The Australian hotdog:
I grew up poor too
I didn’t know we were Australian
bunnings sausage sizzle is literally the Australian staple food
Here representing the kiwis. I was looking for this one on the chart.
If you call this a hotdog you’re going to get stabbed
That’s a Bunnings hotdog, now come stab me!
I moved to Australia in my 30s. These still don’t completely sit right with me.
Propper Aussie sausage is better than a “hotdog”.
I eat beans on dogs
Preach
Saw this posted a while back and people all over the world came together to point out how wrong it is
Haha was about to say the same thing, this image never fails to evoke anger wherever it goes.
Somehow the hot dog taco/burrito got assigned to Norway?
Vietnam, I think.
Yep, that’s Vietnam
As a German: nobody I know would call that a hotdog. If we talk about hotdog it is the one pictured for Denmark
“how USians think Europe looks like”
Asians?
USians. People from USA.
No? They are Muricans.
Or just plain Bratwurst im Brötchen. With ketchup and mustard typically applied by the customer, usually using these disgusting squeezy-bottle-thingies
The Amsterdam dog really isn’t anything dutch or traditional. It’s just cheap pre baked nasty stuff that only tourists eat because they’re not returning customers and thus won’t complain about shitty food
We honestly don’t really have our own hotdog style. A specific raw beef with pickles on a white bread roll tho (broodje ossenworst met kesbeke), that’s the good stuff
A candidate for genuinely Dutch hot dog-like food are maybe broodjes rookworst:
Or maybe even worstenbroodjes, now that I think of it…
What do they sell during Honkbal Hoofdklasse?
It looks like it was specifically designed to be sold to traveling Americans. My brother would probably get two before trying one.
What the fuck? I live near Denver and I’ve never had a Denver. This is bullshit!
Yeah I grew up in Georgia and I’ve never seen whatever that bullshit on a plate is, lol.
Grew up in the potato-growing part of Idaho. I’ve never seen that baked-potato-dog thing in my life. If anything, anecdotally, Idaho should be the “pig in a blanket”: a bun baked around a hotdog and dipped in who gives a fuck. The cheap ones are just wrapped in Pillsbury croissant dough from the can, the good ones use homemade dough.
LMAO!! Like a Denver Omelette, never heard of it until it was on a movie. I lived here my whole damn life. People just be naming shit after is without our involvement.
I think they confused Denver and Phoenix. Because you’re very likely to get something like that in the South West.
The Vietnam one is wrong. That’s a specialty banh mi. For what they call a ‘hot dog’ they slice them down the sides then fry them on a stick.
It’s Icelands national dish and not on here wtf
The Danish stole them from us and added pickles.
Thanks now i’m hungry, i can’t easily get hotdogs here ffs.
No Costco dog, list is shit
Sweden: These are called Tunnbrödrulle (flat bread roll)
Chile: These are called Completos (complete ones, the whole package basically. A hot dog with everything on it). They are also commonly served with Chilean-style mustard and Ají, a spicy sauce.
If I had to choose between them, I’d go for a Completo. Those things will be the death of me, but I will in the very least die happy
All the ways to get your daily sodium nitrates. My only complaint is why isn’t there a glazed hot dog?
I object to some of the information about the Norwegian hot dog. Firstly, lompe is not a tortilla: it’s made from potatoes. (You also roll it all the way around the sausage.) The sausages are either shorter hot dogs or wieners. They are usually eaten with ketchup, mustard, onion (raw or roasted), and usually some sort of dressing. Simple and good.
Given both are potato based, what’s the difference between lompe and lefse?
Lefse is a larger category. Lompe (also called “potetlefse”) is a kind of lefse. Lefse can also be made from wheat, and there are different kinds. A lot of types of lefser are also eaten as a snack rather than as part of a meal, with either a sweet paste or butter, sugar, and cinnamon on top.
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