A Chicago-style crazy dog ââ, Chicago Dog , or Chicago Red Hot is a frankfurter of all beef on a poppy seed sandwich, originally from Chicago, Illinois. The hot dog is stuffed with yellow mustard, chopped garlic, green sour pickled pickles, pickled spears, tomato slices or slices, pickled papaya pickles and a pinch of celery salt. The complete assembly of Chicago hot dogs is said to be "dragged through the park" due to the abundance of toppings. The method for cooking hot dogs itself varies depending on vendor preferences. Most often they are steamed, boiled with water, or more rarely roasted on charcoal (in this case they are referred to as "char-dogs").
Canonical recipes do not include tomato sauce, and there are widespread opinions among many Chicago people and fans that sauce is unacceptable. A number of Chicago hot dog sellers do not offer sauce as a spice. For National Hot Dog Day on July 19, 2017, Heinz created controversy by introducing tomato sauce, labeled as "Chicago Dog Sauce", to insult many Chicago citizens - but their efforts also found a minority of soy sauce lovers in the city.
Video Chicago-style hot dog
History
Many sources associate a distinctive collection of toppings in the Chicago-style Wiener style to the historic Maxwell Street and "Depression Sandwich" reported by Fluky in 1929. The founders of the Vienna Beef frankfurters Beef - the most common brand presented today, was first sold in 1893 The Colombian World Exhibition in Chicago - and the owner of Fluky are both Jewish, who may be in charge of the wibers character, kosher wieners' style.
Maps Chicago-style hot dog
Variations
The style of "shuffling through the park" is heavily promoted by Vienna Beef and Red Hot Chicago, two of Chicago's most prominent hot dog producers, but a general exception occurs, with sellers adding cucumber slices or lettuce, removing poppyseeds or celery salts, or using plain relish or hot dog without skin. Some popular hot dog stands serve a simpler version: a steamed dog with only mustard, onion, plain pepper and chilli, wrapped in hand-cut fries while the historic Superdawg drive mainly replaces fresh pickled tomatoes. Many vendors offer a Chicago-style dog with a cheese sauce, known as a cheese dog. The location of Boz Hot Dogs offers a unique nacho cheese sauce with chunks of jalapeÃÆ' à ± o peppers.
Get started
Chicago-style hot dogs are cooked hot or steamed before adding toppings. The less common style is cooked on a charcoal grill and is referred to as "char-dog". Char dogs are easily identifiable because very often the ends of dogs are sliced ââin crossed fashion before cooking, resulting in a typical "curled-x" shape of the cervelat form when the dog cooks. Some hot dog stands, such as Wieners Circle, only serve char-dogs.
The typical hot dog beef weighs 1/8 pound or 2 ounces (57 g) and the most traditional type has a natural casing, giving it a special "snap" when bitten.
Bread is a high gluten varieties made for steam-warming steam, usually the Maryen S. Rosen brand of Alpha Baking Company.
Restaurants
The Chicago area has more hot dog restaurants than McDonald's, Wendy's and Burger King restaurants. A "hot dog stand" in Chicago can serve many other items, including Polish Maxwell Street, gyros, pork and Italian beef sandwiches, corn dogs, tamales, pizza puffs and Italian ice. Restaurants often have unique names, such as The Wieners Circle, Gene & amp; Jude's, Gold Coast Dogs, Mustard's Last Stand or Morrie O'Malleys; or architectural features, like two giant hot dogs on the roof of the Superdawg (Maurie and Flaurie, named for a married couple who set up the drive-in).
Popular and historic vendors
See also
References
Further reading
- Barrett, Joe (October 26, 2015). "Chicago-style hot dog icon is credited with a role in Apple's latest emoji menu". MarketWatch . Retrieved November 23, 2015 .
- Bowen, Rich; Fay, Dick (1983). Hot Dog Chicago: A Native Dining Guide . Chicago: Chicago Review Press. ISBNÃ, 0-914091-27-1. OCLCÃ, 9197138.
- City News Service (August 28, 2015). "The Dodger Stadium contains Chicago hot dogs for the Cubs series". Los Angeles Daily News . Retrieved November 23, 2015 .
External links
- Media associated with Hot dog stands in Chicago on Wikimedia Commons
Source of the article : Wikipedia