I enjoyed the link. But the suggestion for Kaufman (Royals) is just wrong. Still, click on the Kaufman link within the link and you'll find some really good options.
I love the Brewers and miss everything Klements, but the Secret Stadium Sauce is an embarrassment. If given the choice, anyone living in an actual Bbq town would say thanks but I'll be fine with ketchup.
The signature dish at Dodger Stadium is a Dodger dog, same today as in 1958. Since the article gets the one stadium I know about wrong, I suspect the whole thing :P
I'm calling BS. The only "what to eat" at a ball park is an original foot-long Dodger Dog which is an all beef Farmer John (the eastern-most in quality and the western-most in flavor) grilled hot dog with mustard.
I stand in line for the BBQ at Turkey Mike's BBQ in the San Jose Municipal Stadium Home of the San Jose Giants. Everything I've had is delicious, and I always get peanuts. Who can go to a game and not get peanuts?
They may have Ben's chili dog at Nationals Park right, but that does not mean it is any good. I have eaten many hotdogs/chili dogs and Ben's is no where near the top. Of the other stadiums, the Choomongous looks good.
Appalling how many taxpayer financed stadiums carry corporate names. I'd pay more attention to this list if he called the stadiums by the names the fans know them, instead of the names the marketing departments of corporate America arranged to have them called.
"PB said... I grew up around Cleveland and stadium mustard on a hotdog is a great memory stretching back to childhood. Funny that it's made in Illinois."
The only made in Cleveland these days is crushing depression.
I grew up in Middelburg Hts and North Olmsted. My first MLB game was "Save the Indians Day" in the old Cleveland Municipal Stadium, must have been around 1963 or 64. I still remember the amazing site coming out of the tunnel into the grandstands...all that green.
Why the hell would you buy deep-dish pizza at U.S. Cellular Field (or just "Cellular Field") in Chicago when you can buy it in dozens of places outside the ball park? What you can get inside the ball park is a real kosher all-beef hot dog with a slice of pastrami bacon on top. It's so popular they usually run out in the 6th inning. For good reason, I might add - it's delicious.
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18 comments:
I enjoyed the link. But the suggestion for Kaufman (Royals) is just wrong. Still, click on the Kaufman link within the link and you'll find some really good options.
I love the Brewers and miss everything Klements, but the Secret Stadium Sauce is an embarrassment. If given the choice, anyone living in an actual Bbq town would say thanks but I'll be fine with ketchup.
The signature dish at Dodger Stadium is a Dodger dog, same today as in 1958. Since the article gets the one stadium I know about wrong, I suspect the whole thing :P
I'm calling BS. The only "what to eat" at a ball park is an original foot-long Dodger Dog which is an all beef Farmer John (the eastern-most in quality and the western-most in flavor) grilled hot dog with mustard.
http://www.startribune.com/sports/11690591.html
Boston even has the best ball park in the country.
The rest of them are named after companies...for the most part.
We are so fab; we started the entire gay marriage movement, and first with universal health care, education, and even sports.
The Nationals Park selection is correct, so I believe it all :-)
This is my dream.
I've stood in line many a time at Camden Yards for Boog's BBQ. They got that one right.
I stand in line for the BBQ at Turkey Mike's BBQ in the San Jose Municipal Stadium Home of the San Jose Giants. Everything I've had is delicious, and I always get peanuts. Who can go to a game and not get peanuts?
Yup, that's why America is obese.
They may have Ben's chili dog at Nationals Park right, but that does not mean it is any good.
I have eaten many hotdogs/chili dogs and Ben's is no where near the top.
Of the other stadiums, the Choomongous looks good.
Appalling how many taxpayer financed stadiums carry corporate names. I'd pay more attention to this list if he called the stadiums by the names the fans know them, instead of the names the marketing departments of corporate America arranged to have them called.
Suggests he doesn't know what he's talking about.
My son ate 6 hotdogs at a game once. I think we left early too.
Ah to be young.
"What to Eat at Every Single Major League Baseball Stadium."
A hot dog. With Mustard. And a cold beer. /thread
I grew up around Cleveland and stadium mustard on a hotdog is a great memory stretching back to childhood. Funny that it's made in Illinois.
"PB said...
I grew up around Cleveland and stadium mustard on a hotdog is a great memory stretching back to childhood. Funny that it's made in Illinois."
The only made in Cleveland these days is crushing depression.
I grew up in Middelburg Hts and North Olmsted. My first MLB game was "Save the Indians Day" in the old Cleveland Municipal Stadium, must have been around 1963 or 64. I still remember the amazing site coming out of the tunnel into the grandstands...all that green.
Why the hell would you buy deep-dish pizza at U.S. Cellular Field (or just "Cellular Field") in Chicago when you can buy it in dozens of places outside the ball park? What you can get inside the ball park is a real kosher all-beef hot dog with a slice of pastrami bacon on top. It's so popular they usually run out in the 6th inning. For good reason, I might add - it's delicious.
"I still remember the amazing site coming out of the tunnel into the grandstands...all that green."--Curious George
Ditto. Forbes Field, Pittsburgh, 1968. Exact same feeling.
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