Back to Basics: Perfecting the Humble Hot Dog

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hedgehogging” it. Be sure to lightly butter the buns (split lengthwise) for 1 to 2 minutes so they’ll be hot when they receive the hot dog.

The sky’s the limit when adding condiments–you know the usual suspects. But there’s a wide world of dogs on planet barbecue. Here are some of the most interesting and enticing combinations.

Hot Dog Combinations

Brazilian Turbinado

A “jet propelled” hot dog heaped with mashed potatoes, crunchy shoestring potatoes, bacon bits, mayonnaise, and tomato-onion salsa. Brazil (specifically, Rio de Janeiro) is also the birthplace of the ” target=”_blank”>>samba dog, a popular late-night snack lavished with hard-cooked eggs and a piquant pepper-onion-olive relish.

Canadian “Japa Dog”

When in Vancouver, don’t miss the “Japa Dog,” which comes topped with seaweed, teriyaki sauce, Japanese mayonnaise, and fried onions.

Photo by Heather Harvey via Creative Commons.

Colombian Perros Calientes

This dog comes drenched with salsa, pineapple sauce, mayonnaise, mustard, ketchup, shredded lettuce, and crushed chili-flavored potato chips crowned with a boiled quail egg. Whew!

Chicago Dog

This mid-American classic starts with an all-beef hot dog on a soft poppy seed bun. Then it’s topped with tomato wedges, a dill pickle spear, neon-green relish, chopped onions, yellow mustard (never ketchup), pickled sport peppers—kind of like pepperoncini—and a sprinkle of celery salt.

Chicago hot dog

Photo by Arnold Gatilao via Creative Commons.

Chilean Italiano

Mashed avocados, chopped tomatoes, and a scandalous amount of mayonnaise—colors that mimic the Italian flag—top these dogs. Order a completo, and you’ll get sauerkraut, too.

Chilean italiano hot dog

Photo by Vera & Jean-Christophe via Creative Commons.

6. Dutch “Stoner Dog,” a.k.a., “Pizza Dog”

Long famed for its “coffee” shops, Amsterdamers have an ingenious solution when the munchies strike and you can’t decide between hot dogs or pizza. The “stoner dog” features a frankfurter topped with pizza sauce, pepperoni, peppers, and a prodigious amount of cheese.

Filipino Hot Dog

Luridly red, these dogs are served with rice, a fried egg, and banana ketchup. But no bun.

Guatemalan Shuco Dog, a.k.a. “Dirty Dog”

This dog is served on a hero roll with guacamole or mashed avocado, mayonnaise, boiled cabbage, tomatoes, mustard, and hot sauce.

Icelandic Dog

A waterfront hot dog stand in downtown Reykjavik called Bæjarins Beztu Pylsur plies the lunch and late-night crowd with lamb, pork, and beef hot dogs topped with rémoulade sauce (like tartar sauce), a sweet brown mustard called pylsussinep, ketchup, and French-fried onions.

New York System Weiners

Part of Rhode Island’s food culture since the early 1900s. To order this veal and pork dog like a local, ask for it “up the arm,” which requires the cook to balance the steamed buns on his forearm as he adds onions, celery salt, mustard, and cumin-scented meat sauce.

Swedish Tunnbrödsrulle

Don’t pass judgment on this improbable assemblage until you’ve stumbled out of a Stockholm bar at closing time in need of alcohol-absorbing sustenance. It starts with a soft tortilla-like wrap to which are added hot dogs, mashed potatoes, shrimp salad sloppy with mayonnaise, onions, shredded lettuce, and squiggles of ketchup and mustard. Really.

Check out our Grilled Hot Hog Challenge we did awhile back!

Grilled Hot Dogs Battle

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