hot dog

sausage
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Also known as: frankfurter, würstchen, wiener
Also called:
frankfurter or wiener
Related Topics:
sausage

hot dog, sausage, of disputed but probable German origin, that has become internationally popular, especially in the United States.

Two European cities claim to be the birthplace of the sausage: Frankfurt, Germany, whence the byname frankfurter, and Vienna, Austria, whence the byname wiener. Frankfurt holds that it has been making the sausage for more than 500 years. Whatever its ultimate origins, German immigrants brought the food to New York in the 1860s, where street vendors sold them as “dachshund sausages,” presumably because of their shape. It is from this that the term hot dog derives, with the implied suggestion that the sausage really was made of dog flesh. The first attestation of the phrase used in that sense dates to 1884, and by 1892 it was in widespread usage around the United States.

New York remained the epicentre of the hot dog for many years. In 1871 a German immigrant named Charles Feltman opened a popular stand at Coney Island, a beach and amusement park in Brooklyn, New York, forever associating the sausage with fun and leisure. Feltman would later find a competitor in a former employee of his, a Polish immigrant named Nathan Handwerker, who opened his Nathan’s Famous hot dog stand at Coney Island in 1916. A gifted marketer, Handwerker promoted the stand by sponsoring a Fourth of July hot dog eating contest, a tradition that continues today; the winner in 2020 set a record by devouring 76 hot dogs in 10 minutes.

Ceviche. Peruvian ceviche (sebiche). Raw seafood dish with lime, cilantro, peppers, plantains. Cuisine, food
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By the time Nathan Handwerker opened his shop, hot dogs had become widespread throughout the United States. They were served by the thousands at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, and they were standard fare at baseball parks around the country, just as they are today. Easily cooked at home and eaten on the move, the hot dog became a definitive American dish, with regional variations that include the Chicago dog (an all-beef hot dog served in a poppy seed bun with yellow mustard, bright green pickle relish, chopped onion, sliced tomato, dill pickle, sport peppers, and celery salt), the New York dog (with sauerkraut, brown mustard, and onions), and, from Mexico by way of Arizona, the Sonoran hot dog (with pinto beans, salsa, mayonnaise, and bacon). Some vendors have become culinary destinations, such as Papaya King in New York, Pink’s Hot Dogs in Los Angeles, and Ben’s Chili Bowl in Washington, D.C.

Inexpensive hot dogs are made of “trimmings,” cuts of pork and beef that have not been used for other purposes. These leftovers are ground into a paste and stuffed into casings—that is, encased in a tube traditionally made of intestine. (This is the source of the jocular name tube steak.) Kosher hot dogs, as well as more expensive brands of the sausage, are typically made solely from better cuts of beef, but the production method is largely the same.

Although they are seen as a quintessentially American dish, associated with picnics, holiday cookouts, and sporting events (especially baseball games), hot dogs are eaten well beyond the boundaries of the United States. U.S. Pres. Franklin Delano Roosevelt courted controversy when in 1939 he served hot dogs to a visiting king, George VI of Britain. Although some commentators criticized the dish as embarrassingly plebeian, the king asked for a second hot dog after finishing the first. Not surprisingly, hot dogs abound in Great Britain today and nearly everywhere in the world.

Gregory Lewis McNamee