Is a Hot Dog a Sandwich?

  • Thread starter Joel
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Is a Hot Dog a Sandwich?


  • Total voters
    223
A burger with three or more buns will be a cake. Two will just be a sandwich. The classification of the food is based on the locations of the starch in a meal.

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Source: https://cuberule.com/
What the diddly darn Smeg is a pile of Pancakes doing with the word "Flapjacks" under it. Utter shunt of a comment there.

This is a flapjack, a dense oaty concoction glued together with a butter and syrup mixture.
flapjack-1.jpg
 
So a Big Mac is a cake. Good to know.

What if the starch is in the product? Like croutons in soup?
 
What the diddly darn Smeg is a pile of Pancakes doing with the word "Flapjacks" under it. Utter shunt of a comment there.

This is a flapjack, a dense oaty concoction glued together with a butter and syrup mixture.
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In America (and maybe Canada?) flapjacks are pancakes. The term "flapjack" is not used nearly as often as "pancakes", but I'd guess that it's used in this case because of the word "cake" in "pancake" being too suggestive that it actually belongs in the "cake" category. The idea is for it to be fairly funny and obnoxious, so if it literally says "cake" in the word, it doesn't come off as being quite as funny.

It's not a problem in the US that we use "flapjack" for pancake. Nobody gets confused, because we simply don't have/eat what you're calling a flapjack ;).
 
Are crab cakes flapjacks?

Wait, no, they're nachos.
Crab cakes are expert level espionage assets.

I want to eat a crab cake now.

I am allergic.

Still really want to eat a crab cake.
 
Oxford Dictionary says:
"An article of food for a light meal or snack, composed of two thin slices of bread, usually buttered, with a savoury (originally spec. meat, esp. beef or ham) or other filling."

So no, the hotdog is not a Sandwich.
 
Could the guy not have just opened his store in a different plaza rather than trying to convince them for 3 years and taking it to court?
It's not his store. It's his plaza. He purchased property which had been re-zoned from single-family residential to limited commercial. The new zoning places restrictions on the nature of commercial development. Upon learning the nature of the business to be opened on the property that he'd developed, with rental commitments established, the city planning commission from whom he secured development permission objected.

The ruling doesn't actually define tacos as sandwiches, rather it establishes the nature of the business as complying with the spirit of the restrictions, and it includes language which isn't legally binding ("dicta") that has since been latched onto because it's humorous.
 
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It's not his store. It's his plaza. He purchased property which had been re-zoned from single-family residential to limited commercial. The new zoning places restrictions on the nature of commercial development. Upon learning the nature of the business to be opened on the property that he'd developed, with rental commitments established, the city planning commission from whom he secured development permission objected.

The ruling doesn't actually define tacos as sandwiches, rather it establishes the nature of the business as complying with the spirit of the restrictions, and it includes language which isn't legally binding ("dicta") that has since been latched onto because it's humorous.
If you surround a single-family home with 2 bakeries, is it a sandwich?
 
The essence of a hotdog lies in the sausage itself, not necessarily in how it is served. One can consume the sausage by itself and still say “I ate a hotdog”, it retains its identity.

The term “hotdog” does not inherently imply the presence of a bun, which distinguishes itself from the concept of a sandwich.

A “sandwich” only qualifies to be a sandwich if it consists of one or more types of filling placed between two slices of bread or within a split roll or bun.

Therefore, a hotdog is not a sandwich. (Still voted “Yes” though, was bribed by the other party)
 
The essence of a hotdog lies in the sausage itself, not necessarily in how it is served. One can consume the sausage by itself and still say “I ate a hotdog”, it retains its identity.

The term “hotdog” does not inherently imply the presence of a bun, which distinguishes itself from the concept of a sandwich.

A “sandwich” only qualifies to be a sandwich if it consists of one or more types of filling placed between two slices of bread or within a split roll or bun.

Therefore, a hotdog is not a sandwich. (Still voted “Yes” though, was bribed by the other party)
Based on this, then eating a hotdog WITH a bun, would be considered a sandwich (following the logic that if you have a hamburger, it isn't a sandwich unless it is on a bun of some sort).
Were you bribed with a hotdog to throw your vote?
 
Based on this, then eating a hotdog WITH a bun, would be considered a sandwich (following the logic that if you have a hamburger, it isn't a sandwich unless it is on a bun of some sort).
Were you bribed with a hotdog to throw your vote?
So what we're saying is that a hotdog with no bun is not a sandwich, a hotdog with a bun is a sandwich, and burger without a bun is not a sandwich, and a burger with a bun is a sandwich. Looks good to me.
 
If you take the literal meaning, obviously a hot dog is not a sandwich. You wouldn't call this dog a sandwich:

282263739_09367be4b3_o.jpg

Maybe likes of PETA can get the term hot dog banned as a meal one day. Maybe in an alternate galaxy out there, they call it a hot cat.

Anyway moving on to the next point, a sausage by itself is not a sandwich. The question implies something is making it considered a sandwich which I can presume is a bun. At the end of the day, a split roll with cooked sausage filling is a sandwich. Best to call a spade a spade. If you go down the slippery slope of changing what terms means, then you might get questions one day, is an Orange a basketball? Is a Sub, an actual submarine or a sandwich? I wonder if people who think hot dogs are not sandwiches, would think they are if the sausage was replaced with tuna and salad?
 
If you take the literal meaning
You shouldn't. Many such cases. Here's another:

sos.jpg


It's a fun name intended to get attention, especially at a crowded fair (and later ball games).

The name "hot dog" technically refers to the combined meat and bun. The meat alone is a frank or a wiener, derived from their place of origin (Frankfurt or Vienna). Sometimes people refer to the meat alone as a hot dog. That's neither correct or incorrect. It deviates from its origins but it's common usage.

Accounts of the name's origin vary. Some say that because "wiener" was also used to describe Dachshunds, that made it fun, and of course they (the sausages) were served hot. Another account is that it came from the phrase conveying enthusiasm or excitement ("hot dog!").
 
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