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TM
What do people REALLY eat at Baseball Games?
Edited by Madelyn Miller, the TravelLady
Despite Pushing Trendy Sushi and Sangria, Americans Will Stick With
traditional Hot Dogs and Sauerkraut this Baseball Season
This year's baseball fan's will find a dizzying array of
new foods including Sushi, Tacos and Sangria at their favorite ball parks, but
these trendy menu additions won't make a dent in sales of the perennial American
favorite: a hot dog garnished with sauerkraut, according to the Fremont
Company, producers of Frank's Sauerkraut. Sauerkraut continues to be the
country's second favorite hot dog topping, after mustard, as calculated by sales
by weight.
WEINER IS TOP DOG
"I don't hear any mention of sushi in the classic 'Take me
out to the ball game'," says Chris Smith, VP Director of Marketing for the
Fremont Company. "But I applaud the food operators for trying to innovate and
bring new and interesting foods items to the ballpark." Smith adds.
"Despite competition from other foods the wiener remains
top dog at stadiums," according to a statement issued by the National Hot Dog
and Sausage Council.
According to the Council, Americans will eat 29 million hot
dogs in major league ballparks this year. 'If we assume that 1/2 of these
hotdogs will be served traditionally, with sauerkraut, and that each dog
receives a one and half ounce packet of our product, Americans will be consuming
2,268,750 pounds of sauerkraut this summer," says Chris Smith.
"Regardless of your home team, there's one thing nearly all
baseball fans have in common: a love of the All American hot dog," said Council
President Janet Riley.
In discussing changes at San Francisco's Pacific Bell Park,
San Francisco Chronicle writer Robin Davis observed;"the number of food options
have increased: sushi, ($6-$6.25), Japanese rice bowls ($6.25), Singapore
chicken ($6.25); But do fans really go to the game for these items? The perfect
complement to baseball is the hot dog ($4.75), and at Pac Bell, it came out on
top."
"On the eve of Barry Bonds breaking Babe Ruth's home run
record it's pretty clear that Americans are feeling reverent for tradition. And
hot dogs with sauerkraut at a baseball park is about as honest an American
tradition as you can find," says Chris Smith.
The American Museum of Natural History cites "Hot Dogs as
America" on their website and references the #1 and # 2 incarnations as the New
York Deli Dog and New York Street Cart Dog, both garnished with mustard and
sauerkraut.
CRAVING HOT DOGS OUT OF SEASON?
Check out unique recipes at
www.sauerkraut.com
Madelyn Miller is a writer and web entrepreneur who writes
for
www.travellady.com,
www.chocolateatlas.com,
www.cocktailatlas.com,
www.carladynews.com, and
www.todaysgooddeeds.com She has several new websites in the works.
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