Early November, I’d just landed in Paris after a night of sleep that was, at best, fitful (what else?). I strolled around the Right Bank, went to a museum, fell asleep while walking (it’s happened before), ate a ham/cheese baguette sandwich I picked up at a random boulangerie, and was wandering back to my hotel in a daze through Le Marais. It was starting to drizzle when I spotted a street vendor selling what was advertised as Chicago hot dogs. It was one of those places of business built into another building, with a sidewalk-facing counter, no seating, kind of like some of the old-style Papaya King places in Manhattan. Though I’d just eaten, I had to stop and see what a Chicago hot dog in Paris was like.
Years ago, Carolyn and I were rushing to catch a ferry to take us across Kowloon Bay in Hong Kong when I spotted a vendor offering Chicago hot dogs. I made a mental note to stop at that vendor on the return trip, but by the time we got back across the bay, the vendor had shut down for the day. I vowed to never again pass up the opportunity to have a “foreign” version of a Chicago hot dog…and I will never again.
Overall, I was very impressed with this Parisian Chicago hot dog. I watched the nice man make my sandwich and was somewhat surprised to see him add details like celery salt and especially sport peppers. The latter was surprising because the French are quite heat-averse; there may be some heat in the food of the South, but overall, French food is not what anyone would call “spicy.” Perhaps predictably, these sport peppers were not very hot; the overriding taste sensation was vinegary-acidity, and that was cool: I can usually tolerate only a few nibbles of sport peppers on Stateside dogs, but I always get them on my dogs.
The relish was not the radioactive blue-green glow-in-the-dark kind we expect on hot dogs in Chicago; the flavors were more muted, the pickle flavor subtle.
The sausage itself was much longer, thicker and meatier than what I’d expect from a Chicago dog. It was fine though a little less warm than, say, yer standard Gene and Jude’s. Understandable: the wieners were rotating on those made-especially-for-hot-dog grills, and it was wet and chilly (Paris in November, no big surprise), so the sausage was a touch cooler than I would have liked, but no big deal.
What really set this hot dog apart was the bun; it was no poppy-seed-flecked envelope of white smoosh bread, so maybe points off for that on the authenticity scale, but it was by far the densest, best-tasting hot dog bun in memory. It was almost “too good.” One of my many unsubstantiated beliefs is that some foods (macaroni n’ cheese, gyros, tater tots) must hit the right level of crappiness to satisfy on all the expected levels. I was less interested, however, in authenticity and more interested in seeing how the French, the most awesome food people on the planet, handled this traditional Chicago favorite. And the French, they know bread, and I am so happy they didn’t put the wiener into a croissant, as I’ve heard some have done, in our city, with the Italian beef, which is, pardon my French, fucked up.
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