VOICE ONE:
Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Faith Lapidus. Today we tell about some of the foods that
Americans like best - America's favorites.
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VOICE ONE:
Hot Dog You may have heard that Americans like hot dogs and
hamburgers best of all foods. Well, farmers and owners of public eating
places might happily agree. So might the nation's Meat Institute and the
National Hot Dog & Sausage Council. But people whose favorites are
pizza and apple pie would give the meat-lovers a spirited argument!
Naming the favorite foods of Americans depends a lot on whom you ask.
But one thing is sure. The ancestors of most Americans came from other
countries. The United States owes many favorite dishes, or the ideas for
these foods, to the rest of the world.
For example, that traditional American favorite, the hot dog or
wiener, had its modern beginning in Germany. The National Hot Dog and
Sausage Council estimates that Americans eat about seven thousand million
of these sausages during a summer.
VOICE TWO:
A hot dog is usually made from pork, the meat of a pig. Or it is made
from beef, the meat of a cow. Another version is made from turkey. A
vegetarian version of a hot dog has no meat at all. It often contains
tofu, made from soy plants.
The hot dog is shaped like a tube. Many people say it looks like a
Dachshund dog. It is served between two shaped pieces of bread called a
bun. Americans often say they especially like hot dogs cooked over a hot
fire in the open air. People at sports events buy plenty of hot dogs.
VOICE ONE:
For many people, it is not just the meat that tastes so good. These
people enjoy colorful and tasty additions. For example, they include a
yellow or yellow-brown thickened liquid called mustard. They may also put
red catsup and pieces of a white or red, strong-smelling vegetable called
onion on their hot dogs.
Hot dog eaters often add pickle, a salty green vegetable. Some people
place barbecue sauce on top of all this. Or they use a spice called
horseradish. It gives the hot dog a pleasant bite.
A hot dog is also known as a frankfurter or frank. That is because the
city of Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany is often said to be the birthplace of
this sausage. But the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council says there are
other ideas about where the hot dog began.
VOICE TWO:
One version of hot dog history says a butcher, or meat cutter, from the
German city of Coburg was responsible. It says he invented the hot dog in
the late sixteen hundreds. Vienna, Austria, also claims that it created
the food.
The council says butchers from several countries probably brought
common European sausages to America. A street salesman sold hot dogs to
people in New York City in the eighteen sixties. And, in eighteen seventy
one, a hot dog stand opened at the Coney Island amusement park in New York
City.
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VOICE ONE:
Couple enjoying fries, hamburger and milkshake Americans also
eat lots of hamburgers. This ground meat comes from beef. It can be cooked
in many ways. Like hot dogs, hamburgers are a favorite picnic food.
Many public eating places in the United States say hamburgers are their
most popular foods. People often eat them in places that serve quickly
prepared, moderately priced food.
Like hot dog experts, hamburger historians disagree about how their
subject got started. The Egyptians and Romans apparently ate ancient
versions of hamburgers. In more modern days, people in Hamburg, Germany,
made something like a hamburger from pork and beef.
VOICE TWO:
The small town of Seymour, Wisconsin, is among several American towns
that claim to have created the first modern hamburger in the United
States.
In Seymour, a man named Charlie Nagreen tried to sell meatballs at a
local fair in eighteen eighty-five. But as people walked around, it was
hard for them to handle the round pieces of meat. So Nagreen flattened the
ball of meat. Then he placed this meat patty between two pieces of bread.
In two thousand one, people in Seymour cooked a hamburger that weighed
more than three thousand kilograms. This creation reportedly fed thirteen
thousand people.
VOICE ONE:
Like hot dogs, Americans like their hamburgers with additions. Things
like mustard, catsup, horseradish, mayonnaise, barbecue sauce, tomatoes,
lettuce, onion and perhaps a pickle.
A hamburger with cheese melted on it is called a cheeseburger. Cooks
make a "Sloppy Joe" by combining hamburger meat with tomato sauce. Many
people eat the Sloppy Joe mixture on a bun. Without a bun, they may get
more of the loose meat on them than inside them.
For many people, eating both hot dogs and hamburgers does not seem
right without potatoes. They eat French fries and potato chips with these
meats. French fries are strips, or pieces, of potato cooked in oil. Potato
chips are extremely thin, cooled pieces of potato. They usually are also
cooked in oil.
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VOICE TWO:
Pizza For Lunch Americans also buy or make large amounts of
pizza. A basic pizza contains tomato sauce or cheese, or both, on a
bread-like material.
Food writer Linda Stradley tells about the history of pizza on her
computer Web site, "What's Cooking America." Miz Stradley says it could
have been the Phoenicians, Greeks or Romans who invented pizza. Or, it
could have been anyone who mixed flour with water and cooked it on a hot
stone.
VOICE ONE:
Italians probably brought pizza to the United States in the second half
of the nineteenth century. In nineteen-oh-five, Gennaro Lombardi
reportedly opened the first pizza store in New York City. In the nineteen
thirties, he added tables to his pizza place. Lombardi also began serving
spaghetti.
Spaghetti is a traditional Italian favorite that also has become an
American favorite. It is made from flour and water and sometimes eggs.
This dough is pulled into lengths and boiled.
VOICE TWO:
Al kinds of foods can be added to both pizza and spaghetti to add to
their taste. For example, people like these foods with different meats on
top. Or they like toppings of small fish called anchovies, or vegetables
called mushrooms. Some people like all the additions at once.
Another favorite food, macaroni, is similar to spaghetti. Many
Americans remember that their mothers made macaroni cooked with cheese on
cold winter days. People sometimes call this dish "comfort food," because
it makes them feel better.
VOICE ONE:
Others praise hot soups prepared in their childhood homes. Some people
say chicken soup -- chicken pieces in liquid -- can cure anything. Still
others say New England clam chowder helps them think. This soup contains
the shellfish clams floating in a milky liquid. Another version of clam
chowder has tomato sauce. It looks red.
Chocolate To end a meal, or between meals, Americans often eat
chocolate in some form. They eat millions and millions of kilograms of
chocolate a year. Chocolate is produced from cocoa beans. It is used in
sweet foods like candy, pies, puddings and cakes. Many people say
chocolate makes them feel happier.
VOICE TWO:
People have praised chocolate for its taste for many years. Some
studies have shown that it can help chase away mild feelings of sadness.
But chocolate often has a large amount of fat.
However, some experts now say a moderate amount of chocolate can be
healthful. For example, the Cleveland Clinic Heart Center in Ohio notes
that chocolate contains substances called antioxidants. Antioxidants are
thought to help the body fight damage caused by natural processes and
harmful substances in the environment.
The Heart Center suggests choosing dark chocolate instead of milk
chocolate. And it warns that people should restrict themselves to a
moderate amount.
VOICE ONE:
Apple Pie Like people in many parts of the world, Americans
love pie. These sweet dishes have fruit, nuts or some other filling in a
crust. Some people say pies are the best comfort food ever. That can be
debated.
Pie can be the most inviting food ever. A red strawberry pie or a
yellow Key lime pie can defeat the strongest resolution of people trying
to lose weight. But apple pie may be a top American favorite. Over time,
this dish has come to be strongly linked to the United States.
When someone or something seems especially American, people say it is
"as American as apple pie."
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VOICE TWO:
Our program was written by Jerilyn Watson. Caty Weaver was our
producer. I'm Faith Lapidus.
VOICE ONE:
And I'm Steve Ember. Our reports are on the Web at
voaspecialenglish.com. Please join us again next week for THIS IS AMERICA
in VOA Special English.
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