Hot dog bun

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Hot dog bun
Hotdog - Evan Swigart.jpg
A hot dog bun. The side-loading variety is shown in this image
Origin
Place of origin United States
Details
Type Bun
Main ingredient(s) Flour, water

A hot dog bun is a type of soft bun shaped specifically to contain a hot dog or frankfurter. The original purpose of this food was to make it possible to eat hot dogs without burning one’s hands.[1]

There are two basic types: top-loading (also known as Frankfurter rolls) New England Style Rolls[2] or Lobster Buns in some areas, and side-loading, common in the rest of the United States also called American Style Buns. The advantages to a top loader are that it holds the hot dog securely and fits nicely into little three-sided paper boxes. Top loaders are generally baked side by side and torn apart as needed, leaving a flat side surface for grilling.

History

Hot dog historian and professor emeritus at Roosevelt University Bruce Kraig believes the term "hot dog" was invented in the late 19th century by American observers of German immigrants, who ate sausages on buns. The Americans joked that the sausages looked suspiciously like the Germans' dachshunds.[3]

Charles Feltman invented an elongated hot dog bun on Coney Island in 1871 according to writer Jefferey Stanton.[4]

The Bavarian concessionaire, Anton Feuchtwange, loaned gloves for his customers to hold his sausages at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition. When many were not returned, he asked his brother, who was a baker, to invent a solution. Thus, the hot dog bun was born.[5]

Regional variations

In Chicago, Illinois, where poppy-seed buns are popularly served with Chicago-style hot dogs, the buns are made with high-gluten flour to hold up to steaming.[6]

In Austria, a "hot dog" is a baguette which is hollowed out by cutting off the end and impaling it on a spike so a sausage can be inserted. In Denmark this variation is known as a "French Hot Dog" because of the use of baguette, and a "French Hot Dog Dressing" which contains Dijon Mustard. Pre-impaled baguettes are specially made for this variety due to its popularity.

Austrian hot dog and sausage

See also

References

  1. [1] "The Evolution of Hot Dogs", May 8, 2003 accessed January 29, 2011.
  2. [2] "New England-style bun, from HoJo’s to homemade", July 2, 2013 accessed February 12, 2014.
  3. National Hot Dog and Sausage Council. [3] "Straight From The "H" Files: The Hot Dog's True History"], accessed January 29, 2011
  4. Josh Chetwynd in "How the Hot Dog Found Its Bun: Accidental Discoveries and Unexpected Inspirations that shape what we Eat and Drink, 2012.
  5. "History of the Hot Dog", accessed January 29, 2011. Archived September 26, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
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