Onion Dog Day Afternoon

by dusty on Dec.22, 2009 , under Uncategorized

Character flaws — I have my share. Among them, I can be boastful and I’m very, very, incredibly stubborn. But those factors combined do have an interesting side effect, and it’s both a blessing and a curse. I always follow through on a bet, no matter the level of inebriation nor the absurdity involved at the time of the wager.

Case in point my latest foray into the culinary dark arts: the Onion Dog. Before you pass judgment, let me explain how this aberration came to be, and my role in facilitating this process.

A crime against nature

A crime against nature

For those of you keeping track at home, yes, you are in fact looking at an onion, pierced by seven hot dogs, wrapped in bacon, skewered and grilled. And yes, it’s perfectly natural to be repulsed by this. But no, I cannot take credit for the evil, maniacal genius needed to conjure such a thing out of the mind’s darkest recesses. That distinction goes to one Adam Schabow.

It must have been about a month ago now that Schabow’s band the Shabelles and the band I was drumming for at the time performed a moderately successful gig at the High Noon Saloon. Following the show, I invited members of both groups over to my place for the customary grilling of meat/imitation-meat-for-those-who-prefer and drinking of beer. Schabow attended, as did keys player Nate Tredinnick, and we consumed vast quantities of each commodity.

The coup de foudre of the evening occurred as Schabow was loading up yet another hot dog, heaping it with diced onions. When I commented on the abundance of his onions, he replied, “Man, I love onions on hot dogs so much. If I could just take a hot dog and, like, infuse it through an onion, I’d grill it and eat it like an apple.”

Nate was incredulous. He insisted Schabow’s idea had no grounding in reality whatsoever. When I pointed out it would be possible for one to use a drill to hollow a suitable-sized hole in an onion, he scoffed at the notion, claiming onions lacked the structural integrity to withstand that kind of manipulation.

I thought about it for a moment, putting my engineer’s-brain-two-generations-removed to work and turning the design around in my head, then remarked, “No, I bet if we drilled holes in it like the cylinder on a revolver, we could fit up to… five hot dogs in a good-sized onion.”

The gauntlet had been thrown. Schabow’s love of onions on hot dogs, Nate’s doubt and my lust to achieve the unachievable formed a perfect storm of male testosterone, and we established the terms of the bet. Nate refused to take odds in his favor, insisting ours was a fool’s errand, and ten dollars was established as the winning party’s take. I was to acquire three onions (for three attempts, though only one was needed), a power drill and a suitable bit, and we would reconvene at a date to be determined later.

I don’t know about the other guys, but I had no doubt in my mind the final showdown would occur. Eventually, we settled on last Saturday for a date with destiny.

For the record, a good-sized onion can hold five onions, drilled and mounted parallel to each other in a circle around the outer edge of the onion. In fact, a good-sized onion can hold  seven hot dogs if the holes are drilled precisely. While it’s a figure I’m sure can be topped, and I welcome anyone to try, I’m confident in saying seven was my best effort on that particular night. Between my rusty carpentry skills and the copious tears brought on by the powerful reek of onion hitting me like pepper spray from the project two feet in front of my face, I’m just happy to have completed it with all my fingers intact.

Drill, Baby, Drill!

Drill, Baby, Drill!

Upon completion of the drilling, we stuffed the hot dogs into the onions. And then, because the project had suddenly taken on a vile and malevolent life of its own, we wrapped the newly formed “Onion Dogs” in bacon and skewered them for grilling. Then we sat back and wondered at the horrific abominations we had created.

Grill, Baby, Grill!

Grill, Baby, Grill!

A very smart, albeit fictional, man once said, “Now I know what it feels like to be God!” And while my desire to see this project come to fruition was very powerful, it was similarly, purely academic. I didn’t actually want to eat the thing (though I felt obligated to try it), and I certainly wasn’t in it for my share of the ten dollars. I did know what a pieced-together, unnatural terror I was unleashing onto a very vulnerable world, and I simply didn’t care. I wanted to prove that it could be done, and I wanted to claim this ugly accomplishment as my own.

I don’t yet know if I will feel any remorse for what I did. There’s a muted sense of awe, coupled with a dash of perverse pride and a dollop of indigestion, but no remorse yet.

Awestruck

Awestruck

One thing’s for sure — witnessing the genesis of the Onion Dog had a profound effect on everyone who was present. I watched the color gradually drain from Nate’s face as the project progressed. I think it had more to do with his sense of right and wrong than it did with his vegetarianism or his fear of losing ten dollars. Reem was so appalled, she documented the whole thing and posted it for the world to see on her blog, to which I owe credit for these lovely pictures I borrowed (Thank you!). Others in the room expressed varying degrees of discomfort or nausea.

And of course Schabow documented the whole thing on video. If you gird your loins and say a little oath, you can watch the complete genesis of the Onion Dog at Dane101.

So, I guess if there’s a moral to this story (and rest assured morals were not used judiciously in the creation of the Onion Dog), it’s that I don’t make a bet I can’t win. And I always follow through.

Finally, since I know everyone is headed home for the holidays and it’s often necessary to bring a dish to pass, here is the recipe for the Onion Dog. Use it responsibly.

Madison Onion Dogs

1        Good-sized Onion

5-7   Bun-length hot dogs

2        Strips of bacon

1        Pat of butter (optional)

1        Kebab skewer stick

1        Power drill with 13/16″ wood drill bit

Barbecue sauce, ketchup or other condiments as desired

  1. Peel outer layer from onion. Use drill to make 5-7 parallel holes through the onion, making a ring around its outer edge.
  2. Insert hot dogs into holes, using butter if necessary as lubricant.
  3. Wrap the onion in bacon, and secure with the kebab skewer
  4. Grill for 20-30 minutes, keeping hot dogs perpendicular to the flames and turning every five minutes.
  5. Brush with barbecue sauce or dip in ketchup. Have a friend or family member dial nine and one on the phone, then stand-by. Eat as you would an apple.
  6. Dusty Weis and Adam Schabow are not responsible for stroke, heart failure, stomach rupture or brain explosion (from sheer terror) associated with the consumption of the Onion Dog.

Happy holidays, everyone!

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10 Comments for this entry

  • Reem Tara

    YES! Follow through! I LOVE follow through. And I effing love your writing. You explain it in a grand and only somewhat disgusted sense, and I appreciate that.

    I cannot believe you included a recipe. Now that’s follow through. Good show, Dusty!

  • Pop

    Next level, boys…. Deep-Fried Onion Dog!…I’m just sayin’…

  • Green Girl

    At last! A “dish to pass” that I can bring, with confidence, to both tailgate parties and family gatherings!

    Any recipe that involves both hand-held power tools and bacon gets a hearty two thumbs/makita’s UP from me!

    This opens up a host of possibilities for other recipes….in addition to the deep fried onion dog above, let me suggest the “meat-a-tarian version”, substituting ham for the onion.

    Kudo’s men! Carry on!

  • Dusty

    Yes, the deep-friend onion dog (or D-FOD) was discussed, but we hadn’t the means to achieve it. GG, the suggestion of a meat-a-tarian Onion Dog nearly knocked me clean out of my chair. Yours is clearly a level of diabolical I have ne’er encountered. I am humbled.

  • Adam Schabow

    Nicely done. Next up, Chili Onion Dog.

  • Joshua James

    Part of me is sad that I didn’t make it over to Schabow’s for this monstrosity, but an even bigger part of me is glad I didn’t have to smell it. Only on a cold Wisconsin night will you find grown men drilling holes in an onion as a receptacle for hot dogs.

  • Tim Morrissey

    I will attempt to create one of these monstrosities only to satisfy my personal curiousity about it. Fascinating.

  • Green Girl

    Chili cheese onion dog prep suggestion: Drill the “hotdog holes”, cut the onion in half, hollow out the center, fill with chili…and some shredded Wisconsin cheddar….then reassemble (the hotdogs and bacon should help hold it together). Can’t wait for the photos…sounds like either a NYE or superbowl delicacy in the making! Diabolical…abso-freaking-lutely!

  • Bonnie Smith

    Hi from Cambria. John M sent this to me. I laughed so hard tears were streaming down my cheeks. I still remember the article about your gramma’s pies. Hope all is well with you.
    Bonnie

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