Which Hotdog Would You Lick?

Oh! You would be excused if you think that sausage makers use dog meat to make hot dogs. The term dog has been used for sausage since at least 1884 and since 1845, there has been accusation that sausage-makers used dog meat to make sausages. Such accusation would not have arisen if hot dogs are just called frankfurters, or franks for short, after the name of Frankfurt, Germany where sausages in a bun originated. A name matters, and words too, I suppose but now, may I ask: Which sausage would you lick?

Related Post: Hot Dogs!


Comments

Anonymous said…
Awww you make me sad.
At least you could have said that you 'borrowed' th'licking' picture from my blog:
www.darwinnewsblog.com
footiam said…
Oh! Sorry! Didn't think about that! Will mention that the next time, I borrow something from you!
footiam said…
By the way, Blogmaster, thanks for the photo. I really like it. The sausage looks so smooth and the ketchup, so creamy. I bet they use a lot of tomatoes to make it. What were you thinking of when you see the photo?
iceprinxess said…
lol cute doggie!! the first photo is interesting ketchup in the shape of a tongue, almost missed it
fwidman said…
I'll take the first one, thanks!
Anonymous said…
Gosh! I would definitely take the first one. No idea still why they call them as 'hot-dog'
Liudmila said…
And I prefere the second. Adorable puppy!
Unknown said…
Actually, here's how the hot dog got it's name:
Apparently, the name originated in the 1800s, when a large number of German immigrants began to move to the US. With them, they brought lots of sausages, but they also brought long, thin, dachshund dogs. The similarity in shape between the two is what probably prompted someone to dub the sausages "hot dogs" and the name stuck. No one person can be attributed to this, but the name was so popular that for many years, when someone said they wanted a "dog," they were inevitably referring to the frankfurter and not to a puppy.
footiam said…
Some people only see tomato in it, other people see tongue, iceprincessa. I guess now I understand why some people blame the ladies for their sexy costumes in rape cases, and not the man!
footiam said…
The second one should be great if you mashed it up first and add some pepper and salt!
footiam said…
Joel, From the internet:
According to a popular myth, the use of the complete phrase "hot dog" in reference to sausage was coined by the newspaper cartoonist Thomas Aloysius "TAD" Dorgan around 1900 in a cartoon recording the sale of hot dogs during a New York Giants baseball game at the Polo Grounds.[10] However, TAD's earliest usage of "hot dog" was not in reference to a baseball game at the Polo Grounds, but to a bicycle race at Madison Square Garden, in the The New York Evening Journal [December 12, 1906], by which time the term "hot dog" in reference to sausage was already in use.[11][10] In addition, no copy of the apocryphal cartoon has ever been found.[12]

So, I guess Morganlighter version is more logical.
footiam said…
Oh! Liudmila, do you need pepper and salt to add to taste?
footiam said…
Morganlighter, I prefer your version than the one I added here.
Liudmila said…
No, I would "eat" it so as it is.

Stassi knows the word "tasty" (Mmmm,I'll give you something tasty now) and when she heard for the first time when I joke with her and said "Mmm, how tasty you are! I'll eat you now!" she looked at me surprized. Than she understood the sense.
footiam said…
Oh! Stassi is a hot dog?
Anonymous said…
Very cute puppy! Funny pics :)
footiam said…
Yes, Nancy. It's a hot dog!