New York

Pastrami on Rye

A towering stack of hand-cut, peppery pastrami piled high on fresh rye bread with spicy brown mustard. This Katz's Deli-inspired classic is the ultimate NYC deli experience.

Total 15min 🍴 Serves 4 Deli Legend 🏗 NYC Icon

Equipment Needed

💨 Steamer or Pot
🔪 Sharp Carving Knife
🥣 Cutting Board

Instructions

1

Source your pastrami: The key to this sandwich is quality pastrami. Get a whole piece from a Jewish deli or specialty butcher if possible - pre-sliced deli meat won't capture the same experience.

Tip: Great pastrami should have a dark, peppery crust and beautiful marbling throughout.
2

Set up your steamer: Fill a large pot with 2 inches of water. Bring to a simmer. Place a steamer basket or colander inside, ensuring it doesn't touch the water.

3

Steam the pastrami: Place the whole pastrami in the steamer. Cover and steam for 2-3 hours until the meat is tender and reaches 200F internal temperature. This is what makes it melt-in-your-mouth tender.

4

Hand-cut the meat: Using a very sharp knife, slice the pastrami by hand against the grain. Cut thick slices, about 1/4 inch - this isn't deli-slicer thin. The texture of hand-cut is part of the experience.

Tip: Slice only what you need - the rest keeps better as a whole piece.
5

Prepare the bread: Use fresh, soft rye bread - seedless for classic Katz's style or seeded if you prefer. Do NOT toast the bread. Room temperature soft rye is traditional.

6

Apply the mustard: Spread a generous amount of spicy brown mustard on both slices of bread. Gulden's or Hebrew National are classics, but any good spicy brown will do.

7

Pile high: Stack the pastrami generously on one slice of bread - a proper NYC pastrami sandwich should have at least 8 oz of meat per sandwich. Don't be shy!

8

Complete the sandwich: Place the second slice of bread on top. Press down gently - but not too much, you want the meat to stay fluffy and piled high.

9

Serve immediately: Cut the sandwich in half. Serve on a simple plate with a full sour pickle on the side. Optional: add coleslaw and a knish.

10

Eat properly: Pick it up with both hands, take a big bite, and enjoy. Have plenty of napkins ready. Wash it down with a Dr. Brown's Cel-Ray if you want the full deli experience!

💡 Pro Tips & Variations

  • No mayo, ever: Traditional NYC pastrami on rye uses only mustard. Mayo is considered sacrilege at a real Jewish deli.
  • Quality source: If you can't get to NYC, order from Katz's Deli online, or find a local Jewish deli that steams their own.
  • Pastrami vs. corned beef: Pastrami is smoked after curing, corned beef is not. They're different meats despite coming from the same cut.
  • Steam at home: If starting with pre-cooked deli pastrami, steam for 30-45 minutes to get it hot and tender.
  • The pickle matters: Use full sour or half-sour pickles from a barrel or refrigerated section - never sweet pickles.
  • Rye bread: Corn rye or Jewish rye with caraway seeds are both acceptable. Fresh is essential.