
alain40 wrote:I offer my condolences to Hurdler4Eva. If I had been forced to face such a not very inviting piece of sausage on my plate I am not sure I would have been able to eat it . . .
alain40 wrote:Ronnie, I think that you are right. The type of hot dog in the pic does not deserve my comment. I did not intend to sound snobbish... It is just that I do not like that kind of hot dog.
Santander wrote:A more important question I've probably asked here before: if you eat a bell pepper, you ditch the crown and stem, right? Giardiniera peppers are cut, caps tossed, put in the drink. Steak 'n Shake: use the vinegar, toss the drained pepper husks like so many Cullens.
Why do sport peppers still have the fibrous caps on them when served? Some even have stems. Who needs that roughage or texture on their dog? Or are you actually supposed to (as I've been doing for three decades) bite off and spit the stem end like George Peppard on a stogie and then just eat the rest of the pepper? Who are these sport pepper people?
Santander wrote:A more important question I've probably asked here before: if you eat a bell pepper, you ditch the crown and stem, right? Giardiniera peppers are cut, caps tossed, put in the drink. Steak 'n Shake: use the vinegar, toss the drained pepper husks like so many Cullens.
Why do sport peppers still have the fibrous caps on them when served? Some even have stems. Who needs that roughage or texture on their dog? Or are you actually supposed to (as I've been doing for three decades) bite off and spit the stem end like George Peppard on a stogie and then just eat the rest of the pepper? Who are these sport pepper people?
ronnie_suburban wrote:The casing came away from the dog a little bit at the end, which is pretty normal. The way dogs are made, the casing is either crimped or twisted at regular intervals to create individual links. Once the links are separated from each other, they're not always sealed at the ends, so some opening, as pictured, can occur.
=R=
Hurdler4eva wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:The casing came away from the dog a little bit at the end, which is pretty normal. The way dogs are made, the casing is either crimped or twisted at regular intervals to create individual links. Once the links are separated from each other, they're not always sealed at the ends, so some opening, as pictured, can occur.
=R=
Thanks Ronnie - this is what I suspected. I just hadn't seen this before, so I thought I'd ask you folks.
stevez wrote:
But where did you find that dog? I'm always on the lookout for places that serve natural casing dogs, in case this is one I don't already now about.
Pie Lady wrote:There's no ketchup on it, that's the problem.
tortminder wrote:It's very obviously not Kosher!
scanz wrote:stevez wrote:But where did you find that dog? I'm always on the lookout for places that serve natural casing dogs, in case this is one I don't already now about.
I agree, always on the lookout for a good natural casing dog. Sadly, they seem to be becoming more and more rare these days...especially as you head south.

