Get this guy into a conversation about his eatery's new menu and he starts saying things like, âYou have to care for the bread.âSo, donât smush it, right?âOh, thereâs soooo much more to it than that,â insists Belmont Brewerks owner Rick Veon. âYou have to love the bread.âLove the bread?âYes, love the bread.âSo, donât squeeze it?ââNot until itâs the vessel.âThe vessel?âThat delivers.âDelivers?âYes, delivers.âWeâre still talking about sandwiches, right?âWe are.âSandwiches that deliver?âTheyâd better.âThe Twist Cuban at Belmont Brewerks is constructed a very specific way by the kitchen staff.Five KindsThree-hundred-ninety-six divided by five equals almost 80 and dividing 80 by nine comes out to about nine sandwiches served at the Martins Ferry restaurant per hour that Brewerks was open during the first week the five new sandwiches were on a special menu.Those numbers exceeded what Veon had projected when he and his kitchen crew developed the new eatery options. Veon, a Wheeling native graduated by The Linsly School in 1986, compiled more than 30 yearsâ experience in the food service industry before returning home to the Upper Ohio Valley in 2020. âIâll be honest, I did forget about the meat-and-potato mentality here in the valley. It was true when I was a kid and itâs still true today,â Veon explained. âSince high school, Iâve lived in a lot of different places so I was introduced to a little of everything along the way. Itâs really amazing how people have their favorite foods in different places in the country and how you get used to them after you move into the area.âBut when I came home and started going out to eat once everything opened up again, I was very quickly reminded about the meat and the potatoes here in the Wheeling area,â he said. âItâs not that I thought it would be different these days, itâs just that I had forgotten what my favorites were when I was in high school. That was a few years ago.âThese days, though, he and his wife Heather operate Brewerks on Fourth Street in Martins Ferry and since the purchase in June, Veon has tweaked the restaurantâs menu. It was mind-July, in fact, when he decided to introduce five new sandwiches.âThe new sandwiches on the menu are blowing away everything else we have on the menu. The Club is the most popular, but then the Cuban, the Brewben, the Pot Roast, and the Killer Grilled Cheese follow, and theyâve all done better than we expected,â Veon reported. âThe first week we had those on the menu, we sold almost 400 sandwiches. Our kitchen crew did a fantastic job.âOur soups go very well with all of our sandwiches, and those soups will change pretty often now that weâre getting close to the cooler months,â he explained. âI know one of my favorite lunches is our Killer Grilled Cheese and our soup of the day, and Iâm sure itâll be a popular combination when we get into October, November, and December.âA large portion of the courtyard at Brewerks will be covered during the colder months.Top to BottomStep One: Take care of the bread.Step Two: Acknowledge the strongest ingredient/flavor.Step Three: Use quality meats, cheese, vegetables.âItâs all about the build and the consistency on everything on it. Of course, it starts with the bread and whether or not you are toasting it or grilling it,â Veon explained. âOn my sandwiches the mayo is always on top and the mustard is always on the bottom. The mustard is the most powerful flavor on the sandwich so it has to be last in the flavor profile.âNow, some of this might sound ridiculous to some people, but the way you place the lettuce, the tomato, the onion ⊠it all matters,â he insisted. âBut itâs about how you want that sandwich to taste all of the way through. Put it this way. If it was a T-B-L, you would get a completely different flavor than a B-L-T.âThink about that.If, instead of a Bacon-lettuce-tomato sandwich, it was a tomato-bacon-lettuce, it would taste differently?âMost definitely.âBut why?âItâs all about your palate and the order it receives the flavors.âIt is?âIt is.âInteresting.âHey, I donât make the rules.âThatâs when Veon returned to the topic of bread. âThatâs because the kind of bread you use for any sandwich is super important. It is the vessel of the sandwich,â the entrepreneur said. âThe bread, in many respects, is the end-all, be-all. No matter what, you have to take care of those two pieces of bread because itâs going to be the vessel that takes care of the rest of the sandwich. Thatâs a known fact.âThe majority of the breads we use at Brewerks come out of several places in Pittsburgh. It just depends on what kind of bread it is,â Veon added. âWe have all of the basic breads for the sandwiches, but we have others for other menu items, too.âBecause bread is THAT important?âAgain, I donât make the rules,â Veon said with a smile. âI follow them, though, and that makes people very, very happy.â



















