Two slices of toasted bread filled with layers of corned beef or pastrami, sauerkraut, Swiss cheese and Thousand Island dressing is said to be the original combo for the famous Rueben sandwich. Who invented the Rueben? This is up for debate.
Some sources claim Reuben Kulakofsky a Lithuanian-born grocer from Omaha, Nebraka was the inventor. Kulakofsky belonged to a weekly poker group whose members enjoyed making their own sandwiches. One of the players, Charles Schimmel, owner of the Blackstone Hotel in added the Reuben Sandwich to the hotel lunch menu and it gained local fame. Word of this incredible sandwich soon spread across the country.
Others have argued the Reuben's creator was Arnold Reuben, the German owner of the once-famous Reuben’s Delicatessen in New York. According to an interview with renowned restaurant critic Craig Claiborne it was Arnold who invented the ‘Rueben Special’ in 1914.
This is a popular belief although it has been disputed that Arnold wasn’t the originator, rather his chef Alfred Sheuing. It’s claimed Alfred made it for Reuben’s son Arnold Junior in the 1930s because he ate too many hamburgers. Instead, he got the best damn sandwich of his life.
Over the years there have been many versions of the Reuben sandwich. We even have a café named after the famous creation right here in Sydney. It’s called Reuben Hills. You’ll find it on Albion St, in the heart of the 2010 zip code. This café does two things well, coffee and a Reuben sandwich. The interior is sleek and minimal with polished concrete floors and exposed timber beams. Upstairs they roast their own coffee filling the New York feeling space with beautiful aromas.


