Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 2
U.S. Hot Dog Traditions Showcase $1.50 Costco Staple and Dozens of Regional Styles
Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 2

U.S. Hot Dog Traditions Showcase $1.50 Costco Staple and Dozens of Regional Styles

3 articles · Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 2

Summary

  • From New York’s boiled “dirty water dogs” to Chicago’s ketchup-free, fully dressed franks, an AP feature maps how hot dog preparation remains a point of regional identity across the United States.
  • Chicago favors mustard, relish, onions, tomato, pickle, sport peppers and celery salt on poppy-seed buns, while New York’s classic version leans on sauerkraut, spicy brown mustard and tomato-based onion sauce.
  • Other local signatures include Cincinnati’s cheese-smothered chili dogs, Detroit and Flint Coney variations, Arizona’s bacon-wrapped Sonoran dog, and West Virginia slaw dogs topped “all the way.”
  • Individual shops also define local culture, from Pittsfield’s 94-year-old Hot Dog Ranch and Rochester’s 1918 Nick Tahou’s to Buffalo-area Ted’s Hot Dogs, Baltimore’s fried frizzled dogs and Washington’s spicy half-smokes.
  • Costco’s $1.50 hot dog-and-drink combo, unchanged since the 1980s, stands out as the national constant in a food culture built on cheap, adaptable and fiercely defended local variations.

Insights

What will the next iconic American hot dog style be, and which region will create it?
Can local hot dog traditions survive the era of the 'inflation-proof' $1.50 Costco hot dog?
Why do hot dog toppings become a fierce expression of a city's cultural identity and local pride?