green papaya
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,261
- Location
- California, usa
only 5 cents each
Had a walk-up hot dog stand hot dog for lunch today, but it cost me $2.50. Life is very sad.
How sanitary were the hot dog carts back then? Did they have to adhere to strict food handling laws or did anything go?
But when he paid a nickel for a weenie, he got one that was plump, juicy, and all-meat. For two fifty I get one that's skinny and nitrite-injected and all-meat-flavored.
There were health inspectors, but they had a hard time keeping up with the sheer number of "hot dog kennels" that existed. When the hot dog fad was at its peak in the early twenties, ramshackle wooden stands and carts were everywhere -- many of them fly-by-night enterprises that made people very suspicious. The rise of the first fast-food hamburger chains in the twenties -- White Castle, White Tower and the like -- was the direct result of public mistrust of weenie wagons. White Castle and its clones were sheathed in highly-polished porcelain enamel and had a rigorous sanitation code for employees -- setting the pattern that was duplicated later on by McDonalds and Burger King and the rest of the second-generation fast food operations.