The Norwegian one is a little simplistic. The wrap is a flat potato bread (lompe) and you always get the choice of a hotdog bun or a lompe. The sausage itself is either a plain sausage, one impregnated with cheese, one impregnated with cheese and wrapped in bacon, or one made of hamburger meat. There are then optional extras like pickle, onion, crispy fried onion etc and of course ketchup and or mustard.
These are available at pretty much every kiosk/news agent/gas station. The choices are pretty much always the same. Personally I go for a bacon and cheese sausage on a wholemeal bun with fried onions and mustard.
Guatemala: remove the bacon wrap, remove lettuce, add ketchup. Like, you can get it with bacon and without ketchup but you have to request both those things extra. Lettuce is just weird.
Or just plain Bratwurst im Brötchen. With ketchup and mustard typically applied by the customer, usually using these disgusting squeezy-bottle-thingies
The Amsterdam dog really isn't anything dutch or traditional. It's just cheap pre baked nasty stuff that only tourists eat because they're not returning customers and thus won't complain about shitty food
We honestly don't really have our own hotdog style. A specific raw beef with pickles on a white bread roll tho (broodje ossenworst met kesbeke), that's the good stuff
The Tijuana dog changed my life. A customer had made one of those for me and my partner when we installed their internet. I was a little doubtful at first, seeing what was on it, but I was wrong to.
Grew up in the potato-growing part of Idaho. I've never seen that baked-potato-dog thing in my life. If anything, anecdotally, Idaho should be the "pig in a blanket": a bun baked around a hotdog and dipped in who gives a fuck. The cheap ones are just wrapped in Pillsbury croissant dough from the can, the good ones use homemade dough.
LMAO!! Like a Denver Omelette, never heard of it until it was on a movie. I lived here my whole damn life. People just be naming shit after is without our involvement.
Sweden: These are called Tunnbrödrulle (flat bread roll)
Chile: These are called Completos (complete ones, the whole package basically. A hot dog with everything on it). They are also commonly served with Chilean-style mustard and Ají, a spicy sauce.
If I had to choose between them, I'd go for a Completo. Those things will be the death of me, but I will in the very least die happy
Don’t forget the Baltimore dog, Esskay hotdog in a bun with mustard, ketchup and chopped onions, then tell everyone how much better they are in New York.
I object to some of the information about the Norwegian hot dog. Firstly, lompe is not a tortilla: it's made from potatoes. (You also roll it all the way around the sausage.) The sausages are either shorter hot dogs or wieners. They are usually eaten with ketchup, mustard, onion (raw or roasted), and usually some sort of dressing. Simple and good.
Lefse is a larger category. Lompe (also called "potetlefse") is a kind of lefse. Lefse can also be made from wheat, and there are different kinds. A lot of types of lefser are also eaten as a snack rather than as part of a meal, with either a sweet paste or butter, sugar, and cinnamon on top.
The Michigan one is what we Michiganders call a Flint Style Coney. Popularized by the hit chain restaurant which originated here in Flint, Halo Burger.
There is a restaurant in Australia called Bunnings that only serves hotdogs. They have one every few kilometres. I think you can also buy tools and plants there.
Close, but it's a hardware store that has a charity stand out the front which sells a "snag in bread", or also called a sausage sizzle, cooked on a bbq. Your options are a snag in sandwich bread, onion, tomato sauce (ketchup) or mustard. Freshly made with the cheapest quality ingredients.
A hotdog by definition always contains a boiled sausage stuffed inside a bun or something similar.
A currywurst isn't a hotdog. It comes with fries and no bun Also that Germany variant in the pic isn't one. It's just the plain old delicious Bratwurst and Sauerkraut.
The standard hotdog you can find in Germany consists of a bun and sausage with ketchup, mustard, crispy onions, pickles and sometimes cole slaw.
The standard hotdog you can find in Germany consists of a bun and sausage with ketchup, mustard, crispy onions, pickles and sometimes cole slaw.
Where would that be the "standard"?
The most common sausage in a bun combination is just sausage, bun, ketchup/mustard.
Unless you're specifically talking about restaurants that have an item called "Hot Dog" on their menu, which in turn is rather rare.
Well, they should have added proper labels to them instead of just writing the country name.
The Swedish one is not strictly speaking a "Swedish-style hot dog" - when we eat hot dogs, it's mostly a bread/sausage/ketchup/mustard-deal. The one in the picture is a Tunnbrödrulle (flat bread roll), which does contain a sausage, but it's not what I would call a hot dog by any means.
Disclaimer, I’ve only even seen hot dog octopuses in Anime and Manga.
Usually it’s just to be cute. In fact sometimes characters comment on how it’s childish.
I did try making them for my son once because they’re pretty adorable and he likes both hot dogs and sea creatures, and he thought it was lame at 5. At 7 he thought they were awesome.
Many of those sound gross, but Baltimore....what the fuck man....soggy ass bread? I don't even have to ask if you're good because you are so apparently not ok.