blazing. This wasn't just competition—it became the foundation of cheesesteak mythology, with the two rivals serving as the primary venues for an ongoing debate that shows no signs of ending.[1]
Preparation
The Meat
You want ribeye steak for a traditional cheesesteak, sliced thin and cooked on a flat griddle. As it cooks, you chop it up, creating those characteristic small pieces rather than intact slices. That texture matters. Quality and freshness of meat distinguish better cheesesteaks from the rest.[1]
The Cheese
Three cheese options dominate the field:
- Cheez Whiz — The processed cheese product favored at Pat's and many other places
- American cheese — Sliced and melted right over the meat
- Provolone — The traditional Italian cheese, sliced thin
The Whiz versus provolone debate generates fierce opinions. Partisans on each side claim authenticity, swearing their choice is the only legitimate one. American cheese sits in the middle. Some spots will throw other options at you too, but you're getting into disputed territory there.[1]
The Roll
Must be an Italian hoagie roll. Ideally baked fresh by Amoroso's Baking Company or similar Philadelphia bakeries. The exterior should have slight crunch while the inside stays soft enough to soak up meat juices. Rolls from outside Philadelphia? Purists won't touch them.[1]
Additions
Onions fried on the griddle alongside the meat are a common choice. "Wit" means with onions. "Witout" means without. You can get peppers, mushrooms, and other additions, but serious cheesesteak enthusiasts see those as departures from the classic form. The "cheesesteak hoagie" adds lettuce, tomato, and hoagie toppings—acceptable maybe, but it's not a true cheesesteak anymore.[1]
Ordering
Philadelphia establishments don't mess around when it comes to ordering. At Pat's and Geno's, you need to know the format: cheese choice first, then "wit" or "witout." "Whiz wit" gets you Cheez Whiz with onions. Hesitate or act confused at the ordering window, and you'll feel impatience from staff or other customers waiting behind you. This ordering ritual has become part of cheesesteak mythology, honestly.[1]
Beyond Pat's and Geno's
Pat's and Geno's grab most of the tourist traffic, but actual Philadelphians often prefer somewhere else entirely. Jim's Steaks on South Street has passionate advocates. So do Steve's Prince of Steaks in Northeast Philadelphia, Tony Luke's, and numerous neighborhood shops scattered throughout the city. The best cheesesteak? That debate may never get resolved. Which is really the whole appeal of the thing.[1]