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Being a NY person we like them with mustard and saurkraut or with onions in sauce. Nathans in Coney Island aer some of the best. I know the Chicago dog, any other combos or favorites out there?
If you dare, wash it down with some poutine (fries with heavy, cheesy gravy) and then go get an angiogram
I've sort have become a vegetarian, but IMO a hot dog must have a 100% all beef wiener. Tofu, chicken and pork need not apply. Apart from the beef and bun, the formula is quite simple. A leaf from a head of lettuce with a slice of cheddar cheese on the inside, wrapped around the meat.Absolutely no mustard, mayo, relish, onions or sauerkraut. We won't even mention Ketchup.
For Hot Dogs I believe that less is more - dog, bun & mustard (yellow like French's, nothing fancy). Dogs are also about the environment you're eating them in - boiled Eskay dogs at Memorial stadium in Baltimore during an O's game are my standard. Growing up, ketchup and relish were the condiments my family used, I'd often request that at an Orioles game and get handed a dog with mustard only and a friendly "here ya go". If you or the vendor didn't yell out "hot dog man" right before you bought it, it probably doesn't meet my standards.One of the issues I have with modern corporate sports venues (i.e. - sports themed shopping malls) is that it is impossible to get good honest ballpark food. I don't want a luxury priced polish sausage, half-smoke or a kosher dog, I want a hot dog. Pretzels seem to have been bastardized as well, 900 variations except that none resembles a pretzel.Nowadays, I really can't imagine preparing a hot dog any other way than with just mustard.Jim C