I found a poster of this in the bathroom of a hot dog shop. Thought it was cool so I searched for it. Not my OC, but a cool guide nonetheless.

  • mihnt@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Is that Georgia the state or country? I grew up in the state and have never seen that.

    Michigan calls theirs coneys as well.

  • Lvxferre
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    1 year ago

    Frankly the “Brazil style” sounds fake. Dunno if someone out there eats it this way, but it’s a lot like trying to pretend that the Guatemala, New York and Sonora styles are the same “North American style”. For example, where I live in Paraná, I’ve seen at least three types - none including carrots or cilantro*.

    Street “podrão” (big rotten):

    • Usually includes a secondary meat. Beef cubes, ground meat, shredded chicken, stuff like this.
    • Potato mash, fried yucca meal, or both.
    • Some creamy cheese, not just Parmesan. Usually requeijão.
    • If the hot dog is opening that way, something is wrong. You’re supposed to press the whole thing on a hot plate, until it’s roughly brick-shaped. It’s easier to eat and the bun is slightly toasted.
    • Salmonella is a seasoning! (Food poisoning is a concern.)
    • Pico de gallo is by no means obligatory. It’s fairly common to sub it with sliced cooked onions instead. I’ve seen a few with sauerkraut too.

    Vininha: basically pigs on a blanket: the wiener is cut in half, then covered with dough, and then baked. Kids love that stuff.

    Pão com vina: homemade. The wieners are chopped and heated on a thick tomato sauce (the same sort that you’d add to pasta or pizza) and served/eaten inside a “water bread”* (pão d’água) or “French bread” (pão francês) bun, alongside the seasoning of your choice. Pickles or sauerkraut are fairly common.

    *I don’t rule out the possibility that someone out there does it this way, mind you, my point is that it’s a damn weird generalisation.

    **it gets this name because the bread is baked in a high moisture environment.