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How the hot dog became an American icon

  

Category:  Wine & Food

Via:  buzz-of-the-orient  •  4 years ago  •  20 comments

By:   Story by Hannah Selinger, CNN

How the hot dog became an American icon

Probably the most basic food served in baseball parks.


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



How the hot dog became an American icon





No matter how you like your wiener prepared, grilled or boiled, with mustard, ketchup or chili, we can all agree on one thing, and that's that hot dogs have become part of a certain American cultural narrative. 


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© Channon Hodge, CNN  Every year on the 4th of July, Nathan's has a hot dog eating contest.


And this year, more than ever, hot dogs are red hot; in March, the data firm IRI reported that sales were up by as much as 127%, and that was well before grilling season started.

Billions of hot dogs


"Americans eat an estimated 7 billion hot dogs between Memorial Day and Labor Day," Eric Mittenthal, president of the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council, said.

But while hot dogs may feel "all-American," they're inherently something else.

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© Channon Hodge, CNN  A visit to Coney Island in the summer nearly always involves hot dogs, and, frequently, beer.




Also known as the frankfurter, this specific style of cased sausage was originally thought to be from the town of Frankfurt-am-Main in Germany, but hot dog historians argue that sausage culture, native to Eastern Europe and, particularly, Germany, has no specific town of origin.

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© Channon Hodge  In some ways, Nathan's hot dogs now define the Fourth of July — and are a major Coney Island attraction.

The traditional German hot dog, when it arrived in the United States, was a blend of both pork and beef; the all-beef hot dog, as we now know it, takes its roots from Jewish-American butchers, who, due to Kosher restrictions, chose not to use pork in their meat blends.

"When Germans came, you have to look at where they came from," said Dr. Bruce Kraig, professor emeritus at Roosevelt University in Chicago.

Kraig is a hot dog historian and the author of several books, including 'Hot Dog: A Global History' and 'A Rich and Fertile Land: A History of Food in America.'

"A good number of the early [Germans] came from the Palatines," which is a general area surrounding the actual city of Frankfurt, explains Kraig. Frankfurt, Kraig said, refers to the region of origin, though the actual food does not necessarily come from Frankfurt itself.

Brought over by German immigrants in the mid-1800s, hot dogs began their path into the American zeitgeist in New York City hot dog carts, where they were a natural fit for the sandwich-loving harried New Yorker, who already preferred to eat on the go.

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© Courtesy of National Hot Dog & Sausage Council  July is national hot dog month.

"They appear with the first German immigrants in the late 1840s," Kraig said.

"Germans have sausage culture, so they eat sausage from butcher shops. They eat them at home. They eat them in the street at fairs and festivals, and at beer gardens, so when Germans got to America, they set up beer gardens right away."

Classic street eats


Americans, he said, became enamored with the German idea of sausage eating on the street. "You have lots of evidence of sausage being sold by vendors, probably in the 1840s, but certainly by the 1860s. Wherever there are Germans, there are sausages sold in the streets."

That plural is important, actually. Germany is not known for a single sausage, after all, but for its abundance of them, from the veal- and poultry-based weisswurst to the pork-based bratwurst to the jerky-like landjäger.

German sausages are so plentiful that it's remarkable that Americans inherited only one in the common dietary canon.

In 1867, an entrepreneurial baker from Brooklyn by the name of Charles Feltman began selling hot dogs from a converted pie cart on Coney Island. "Coney Island started becoming a spot that people would go for recreation, but there wasn't really anything there at the time," said Michael Quinn, co-owner of hot dog brand Feltman's of Coney Island, which he and his brother, Joe Quinn, purchased in 2015.

Birth of the bun


Charles Feltman developed a hand-sliced, elongated bun that set the precedent for the modern hot dog bun.

When popularity surged — Michael Quinn, himself a Coney Island historian, said that, in that first summer, the cart sold about 4,000 hot dogs — Feltman set his sights higher, entering into a restaurant and hotel partnership and opening a sprawling resort in Coney Island in 1873.

"Eventually, it became billed as the largest restaurant in the world," Michael Quinn said.

Numerous historic sources, including the Coney Island History Project, have acknowledged that, by the 1920s, Feltman's Ocean Pavilion restaurant was serving roughly five million customers per year, and selling somewhere around 40,000 hot dogs a day.

Suddenly, hot dogs were on the national stage, and Coney Island was became the accessible epicenter of summer fun for anyone and everyone in and around New York.

Coney Island


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© Courtesy of National Hot Dog & Sausage Council  Hot dog historian Bruce Kraig says there's lots of evidence of sausage being sold by vendors, probably in the 1840s, but certainly by the 1860s.

That stage had already started to expand when, in 1875, Charles Feltman convinced president of the Prospect Park Railroad Andrew Culver to run the subway line down to Coney Island, offering public transportation to thousands of New Yorkers who had never before had access to the far reaches of Brooklyn.

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© CNN

The conflation of the subway line with Feltman's massive resort made Coney Island important — and hot dogs were in the center of this major cultural moment.

Although Feltman's empire diminished over time, and Coney Island became known less for its ritzy resort caché and more for its boardwalk kitsch, Feltman had already unknowingly contributed the greatest icon to American hot dog culture, when he hired a bun-slicer who would go on to become among the United States' most famous hot dog vendors.

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© Channon Hodge, CNN  Nathan's Famous on Surf Avenue in Coney Island has been around since 1916.

"They didn't have machines back then, so one of the bun-slicers that the Feltman family hired was Nathan Handwerker," Michael Quinn said. "He worked as Feltman's as a bun-slicer!"

That same Nathan Handwerker would open his own competing brand, Nathan's Famous Hot Dogs, in 1916, and that brand would become synonymous with Coney Island hot dogs.

In some ways, Nathan's hot dogs now define the Fourth of July, which is when the famous Nathan's Hot Dog-Eating Contest takes place each summer. Hot dogs helped to frame the fame of Coney Island.

"They were such an incredible sensation that Charles Feltman ultimately built a nearly 100-year empire on them," said Feltman's of Coney Island co-owner Joe Quinn.

How do you take it?


New York, of course, was not the only place where hot dogs took root in the late 19th century. "Hot dogs were spread around the country as immigrants spread to different regions," said Eric Mittenthal. "The Chicago-style hot dog took hold during the Depression, when stands would offer a variety of toppings that people would pile onto the hot dog, though Chicago is not alone in offering distinctive dogs."

While toppings differentiate dogs from place to place, one constant is affordability. A hot dog is a food of access. It is delicious, filling and cheap, no matter where you might find yourself, what city you happen to find yourself in, and that makes it appealing to anyone, irrespective of physical location. (Even vegetarians and vegans can enjoy hot dogs now — albeit of the meat-free likes of Beyond Meats and other brands on the market.)

German immigrants spread their love for sausages to other cities through the United States: Detroit, Milwaukee, and, later, Los Angeles.

Where Germans went, hot dogs followed. New Yorkers, of course, will argue that the specificity of the hot dog — a food that's well suited to eating while moving — works particularly well in their city, which is why the association is one that resounds, over a century later.

"The advantage of having a hot sausage on an elongated bun — it's a very New York thing," Michael Quinn said. "New Yorkers like to walk and eat."

As for the name, hot dogs were first coined "red hots" — a term that's still used in both Maine and Detroit — sometime around the late 1800s, because of the heat of the grill that was used to cook them. But the dog part was really just cheekiness. "Hot dog is a joke word," Kraig said.

The earliest he has been able to trace the word is to 1892, to a newspaper clipping hailing from Patterson, New Jersey. "The identification of sausages with dogs is considerably earlier," he conceded.

According to Kraig, a popular song in the 1800s, written by Septimus Winner, begged the question: 'Where, Oh Where Has My Little Dog Gone?', allegedly a reference to a dog gone missing in sausage meat. Thankfully, in the age of transparency, we know that the hot dogs we eat today — 7 billion this summer, if not more — are all hot, no dog.

That's a bit of a relief, for those looking to celebrate National Hot Dog Month in July. Break out the mustard.

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© Courtesy of National Hot Dog & Sausage Council  It's estimated that Americans eat 7 billion hot dogs between Memorial Day and Labor Day alone.


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Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
1  seeder  Buzz of the Orient    4 years ago

In Toronto, the most famous name for hot dogs was "Shopsys", named for the Shopsowitz family who opened the most famous delicatessen restaurant in Toronto, and manufactured deli products with the "Shopsy's" brand name. It's history is similar to those who opened the first hot dog stands in America.

I eat hot dogs for dinner now and then (could it be nostalgia? No. I just happen to enjoy them.) but I buy imported frankfurters because one never knows what the ingredients of a hot dog could be, and considering what Chinese people have no trouble eating, I can't be positive about what they put in their hot dogs. As I once posted, while touring the city of Nanning in the past I found myself on a street called "Canine Street" which had a lot of restaurants, and there was no way I was going to eat in one of them. 

 
 
 
zuksam
Junior Silent
1.1  zuksam  replied to  Buzz of the Orient @1    4 years ago
I can't be positive about what they put in their hot dogs.

Do you really believe it could be any worse than what we put in there?

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
1.1.1  seeder  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  zuksam @1.1    4 years ago

Yes.

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
3  charger 383    4 years ago

A chili cheese dog with mustard, please  

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
5  seeder  Buzz of the Orient    4 years ago

75 hot dogs, 10 minutes  (Nathan's Annual Hot Dog Eating Contest)

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© John Minchillo, AP  Competitive eater Joey Chestnut celebrates after setting a new world record with 75 hot dogs to win the men's division of the Nathan's Famous July Fourth hot dog eating contest, Saturday, July 4, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York.

Joey Chestnut eclipsed his own world record Saturday, winning his 13th title in the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest. Chestnut downed 75 frankfurters to beat his 2018 mark of 74. The annual hot dog contest took place at a private New York location with COVID-19 safety measures in place instead of its usual Coney Island boardwalk spot. No fans were in attendance, and competitors were spaced six feet apart while separated by plexiglass. "I knew I was fast in the beginning," Chestnut said. "I hit a wall (at the end). I really missed the crowd." 

 
 
 
Paula Bartholomew
Professor Participates
6  Paula Bartholomew    4 years ago

I used to love hot dogs until I got really bad food poisoning from them (Dodger Dogs).  The effects lingered for almost 3 years and I lost over 100 lbs. 

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
6.1  seeder  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Paula Bartholomew @6    4 years ago

I  once got food poisoning from clam chowder at a motel in Orlando, Florida, and it's something I don't wish on anyone.  Thankfully, in my case, I got over it in a couple of days, or Disney World would have been a miserable experience.

 
 

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