Korean Corn Dogs Loaded With Melted Cheese and Other Epic Fixin’s Arrive in NYC
Sofrito Lovers,
Korean Corndogs are iconic! What else would you call a delicious hotdog covered in batter, wrapped in cheese, dipped in fried potato cubes, coated in sugar, and placed on a stick? You see, Iconic!!
This delectable streetfood is all the rage online, just check the thousands of Mukbangs and ASMR videos on YouTube dedicated to sampling this new sensation. Whether it's an actual Korean Mukbanger, British online foodie, or an American ASMRist, these corndogs are garnering a massive international following.
If you're interested in sampling one for yourself, then check out the Eater.com article below and get the deets on how you can get your hands on one. I plan on making my way to Snowy Village in Times Square and getting myself a few of these famous delicious dogs, maybe I'll make a Mukbang or two myself!
Go taste for yourself! ¡Buen Provecho!
Korean Corn Dogs Loaded With Melted Cheese and Other Epic Fixin’s Arrive in NYC
The city may be on the verge of a wiener-on-a-stick revelation with the opening of Snowy Village
by Robert Sietsema Jan 16, 2020, 11:44am EST
When I was a kid in Minneapolis, corn dogs loomed large. They were available only once a year at the Minnesota State Fair and considered one of its main attractions. Called “pronto pups,” these were hot dogs on a stick dipped in a sweet batter heavy with cornmeal and deep-fried to a golden brown. Later, when my family moved to Dallas, a similar product touted at the Texas State Fair was called “corny dogs.” Indeed, it’s a product with a national presence — the places claiming to have originated the corn dog are legion. Portland, Oregon; Muskogee, Oklahoma; Springfield, Illinois; and Dallas, Texas are all cities that make credible claims. Corn dogs were first sold on Coney Island in 1947, and you can still get them there.
Despite their association with Brooklyn beaches, good corn dogs are hard to come by in the city. Imitators of the Papaya King chain often use shorter hot dogs made of chicken, which are not only unsatisfyingly small but pale inside and nearly devoid of flavor. Predictably, restaurants more upscale than a hot dog stand have played with the format, making versions out of seafood, or wrapping them in waffles instead of cornmeal batter. Shake Shack even tried its hand and failed miserably.