Spyke
sh.itjust.works

Okay so I'm not a native speaker and I hope I'm not the only one concerned with the use of IDEAL SIZE FOR BRATS

27
lemmy.world

I recently moved to the Czech Republic and found out that their hotdogs are already like this. The meat cylinder goes into a tube. It makes so much more sense than the sandwich!

21
lemmy.world

Wikipedia says this approach originated in Germany, called ‘Würstchen im Schlafrock’. Afaik it's popular in Eastern Europe.

English-speakers may know it as ‘pigs in a blanket’.

8
filcukreply
lemmy.zip

Pigs in blanket in the UK would mean cocktail sausage in bacon or pastry
It could be both, but I've never come across it

4
lemmy.world

Are 'cocktail sausages' made from a variety of meats boiled, cured, or smoked — shaken, but not quite stirred together, so to say?

3

Here in the southern US, pigs in a blanket is typically made from little cocktail smokies wrapped in about 1/3'rd of an uncooked pilsbury cresssant, then tossed in an oven until done. I really thought a sausage roll from Tesco would be similar but it was not... That's when I realized y'all have pretty bad food there (no offense), why did you guys start putting hotdogs in pizza crust? As an aside, I love how orderly everyone queues up for stuff there, almost like a country with functioning adults that teach their kids how to wait their turn.

2

Same in the regions of the US I’ve been to. Usually little cocktail weenies in pastry here, bacon wrapped is just called bacon wrapped, though.

1

Some folks call them Kolaches if you live far enough in the South US. Definitely a trend that followed with Eastern European migrations.

1

The tomatoes get turned into sauce for some pasta I'm cooking later, the pickles get munched on during a warm summer day, the peppers go into that pasta sauce I was talking about, and the onions go in there too, as none of those things belong on a hotdog

-2

I feel it's unfair that bussy is already taken and this has to get the frankly third-rate "bunussy"

5

hoagie rolls man. I guess this is more of a "kolache" making tool.

2
lemmy.world

You really haven't tasted hot dogs until you've spent half a paycheck on ingredients and tools, then another 14 hours prepping and cooking everything. It's almost as good as a microwaved Ballpark... Almost.

2

Surely my first attempt will be better than their decades of massive international corporate recipie.

2

Kaiser rolls. They're larger to hold the brat, and usually aren't cut.

1
sh.itjust.works

Must've had a Freudian slip because I swear that title said "Perfect size for butts"

6
sh.itjust.works

There’s a food vendor called Wunder Wurst at a fall festival I attend, and they serve their brats like this with cheese sauce. It’s really good.

Not sure I’d want to go to all the trouble with making it at home, though. Regular cut buns work just fine for me.

3
Raiderkevreply
lemmy.world

Puka Dog in Kauai does as well. Highly recommend. Theirs have tropical relish and spicy sauce. It's so damn good.

2

Oooh — the spicy sauce is intriguing. Love some good heat. Maybe next year I should bring some hot sauce with me to throw in. :D

2

Still not as visceral of a reaction as the one I had to a dude using a speculum for the same thing and I don't even have the proper equipment to have experience with one of those.

2
LycanGalenreply
lemmy.world

Oh, but there are speculums for all. If you have an orifice, western medicine has figured out how to pry it open.

4
lemmy.world

You can pay most doctors on the side to pry open your orifices, even if isn't covered by insurance.

2

You reached the end