Cincinnati Chili by Cliff Lowe wrote:In 1922, a Macedonian immigrant, Tom Athanas Kiradjieff settled in Cincinnati with his brother, John. He opened a hot dog stand, which he named 'Empress' and sold hot dogs and Greek food. He did a lousy business because, at that time, the large majority of the inhabitants were of German heritage, and nobody in the area knew anything about Greek food, and weren't thrilled by it.
Tom was not to be defeated. He took a Greek stew, maintained the Mediterranean spices of Cinnamon and Cloves, changed the meat to ground beef, and added other spices, such as chili powder, to the mix and began to sell this stew over spaghetti and called it 'Chili.' It proved to be a successful experiment. He also came up with the idea of selling his Chili in 'ways', which is also unique to the area.
Today, Cincinnati Chili is still assembled and sold the way ole Tom used to sell his: Two Way means spaghetti topped with chili (get it? Two Way means two items, spaghetti and chili); Three Way is spaghetti topped with chili and grated cheddar cheese; Four Way is spaghetti topped with chili, grated cheese and chopped onions; and Five Way is kidney beans or chili beans, heated separately, placed on the plate then topped with spaghetti, chili, onions and grated cheese.
If you stop in a Cincinnati chili parlor you must have a 'Coney.' Now, the history of this sandwich is somewhat vague, but Uncle Tom gets the credit for this, also. Seems that, en route to Cincinnati; he passed through the Coney Island area of New York. Later when he decided to cover one of his hot dogs on a bun with mustard, Cincinnati Chili, and onions, and top it all off with a lot of finely grated Cheddar Cheese, he named it a 'Coney Island' and the name sticks to this day. 'Coneys', as the locals call them, are now made with a hot dog that is a bit smaller and shorter than a regular wiener, to allow more room for the chili and other goodies that go thereon.
JeffB wrote:To clarify, as the link shows, there is (1) Macedonia, the northern region of Greece, and (2) the 'Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia', (FYROM). Lots of typically Balkan controversey over boundaries, culture, etc., but I think it's fair to say that most of what can be called "geographic Macedonia" is culturally on the Greek side of the mountain. The dog-father's middle name would appear to put him there, too.
JeffB wrote:I wonder, did they say anything about the relationship between Cincy coney dogs and the Coney dogs of Detroit and various places in between (eg, other major cities in OH and in Western PA)?
cowdery wrote:I can testify that the Cincinnati Chili chains (Skyline, Empress, Gold Star) have spread as far north as Columbus and as far south as Louisville. Personally, I can't pass one without having at least a coney.
I have a good recipe. Should I post it? (New here, still feeling my way.)
Cathy2 wrote:Do you mind describing goetta for the uninformed?
G Wiv wrote:Goetta is similar to scrapple, though made with oats, as opposed to cornmeal, and seems to be Cincinnati specific. Typically goetta is sliced, pan fried and eaten accompanying eggs, potatoes and toast for breakfast.
stevez wrote:How'd that cantelope get in there?
Simon wrote:more curiously, is that floss making a move at the goetta?
Mhays wrote:Just returned from a trip to the Cincy area, and had my first really good Cheese Coney for a long time: we often get them heading out of town, and the chili parlours that are on the fringes often just don't get it. So we went for the second-last option headed out of town; still outside the I-275 radius that often means danger, but still close enough to count as a suburb of Cincinnati and have a sense of what's appropriate.
Curly dog cutting boards, donated by patent-holder Alma Lach. Given away on day when Coney Island hot dogs were served. A curly dog fits on a hamburger bun and holds chili in the middle without the usual mess.