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I love the idea of avocado. Avocodo makes everything better . . .
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 12:35 am 
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Rene G wrote:
JoelF wrote:
No, the late, lamented Demon Dogs did have Ketchup, and would put it on dogs too, if you were gauche enough to ask.


As I recall, Demon Dogs had a big pump dispenser on the counter so you were free to use it as you saw fit (as Wiener's Circle does now). A most practical solution to a very divisive problem.



Wiener's Circle has a pump dispenser, but they're perfectly willing to put ketchup on a char dog there. They've never had a problem accommodating the intractable Canadiaosity of my wife.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 1:27 am 
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Cathy2 wrote:
My local hot dog stand is Stash's in Highland Park. When I was first acquainted with them in the early 1970's, the default dog was Chicago style ...

iblock9 wrote:
FWIW, I used to really like Stash's and i still think their fries are pretty good. I prefer Michaels for almost everything else if i am just running out for dinner in

As I think I've posted before, there used to be nothing much better in life than walking home with a little greasy brown paper bag full of Stash's fries. I can close my eyes and still see the little dark narrow shop and the guys crowded in behind the counter and the lines of people crowded in on the other side.

It was never the same once it was forced to move into whatever the city calls what that block turned into.

Michael's is good - my out-of-town sibs don't come in and leave again without stopping by there once - but Stash's was one of a kind.

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Last edited by Katie on Sat Dec 20, 2008 1:35 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 1:29 am 
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Cathy2 wrote:
'Mutt' was a rather short Stash and 'Jeff' was a rather tall guy named Frank Rosenthal. Does the name ring a bell? This was Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal whose life was emulated in the movie 'Casino' with Robert De Niro portraying him.

Did you see his obituary in the Tribune a few months ago? It mentioned him taking the 5th in response to every question that was asked of him at a Congressional hearing, including a question on whether or not he was left-handed.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 1:34 am 
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Cathy2 wrote:
I think the whole ketchup issue gets out of hand when your liking it is treated like you said something impolite.

I second that emotion. Ketchup police, grrr. I'm happy to eat a Chicago hot dog "the Chicago way," if that means, among other things*, no ketchup, but I like my Polish sausage with ketchup, mustard, and grilled onions.

* Ketchup's a sin, but no one's bothered by the radioactively green relish? I don't get it.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 7:15 am 
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Some like their food sweet. Hot dogs and Polish are sweetened with corn syrup and dextrose. The food service neon green relish adds high fructose corn syrup. The retail neon green relish has sugar. Ketchup adds more high fructose corn syrup, plus corn syrup. Tomatoes contain natural sugar. Grilled onions may be caramelized with sugar or brown sugar. When I was a kid, the only thing that sweetened encased meats were grilled onions caramelized with Coca Cola and served on a real Maxwell Street Polish, never on a hot dog. Chicago baby boomers rarely, if ever used ketchup on a hot dog or Polish, so it never became an acquired taste.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 8:56 am 
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Katie wrote:

* Ketchup's a sin, but no one's bothered by the radioactively green relish? I don't get it.


I abhor the sugar laden green stuff. Never understood it. I don't do gobs of sugar on my dogs. Another one of those things that not only do I not "get," it pretty much gives me the heebie jeebies. Why not just sprinkle some candy pieces on it? DILL relish, however, that's the goods - IMO, of course.

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PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 12:24 am 
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Dmnkly wrote:
I've always thought the fries were were one of Superdawg's greatest attributes -- arguably stealing the show from the dog.


I [heart] Superdawg, and would eat there three dozen times a year if I lived closer. Tonight, with temperature in the single digits, the lot was packed, and the flushed, smiling carhops danced their way across a lot freshly scattered with salt, just like the fries.

I had an opportunity to compare the Superdawg fries tonight with some Maggiano's Potatoes Vesuvio (eaten beforehand) and Avenue Alehouse Sysco Waffle Fries (eaten afterward), and of the three, Superdawg's far and away tasted most like the real McCoy as far as spuds go. Layers of crispness from fresh hot oil (and probably multiple fryings) with perfect salt and skin ratio, and this on top of their unique garlicky sausage. Eaten right from the window without the steam effect that occurs on a journey home, each element could pop and sing.

And the pickled tomato is worthy of an ode. YTMND.


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PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 10:27 am 
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Santander wrote:
YTMND.

You're The Man Now, Dog*

* $&^* young whippersnappers and their ^%^ text message acronyms!

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PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 11:52 am 
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Quote:
the flushed, smiling carhops danced their way across a lot freshly scattered with salt, just like the fries


QOTD.

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PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 1:04 pm 
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Location: RogersPark.Chicago
Today, my car broke down in front of a Circle K convenience store. As I sat there endlessly waiting for salvation by AAA, I found myself staring at a 4 foot poster half exposed above several pallets of windshield fluid. The sign was entitled "Chicago's Hot Dog 2/ $2.22". Below the title, was a photo of 3 foot weenie. I decided that a convenience store chain based out of Phoenix, may actually be the absolute arbiter of the definitive "Chicago Dog" argument. After all, at least according to one infamous Check Please guest, if you're from Phoenix, you know barbecue ribs, so maybe the inherent Arizonan culinary expertise also extends into the upper Midwest encased meat arena. From my vantage point, I could see the pictured sausage was covered in nothing but mustard and not quite radioactive green relish. I decided to inspect it closer, even peering behind the stacks of windshield fluid, just in case there was a hidden pickle spear or tomato wedge lying in ambush behind the rows of glowing blue liquid in gallon plastic bottles, but there was nary a garden in sight. So according to no less an authority than the circle K corporation of Arizona, a tube steak requires nothing beyond yellow mustard and bright green relish to attain the ranking of "Chicago's Hot Dog".

Unfortunately, a recent bout of stomach flu made me reluctant to take advantage of their most generous offer.


Last edited by d4v3 on Sun Dec 21, 2008 5:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 5:16 pm 
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Mhays wrote:
Santander wrote:
YTMND.

You're The Man Now, Dog*

* $&^* young whippersnappers and their ^%^ text message acronyms!


Thanks, Michele. Sean Connery actually says that line like he's pronouncing every letter in the "dawg" in Superdawg, making it even better.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 15, 2009 7:52 pm 
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Location: Chicago
Quote:
If you go to Byron's I'd also suggest the original on Irving Park for its classic 1970s hot dog stand ambiance. Contrary to popular belief, you can get a natural casing Vienna hot dog at Byron's. Problem is, it's the half-pound Dogzilla.

Behold Dogzilla.

Image

A half-pound hot dog washed down with a cold forty—living the high life for sure.

Byron's Hot Dogs
1017 W Irving Park Rd
Chicago
773-281-7474


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