Iamarealbigdog wrote:...From Zweigle's...B. Ingredient Statement: PORK, WATER, BEEF, VEAL, NONFAT DRY MILK, SALT, contains 2% or less of: SODIUM LACTATE, CORN SYRUP, DEXTROSE,FLAVORINGS, SODIUM PHOSPHATES.
a little more research shows dry mustard powder, I think a little white pepper, I'll see if I can dig up some more of the spice additions.
It's kind of fun researching recipes and how the same sausages vary from region to region.
Yes, I've gotten as far as Zweigle's and a couple of other commercial producers making them...and that pesky catch-all term "flavorings". At this point, I'm researching individuals' descriptions of ones they have had for clues to the seasoning, and how it would be different from weisswurst. It appears to be described as a "hot dog", and by some, as milder than Zweigle's red hot dog, which is described as a regular hog dog. The fact that the white dog is made with uncured, unsmoked pork, or pork and veal, and milk, would make it milder tasting, even with the same seasoning. It is plumper that a regular hot dog, like a weisswurst. One person says they tried weisswurst, and it isn't a substitute for white hots, that the white hots are spicier than the weisswurst.
So, now I'm researching traditional seasoning blends for hot dogs from Rochester and Buffalo, NY. Looking for homemade recipes for both red and white, in hopes of determining what it is the commercial producers are duplicating and offering. As a food historian, I find this kind of quest very interesting. I expect some of you go digging for regional variations/origins, too.