The Chicago-style hot dog consists of an all-beef wiener on a steamed poppy-seed bun topped with what is known as the “Magnificent Seven”: mustard, relish, chopped onions, two tomato wedges, a pickle spear, two sport peppers, and a sprinkling of celery salt. The frankfurter aficionados behind the Hot Dog Chicago Style website (www.hotdogchicagostyle.com) state that adding these toppings in the order listed here is crucial to ensuring that you can taste all the ingredients in every bite.
The Chicago-style hot dog evolved during the 1920s through the
1950s, according to Bruce Kraig, author of Hot Dog: A Global History (as
told to WBEZ in 2017). According to Hot Dog Chicago Style, an early
forerunner of the Chicago-style hot dog was the affordable “Depression Dog”
sold by Chicago street vendors during the Great Depression of the 1930s: an
all-beef frank topped with mustard, onions, sport peppers, and maybe relish
served on a plain bun or wrapped in French fries. According to the Chicago
Tribune, one Depression Dog typically sold for a nickel.
One of
the earliest places where the Chicago-style hot dog was sold was the Maxwell
Street Market, located near Halsted Street and Roosevelt Road. The neighborhood
surrounding this area was home to German, Jewish, Greek, Italian, and other
European immigrants, who all contributed to the evolution of the Chicago-style
hot dog.
The sausage, the bun, the mustard, and the pickle all stem from
German cuisine. Jewish influence and the fact that the Chicago stockyards
produced 80% of the country’s beef made the all-beef wiener a Chicago staple.
Sport peppers came from Mexico and likely made their way to Chicago via the
railroad as early as the 1870s. This ingredient became popular with Chicagoans
after tamales were sold at the Columbian Exposition in 1893. Pickle relish came
from England and was first known to appear on hot dogs in Chicago at a Cubs vs.
Sox baseball game in 1928.
Greek and Italian immigrants were probably the first to add
tomato slices to the dog, and poppy seeds were likely added to the buns after
Jewish Eastern Europeans immigrated to Chicago after World War II. Finally,
celery was widely touted as a health food during this time, and the Lakeview
neighborhood of Chicago was once a major celery-growing area. Many describe the
Chicago-style hot dog as being “dragged through the garden” due to this
abundance of veggie toppings.
Finally, there is the notable absence of ketchup on the Chicago-style dog.
According to Hot Dog Chicago Style, most true hot dog lovers
(not just Chicagoans) eschew ketchup, believing that it overpowers the taste of
the hot dog. Meanwhile, Kraig believes that the winning combination of toppings
on the Chicago dog simply makes ketchup unnecessary, and adding the condiment
would only upset its delicate balance of flavors and textures. Some local hot
dog vendors may offer ketchup to those who wish to partake, but many refuse to
put it on the hot dogs themselves.
It took many years and many different cultures to create the Chicago-style hot dog, an inexpensive yet nourishing dish that came out of the hard times of the Great Depression. Today it continues to serve as a delicious testament to the resilience and uniqueness of Chicago.
Ingredients:
Frankfurters
of your choice—use Vienna Beef to be extra authentic
Poppyseed
buns
Sliced
tomato wedges
Finely
chopped onion
Mustard
Relish
Pickle
spears
Sport
peppers
Celery
salt
Heat up the frankfurters following the directions on the package.
For each hot dog, do the following:
Place the wiener on the bun. Add the mustard and relish.
Sprinkle with chopped onion. Place two tomato wedges on one side of the hot
dog, a pickle spear on the other side, and two sport peppers in the middle.
Shudder at the thought of adding ketchup. Sprinkle with celery salt.
Fluky's became known for its "Depression Sandwich" - a hot dog with mustard, relish, onion, pickles, pepper, lettuce, tomatoes, and French fries FOR ONLY 5¢! The "Garden on a Bun" was the depression sandwich without the hot dog and cost only 2¢.
ReplyDeleteMY ARTICLE: https://drloihjournal.blogspot.com/2017/04/the-history-of-flukys-hot-dog-stands.html
Thanks for the information!
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