Originally posted by: moshquerade
because they are made out of meat scraps fit for a dog and you serve 'em up hot?
Originally posted by: KK
Some german word that got shorterned up. Atleast that is what was on the food network.
KK
Originally posted by: MaxDepth
Because "sultry wieners" was too filthy?
😱
Originally posted by: hevnsnt
Why is water called water?
Nope. They are named "frankfurters" because of the town in Germany where they supposedly originated.Originally posted by: yukichigai
Something to do with the translation from German -> English of certain names for Sausage. Hot Dogs are an American/English twist on traditional German Brautwurst and other Sausages. If I remember correctly the kind of German Sausage they most resemble has a name which either translates to a type of dog or sounds like a type of dog.
Part of the reason this caught on was WW1 - German sounding names suddenly became unpopular in the US and a lot of businesses started Anglicising their product names. Sort of like people renaming French fries "Freedom fries" today. That's also the reason German Shepherds are sometimes called Althusans.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Nope. They are named "frankfurters" because of the town in Germany where they supposedly originated.Originally posted by: yukichigai
Something to do with the translation from German -> English of certain names for Sausage. Hot Dogs are an American/English twist on traditional German Brautwurst and other Sausages. If I remember correctly the kind of German Sausage they most resemble has a name which either translates to a type of dog or sounds like a type of dog.
The "hot dog" thing came from a vendor who needed a unique sign and drew a picture of a daschund (sp?) in a bun for his mascot. He started calling the frankfurters "hot dogs" because of his mascot. At least, that's what I have been told regarding the term "hot dog". Though I know for a fact that the frankfurter bit is right.
ZV
Originally posted by: Jzero
Here?
Originally posted by: isekii
I like Hebrew National Dogs.
They're Kosher