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How did hot dogs develop into a popular food

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In the same year of 1893, the first baseball team began to sell the predecessor to the modern hot dog (dachshund sausages) at baseball games. The Saint Louis Browns were the first team to sell these sausages at their games in buns. The owner, Chris Von de Ahe, was a German-American who saw an opportunity in selling these products at games, where they were easy to eat while sitting and watching the game as they required no knife or fork to eat given the shape of the sausages being long and thin. While the sausage buns were not a standard size, in 1904 Anton Feuchtwanger, at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, helped to develop a bun that fit the shape of the sausage. However, some dispute this and state that Feltman in 1871 had already developed a specialized bun that fit the long, thing shaped sausages. It is clear that buns would have developed to fit the increasing culture of eating hot dogs or sausages on the go rather than as a sit down meal. Therefore, buns became developed so that hot dogs could be held without burning your hand and making it easy to eat. Regardless, this innovation of hot dog buns made it even easier to hold and consume the sausage as people sat and watched the exhibition or other events. As for the origins of the term 'hot dog,' this is not fully clear. The most likely story is that in the 1890s, at Yale, German immigrants selling dachshund sausages became associated with dachshund dogs, which were thin and long dogs. The association of the dogs with the sausage vendors could have been a play on words that associated the two, as pronouncing dachshund was not easy for many Americans and the term 'hot dog' was used in reference to the shape and vendors became easier. Other origin myths could have been that 'hot dogs' were a derisive reference to the accusation that dogs were sometimes used as the meat of the hot dogs.<ref>For more on how the sausage became the hot dog, see: Bly, R. W. (2007). <i>All-American frank: a history of the hot dog</i>. Baltimore, MD: PublishAmerica.</ref>
 
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[[File:Hot-dog-historic.jpg|thumb|Figure 2. Dachshund vendors helped popularize sausages that developed into the modern hot dog.]]
==Later Developments==
In the early 1900s, food manufacturers began to produce hot dogs in larger quantities. At this time, food emulsifiers were often added for further preserving preserve hot dogs as they were packaged and shipped to increasingly more distant places. In fact, in the early 1900s it was food manufacturers that created a somewhat negative image of hot dogs that still affects their reputation. During this time, some manufacturers began to add sawdust or applied other short cuts, including mixing meats with different animals and sometimes even rotting meat. Upton Sinclair’s famous publication, <i> The Jungle</i>, led to a major backlash against the food manufactures with hot dog manufacturing being one of the culprits. This eventually led to the Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906. Hot dogs, in effect, helped contribute to food safety guidliness in the United States. In the early 20th century, different cities began to create variations of their hot dogs. New York and Chicago became two major cities that were associated with styles of hot dogs. The One type of Chicago hot dog is a kosher style meat with white onions, a dill pickle spear, tomato slices and sometimes hot peppers for a spicy hot dog. In New York, there are many variations but the common elements have included mustard, sauerkraut, and with optional sweet onions and tomato-based sauce. Modern ketchup, deriving in the early 20th century, has also developed as a popular condimentin the early 20th century for hot dogs, although many would argue ketchup ruins the taste of a hot dog.<ref>For more on the sometimes controversial development of meat packing industry and its relation to the hot dog, see: Horowitz, R. (2006). <i>Putting meat on the American table: taste, technology, transformation</i>. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. </ref>
As By the 20th century continued1920s, there became more of a distinction between traditional sausages and hot dogs, which were increasingly defined by the food manufacturers. Hot dogs are essentially a type of sausage that is ground finer and emulsified, often encased with an artificial covering that is also usually removed in the food making process to keep the meat together. As larger food consumer companies began to manufacture hot dogs, they also experimented with different products to hold the meat together and they started creating artificial cellulose casingcasings. The meat itself in most hot dogs today is mostly a paste of different types of meats, including chicken, pork, or beef. Traditional German sausages were mostly made of pork, as that was the common and relatively inexpensive meat. After intense heating, the encasing is peeled away, keeping the meat tightly packed for modern hot dogs. Traditional sausages, however, are still soldin many stores and often still made by butchers in more traditional shops.<ref>For more on what goes in a hot dog today, see: Hui, Y. H. (Ed.). (2012). <i>Handbook of meat and meat processing (2nd ed)</i>. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, pg. 453.</ref>
==Summary==

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