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Well, it is NOT at the "Toot'n Whistle", the cafe/shack beside the Picton stop for the Coastal Pacific Train to Christchurch in New Zealand. I made the bad decision to order a "hot dog" here a few years ago. I ordered it because I was suffering from a nasty migraine-like headache, craved something salty/tangy - and this was the only thing on the menu that matched my craving. I wish I had known that hot dogs in New Zealand are not the same thing as hot dogs in North America. They're more like pogos, but not as good - imagine a greasy, tasteless, battered, deep-fried sausage on a stick. Aka "d*** on a stick" and a rather cringe-inducing product to eat in public.
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Originally Posted by Canarsie
For me, the best hot dog is a genuine Kosher frankfurter — usually Hebrew National — on a hot dog bun, topped with a generous application of spicy brown authentic Kosher delicatessen mustard — usually Ba-Tampte (from the Canarsie section of Brooklyn) or Hebrew National brands. Sauerkraut is optional but welcome. I usually prepare them outside on the grill at home, or I enjoy them at any number of Kosher delicatessens in New York.
Nathan’s Famous in Coney Island comes second, and it is the only non-Kosher frankfurter that I enjoy. |
From August's Mid-Atlantic Brewing News
I'm posting something I wrote as a sidebar in next month's food and beer issue of Mid-Atlantic Brewing News (My editor says you've got to promise to get copies anyway) that seems appropriate to this thread.
<BEGIN COPY> Hail the humble hot dog as accompaniment to cold beer. You could consider its history. Rather, you could if anyone really knew its history for sure. It’s said the frankfurter was created in Frankfurt. Unless it’s a wiener because it was invented in Vienna (in German, Wien). The burghers of Frankfurt say the Viennese choose to ignore that the purported inventor of the wiener learned to make sausage in their city. On this topic, what the Viennese choose to ignore are the burghers of Frankfurt. Known as hot dachshund sausages in the 1800s for their resemblance to the long thin dogs, the name hot dog was supposedly coined in 1901 by New York newspaper cartoonist Tad Dorgan. Facing an imminent deadline and uncertain how to spell dachshund, he captioned them “hot dogs” instead. However, no copy of that cartoon has ever been found, and students at Yale University were eating and writing about “hot dogs” years earlier. A hot dog in English is a “perrito caliente” in Spanish, a “cane caldo” in Italian and a “chien chaud” to the French. When baseball player Barry Bonds visited Philadelphia in May he was one homer shy of Babe Ruth’s career home run total of 714. A fan’s banner hanging in the outfield of the Phillies' Citizens Bank Park reminded the San Francisco Giants slugger accused of using illegal performance-enhancing substances, “Ruth did it on hot dogs and beer.” Some say being cooked in beer is the secret of baseball’s top-selling Dodger Dog but those in charge of ballpark concessions in Los Angeles deny that’s how they sold nearly two million of the team’s trademark hot dogs last season. According to the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council, on the Internet at www.hot-dog.org, the average per capita hot dog consumption in America is 60 per year and over seven billion hot dogs will be eaten in the U.S. between Memorial Day and Labor Day, 155 million of them during the Fourth of July holiday alone. The council’s researchers found that the most popular condiment on a hot dog is mustard, although when kids were asked what they’d put on a hot dog “if Mom wasn’t watching,” 25 percent picked chocolate sauce. One of the unsolved riddles of the universe asked by a Nazi-fighting Tibetan mystic kung-fu master portrayed by actor Chow Yun-Fat in the somewhat ludicrous 2003 film The Bulletproof Monk is, “Why do hot dogs come in packages of ten, but hot dog buns only come in packages of just eight?” Earlier this year a tasting panel organized by food section editors of the Arizona Republic newspaper selected Scotland’s Fraoch Heather Ale as the best beer to pair with a grilled hot dog. “Absolutely great,” enthused Mark Tarbell, owner and chef of the national-award-winning Tarbell’s Restaurant in Phoenix, “the dog brought out the fruity character in the ale.” New Belgium Brewing Company’s Fat Tire Amber Ale was the Arizona panel’s second choice, while Bud Light “was the beer whose flavors washed away when munching on the dog.” <END COPY> |
I have to go with Lawton's Famous Frankfurters in Lawrence, Massachusetts
Anyone ever had a dog at "Swanky Franks" in Norwalk, CT? I've passed by many times, but always on a full stomach. I'd love to try 'em. I love the name. |
Anybody that serves Martin Rosol hot dogs:
www.martinrosols.com Who could grow up in central CT and not know Frankie's? |
Which character on MASH was all about his hometowns hotdogs?
someplace in Akron Ohio right? |
re HOT DOGS,,,anyone remember JOE & NEMO?
YUMMY SINAI BRAND at Costco. I just flash my expired card whenever I
want one. |
Yocco's in Allentown, PA is pretty strong.
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Toledo, not Akron, for Tony Packo's
Originally Posted by rebadc
Which character on MASH was all about his hometowns hotdogs?
someplace in Akron Ohio right? Jamie Farr, who played Klinger on M*A*S*H, was a native of Toledo so when he had the chance to ad-lib a little of Klinger's personal history, he made him from Toledo as well. According to Tony Packo's website: In the episode that made Packo's future, a man playing a television newsman talked to Klinger about his hometown. Farr wrote a little local color into his reply. The lines read, "If you're ever in Toledo, Ohio, on the Hungarian side of town, Tony Packo's got the greatest Hungarian hot dogs. Thirty-five cents..." Thus a new epoch began. The name appealed to the scriptwriters, who wrote Packo's into five subsequent episodes. In one show the mobile hospital unit sent to Packo's for sausage casings to be used in a blood-filtering machine. |
Undoubtedly Portillo's in Chicago
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Right Town; Wrong Source
Originally Posted by singal3
Undoubtedly Portillo's in Chicago
Buy 'em in small and large diameters at the Vienna Factory Store at 50% off retail (polish and corned beef, too): Buy Rosen's Seeded Buns at the Dominick's; Grill 'em at home; dress to taste. |
Originally Posted by sonofzeus
Buy 'em in small and large diameters at the Vienna Factory Store at 50% off retail (polish and corned beef, too): Buy Rosen's Seeded Buns at the Dominick's; Grill 'em at home; dress to taste.
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Paris...really
While touring the Eiffel Tower, I stopped at consession booth just outside the park near the Seine and ordered a hotdog. It was topped with cheese, french mustard, and ketchup on a french bread and let me say for the record that this beat any hot dog I ever ate in the US...at Costco, Baseball Parks, neighborhood BBQ, West/East Coast...!
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Originally Posted by xbanker
While touring the Eiffel Tower, I stopped at consession booth just outside the park near the Seine and ordered a hotdog. It was topped with cheese, french mustard, and ketchup on a french bread and let me say for the record that this beat any hot dog I ever ate in the US...at Costco, Baseball Parks, neighborhood BBQ, West/East Coast...!
To us native Chicagoans, ketchup on a hot dog is inexcusable for anybody over the age of 10. |
Wrong Store
Originally Posted by singal3
Ill give you the rosen's seeded buns, get em from costco though...
Not worth the extra time/gas to go to costco for a handful of buns. Dominicks/Safeway is my constant friend. |
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