![]() ![]() What it essentially means is that there's no sodium nitrite in the product. ![]() The word "uncured" on hot dog packaging is perhaps a little misleading. Photo by Chelsea Kyle, Food Styling by Anna Stockwell The Best Uncured Hot Dogs: Niman Ranch Top-split buns + top-rated dogs = the ideal Memorial Day situation. Noting that, Hebrew National's dogs were the perfect length for standard hot dog buns. We prefer bun-length dogs and tasted these whenever available. That snap is important, and it's usually where most hot dogs fall short, having either no snap (which makes the dog seem mushy) or an exterior so tough that it's hard to bite through cleanly without making a mess of the toppings. ![]() They're meaty with a nice smoky profile and a good snap when bitten through. The big flavors here were beef and paprika. Many of the hot dogs we tasted were filled with strange, unappealing spices. First up, the rankings! Our Favorite Hot Dogs: Hebrew National For our methodology and the full list of hot dogs we tasted, scroll to the bottom of the page. Concerned about nitrates? We also picked a best no-nitrate-added variety. In the lead: kosher beef-namely that by Hebrew National. But of the 17 kinds of hot dog we sampled in our recent taste test (some beef, some pork, some a combination of these and other meats), the pork varieties easily slid into the bottom ranks-except for one. Maybe you already knew this, but I didn't, and-having grown up in a world that knew only pork hot dogs-it was a particularly hard fact for me to swallow. ![]()
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