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A hot dog (also spelled hotdog) is a cooked sausage, traditionally grilled or steamed and served in a sliced bun as a sandwich.[1][2][3][4] There are also Hot dog variants that include the corn dog and pigs in blankets. Typical hot dog garnishes include mustard, ketchup, onions, mayonnaise, relish, cheese, chili, and sauerkraut.

Claims about hot dog invention are difficult to assess, as stories assert the creation of the sausage, the placing of the sausage (or another kind of sausage) on bread or a bun as finger food, the popularization of the existing dish, or the application of the name "hot dog" to a sausage and bun combination most commonly used with ketchup or mustard and sometimes relish.

In 1916, a Polish American employee of Feltman's named Nathan Handwerker was encouraged by Eddie Cantor and Jimmy Durante, both working as waiters/musicians, to go into business in competition with his former employer.[5] Handwerker undercut Feltman's by charging five cents for a hot dog when his former employer was charging ten.[5]

[ ]According to a myth, the use of the complete phrase hot dog in reference to sausage was coined by the newspaper cartoonist Thomas Aloysius "TAD" Dorgan around 1900 in a cartoon recording the sale of hot dogs during a New York Giants baseball game at the Polo Grounds.[6] However, TAD's earliest usage of hot dog was not in reference to a baseball game at the Polo Grounds, but to a bicycle race at Madison Square Garden, in The New York Evening Journal December 12, 1906, by which time the term hot dog in reference to sausage was already in use.[6][7] In addition, no copy of the apocryphal cartoon has ever been found.[8]

References[editar | editar código-fonte]

  1. «Hot Dogs Chain Store Basis». Los Angeles Times. 11 October 1925. p. 18  Verifique data em: |data= (ajuda)
  2. «Anniversary of Hot Dog, Bun.» (PDF). Binghamton (NY) Sunday Press. 29 November 1964. p. 10D  Verifique data em: |data= (ajuda)
  3. Zwilling, Leonard (27 September 1988). «Trail of Hot Dog Leads Back to 1880's». New York Times. p. A34. Consultado em 17 June 2013  Verifique data em: |acessodata=, |data= (ajuda)
  4. Lavin, Cheryl (24 September 1980). «Hot dog! 2 mustard moguls who relish their work.». Chicago Tribune. p. E1  Verifique data em: |data= (ajuda)
  5. a b Immerso 2002:131
  6. a b Wilton 2004:58–59
  7. Popik 2004:"Hot Dog (Polo Grounds myth & original monograph)"
  8. «Hot Dog». Snopes. July 13, 2007. Consultado em 13 de dezembro de 2007  Verifique data em: |data= (ajuda)

[[Categoria:Culinária dos Estados Unidos]] [[Categoria:Enchidos]]