Some restaurants become famous because of celebrity chefs or elaborate menus. Others earn their place in history with a single item done exceptionally well. In Butte, Montana, that item is the pork chop sandwich.
For more than a century, Pork Chop John’s has been serving one of Montana’s most iconic foods. The story begins in 1924, when Swedish immigrant John Burklund started selling breaded, deep-fried pork chop sandwiches from a wagon to Butte’s hardworking miners. The sandwich was simple, affordable and filling — exactly what a mining town needed. It became so popular that Burklund opened a permanent restaurant in 1932, creating a Montana institution.
The sandwich itself is simple: a thin pork loin pounded flat, breaded, fried until golden, and served on a soft bun with mustard, onions, and pickles. There are no gourmet toppings, artisan sauces, or modern twists. That’s part of the appeal.
Walking into the original uptown location feels like stepping back in time. The narrow lunch-counter diner remains a fixture of historic Butte, where locals and travelers squeeze onto stools and order sandwiches wrapped in wax paper. The atmosphere is unpretentious, the menu is straightforward, and the focus remains exactly where it has always been: on the pork chop sandwich.
Grade: B
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