Larry and sister Pattie Sue revisit  Coney Island - a hot dog restaurant that has been a landmark and favorite lunch and snack spot in downtown St. Petersburg, Florida, for over 80 years. This visit was in 2004.

The Search

For The Perfect

Coney Island Hot Dog

This fascination with the Coney Island hot dog is new. Thanks to my wife's father, Sonny, I had the opportunity to eat Coneys at the same little shop where he ate them as a school kid in the twenties. These were not like the hot dogs I was used to.

Previous to the Coney Island encounter, my feelings about hot dogs were thus: as long as it didn't taste like a hot dog, that was okay; in fact,that was good! That is why my hot dog of choice was one with lots of mustard, a good helping of diced onion and lots and lots of good ol' sweet pickle relish. You can't taste the hot dog that way. An alternative was a chili dog but that was one smothered in chili with lots of diced onions and cheese - enough that it had to be eaten from a plate with utinsels. Can't taste the hot dog that way either.

With the combination of flavors from the chili sauce, the onions and the mustard, the Coney Island hot dog is again a handy and tasty finger food.

Ingredients

Directions for Traditional Coney Island Hot Dog

  1. Grill hot dogs, warm buns.
  2. Place hot dog in bun. Place stripe of mustard along side hot dog.
  3. Place spoonful of onions along side of hot dog on same side as mustard.
  4. Place spoonful of chili sauce along opposite side of hot dog. Use finger to push onions and chili down along side of hot dog and into the side of the bun until you can close-up the bun. Add hot sauce if desired. It is rready to eat.

The secret here is proportions. It will take a bit of experimentation to get it right but that's okay. You get to eat the test results. It is a balance of the mustard, onions, chili sauce and the hot dog. No single ingredient should predominate - it is the blend that makes the distinctive flavor of the Coney Island hot dog.

I talked for a bit with the owner of the Coney Island stand. He didn't give much to help me figure out the recipe for his chili sauce - and that is the one ingredient that makes the Coney Island hot dog unique. Did a few taste tests and then a few more several days later. Started to get a feel for what was in it. Also did some research on the internet and found several recipes, all "authentic," and all different. Some very different. Pick one you like and give it a try. Enjoy a real, "authentic" Coney Island hot dog.

Sauce 1 Ingredients (Joyce S. - Recipes Online)

Directions

  1. Combine everything except wieners and simmer until thick. Do not brown ground beef first.
  2. Grind the wieners and add to sauce. Cook 15 minutes longer.
  3. Now, some chefs, if the sauce is too thin, added a few crumbled soda crackers to the sauce. Put over hot dogs in a bun.

Sauce 2 Ingredients (Charlotte Lewis - Recipes Online)

Directions

  1. In a medium saucepan, cook meat, crumbling with a fork, until it loses its red color.
  2. Add remaining ingredients and simmer for about 30 minutes.
  3. Serve over hot dogs in buns.

I have experimented with several chili sauce recipes. Some of them similar to the above recipes. I keep the cooked sauce in a jar in the fridge so that I can grab a quickie Coney Island dof whenever the urge strikes.

The above recipes seem to treat the Coney Island as a mundane chili dog. They seem to neglect the traditional garnishes - the raw chopped onions and the mustard. After looking at the recipes that I found on the internet and remembering the taste tests of the real Coney Island hot dogs, I came up with the following recipe that does a nice job of minicing the "secret" Coney Island sauce. I hope that you like it.

Sauce 3 Ingredients (Larry Andersen)

Directions

  1. In frying pan, brown meat until no longer red. Break up into very small pieces. Skim off most of the fat.
  2. Add onions and garlic, cook until onions are transparent. Add other ingredients and simmer while stirring.
  3. May add a little water if sauce too thick when cooking but the finished sauce should be almost dry.
  4. Taste sauce. Chili pungemncy should be present but not too hot. The finished sauce need to have a bit of a bite but mostly flavor to meld with the mustard, onions and grilled hot dog.
  5. Assemble you Coney Island following the directions for the Traditional Coney Island at the top of this page.
  6. Sauce will keep for a week in a covered container in the refrigerator. Good eating!

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Last update February 2004