Skip to content

Roadfood

Your Guide to Authentic Regional Eats

  • Restaurants Near Me
  • Reviews
  • Restaurant Type
  • States
  • Guides
  • Forums
  • About Roadfood
  • Sign In / Out
Roadfood on Instagram Roadfood on Facebook Roadfood on Twitter
  • Roadfood on Instagram Roadfood on Facebook Roadfood on Twitter
    • reviews
    • guides
    • recipes
    • forums
    • about
  • Restaurant Type
  • State
  • Restaurants Near Me

Home › Forums › Lunch & Dinner Forums › Hot Dogs, Sausages & Bratwursts › How to cook Sabrett’s › RE: How to cook Sabrett’s

November 4, 2006 at 12:41 am #2517848
sizz
sizz
Member

As someone who lives in NYC, I can tell you the absolute best way to cook a Sabrett’s hot dog.

Step 1: Depending on time and distance, fly or drive to NYC.

Step 2: Find a pushcart.

Step 2:a if vender is wearing a turban move on to the next pushcart. If after 12 or more pushcart venders all look like terrorists then review step 3

Step 3: Being a true New Yorker you must learn that the majority of New York cab drivers are Pakistani, not Indian they also wear turbans ……but are not the only culture that wear turbans (see below)

Step 3:a Know that a hot-dog pushcart filled with TNT will and able to perambulate any where in the city unnoticed a deadly vehicle for sure, …better to eat your hot-dogs at Gray’s Papaya

Any other way, it won’t taste the same, trust me.

In Islamic culture, the turban (Arabic: #1593;#1605;#1575;#1605;#1577; imamah, Persian: #1583;#1587;#1578;#1575;#1585; dast#257;r, Hindustani: #2360;#2366;#2347;#2364;#2366; #1587;#1575;#1601;#1575; s#257;f#257;) is an important spiritual element of the cultural faith. Ancient Arabs wore them and took pride in them; to be deprived of one’s turban was humiliating, and knocking a man’s turban off was considered an insult. In daily life, the turban was very useful for fending off the desert sand and protecting the face from high temperatures and strong sunlight. In modern Persian Gulf countries, the turban has been replaced by the white or red-and-white checkered scarf (called keffiyeh, ghutrah or shumagh), though the turban tradition is still strong in Oman (see, for example, Sultan Qaboos of Oman). In Sudan, a large white turban is worn and can indicate social status. Islamic leaders can be seen wearing turbans, in particular Shia Muslim scholars who have become famous for them (e.g., Ayatollah Khomeini, Ayatollah Khamenei, Hezbollah head Sayyid Hassan Nasrallah, and newcomers to the world stage, like Iraq’s Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani). These are worn by Persian and Arab scholars alike; the black colour indicates a sayyid, a descendant of the Prophet Muhammad. Jews in Arabic countries often wore turbans as well, due to assimilation. The traditional color is black. In the countires of South Asia, some Muslims are seen wearing the turban. In fact, in Afghanistan, students were once forced to wear the turban under Taliban rule[1]. ……..also a must read http://www.rawa.org/turban.htm

FORUM SEARCH

Log In
Register

Forums

  • Beverage Forum
  • Breakfast Forum
  • Desserts Forum
  • Lunch & Dinner Forums
  • Miscellaneous Forums
  • Regional Forums
  • Restaurant Professionals Forum
  • Roadfood News & Information Forums
  • Side Dishes Forum
  • Snacks & Candy Forum

Forum Statistics

Registered Users
24,563
Forums
41
Topics
51,038
Replies
686,465
Topic Tags
1,978
  • Most popular topics
  • Topics with no replies
  • Topics with most replies
  • Latest topics
  • Topics Freshness
    • home
    • reviews
    • forums
    • about
    • privacy policy
    • your california privacy rights
    • sign in / out
  • Subscribe to our Newsletter!

Proudly powered by WordPress