Chin Diesel
Power of Love
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
- Messages
- 33,429
- Reaction Score
- 104,670
A quintessential tailgate food.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/trave...oodys-hot-dogs-hartford-connecticut/78374432/
Turns out Nutmeggers love them some tube steak. Books have been written about Connecticut's love affair with the encased meat tube.
And Woody's gives your mouth the full 12".
The unifying theme is the frank itself, always a foot-long, all-beef model that is thin with a nice snappy exterior, and to me very similar to a longer version of a Hebrew National supermarket frank. The dogs are cooked well done, until almost blistered, enhancing the nice snap, and the New England-style rolls — the best style, with flat exposed sides — are buttered and griddled, a great touch.
I guess I missed out on this love affair when I lived in Ct. I never even knew there was a deep fried sub-genre in the Southeast of the state.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/trave...-dogs-sizzle-at-connecticut-drive-in/1951973/
Connecticut is hot-dog mad and chock full of roadside stands, trailers and even a wiener-serving boat. Ten of these classics were featured in the fun food documentary A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour, which also noted that the Nutmeg State is the epicenter of a unique regional cuisine, the oil-fried hot dog. This preparation style is especially popular in southern Connecticut, with some spillover into New York and New Jersey, where Great American Bites last visited Rutt's Hut, another classic fried-dog dispensary
http://www.usatoday.com/story/trave...oodys-hot-dogs-hartford-connecticut/78374432/
Turns out Nutmeggers love them some tube steak. Books have been written about Connecticut's love affair with the encased meat tube.
And Woody's gives your mouth the full 12".
The unifying theme is the frank itself, always a foot-long, all-beef model that is thin with a nice snappy exterior, and to me very similar to a longer version of a Hebrew National supermarket frank. The dogs are cooked well done, until almost blistered, enhancing the nice snap, and the New England-style rolls — the best style, with flat exposed sides — are buttered and griddled, a great touch.
I guess I missed out on this love affair when I lived in Ct. I never even knew there was a deep fried sub-genre in the Southeast of the state.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/trave...-dogs-sizzle-at-connecticut-drive-in/1951973/
Connecticut is hot-dog mad and chock full of roadside stands, trailers and even a wiener-serving boat. Ten of these classics were featured in the fun food documentary A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour, which also noted that the Nutmeg State is the epicenter of a unique regional cuisine, the oil-fried hot dog. This preparation style is especially popular in southern Connecticut, with some spillover into New York and New Jersey, where Great American Bites last visited Rutt's Hut, another classic fried-dog dispensary