Man Bites Dog: Hot Dog Culture in America (Rowman & Littlefield Studies in Food and Gastronomy)

by Bruce Kraig

Other authorsPatty Carroll
Hardcover, 2012

Status

Call number

Meat -- KRA

Call number

Meat -- KRA

Publication

AltaMira Press (2012), Hardcover, 200 pages

Description

Nonfiction. HTML: Whether you call them franks, wieners, or red hots, hot dogs are as American as apple pie, but how did these little links become icons of American culture? Man Bites Dog explores the transformation of hot dogs from unassuming street fare to paradigms of regional expression, social mobility, and democracy. World-renowned hot dog scholar Bruce Kraig investigates the history, people, décor, and venues that make up hot dog culture and what it says about our country. These humble sausages cross ethnic and regional boundaries and have provided the means for plucky entrepreneurs to pull themselves up by their bootstraps. Hot dogs, and the ways we enjoy them, are part of the American dream. Man Bites Dog celebrates the power of the hot dog through an historical survey and profiles of notable hot dog purveyors. Loaded with stunning color photos and descriptions of neighborhood venues and flashy push-carts from New York to Los Angeles, with recipes for cooking up hot dog heaven at home, this book is the ultimate sourceâ??informative, fun, and tastyâ??on the role of hot dogs in American culture. It's a must-have for the dog fan, the foodie, the pop culture maven, and the street cart obsess… (more)

Language

Physical description

200 p.; 9.06 x 0.63 inches
Page: 0.1758 seconds