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Topic: disturbing concession products
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Gerard S. Cohen
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 975
From: Forest Hills, NY, USA
Registered: Sep 2001
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posted 06-08-2003 12:04 PM
There's a vegetarian version of the frank that might sell well, especially in urban cinemas patronized by girls and young women, who increasingly seem to be vegetarian or on diets. It called Corn Dogs, and my daughter brings them home frozen, in cartons of six or eight. Each vege "hot dog" is mounted on a stick and covered with a thick coating of corn dough. Popped in a micro-wave oven for two minutes, each makes a delicious snack, easy to hold and eat, with no chance of spilling or dripping on clothes. Simple to store, heat and eat.
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Paul Mayer
Oh get out of it Melvin, before it pulls you under!
Posts: 3836
From: Albuquerque, NM
Registered: Feb 2000
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posted 06-08-2003 01:35 PM
Dennis, "Meat Pipe"... I love it!
I cook and attempt to sell these things at the "Snack Attack" stands at the Thomas & Mack arena and Sam Boyd Stadium here. My opinion in a word--they're hideous. On a typical night we'll cook and sell upwards of 60 hotdogs (Hebrew Nationals) in each stand, whereas we usually only need to cook 5-10 each of the burger and chicken pipes--then spoil lots of those out since they usually don't sell. Promotion (other than the rather unappetizing name) doesn't seem to be the issue--the pipes are the only product we sell that has a picture poster mounted on the menu board in each stand. So far the only crowds that seem to really like the pipes have been the National Finals Rodeo and the Monster Truck Finals--meat lovers to the end I suppose.
BTW the Brenden Palms 14 sells them too. Don't know what kind of luck they've had with them.
They may look better if they are cooked on a grill or roller (that's the way they were demonstrated to us) but except for the Backcourt Grill at the TAM we only have steam ovens at these venues, so that's how we cook these pipes. When they're raw it's easy to tell the difference between chicken and burger, but after the steamer it's hard to tell which is which, either by color or smell or taste. Not generally a good sign.
One other good/bad thing about these pipes is they contain no preservatives. Fine as far as that goes, but once they're put in the fridge they cannot be put back into the freezer--thawing is a one-way trip. So extra care must be taken when moving stock to prevent even more spoilage losses. In trying to cut down on some of the spoilage we experimented with returning cooked pipes to the fridge then reheating them (as we sometimes do with the hotdogs). Not a pretty result--the pipes fell apart during reheating.
All in all not a very impressive product IMNSHO, from either the customer side or the kitchen's. Don't know how long we'll keep pushing them at TAM and SBS--someone obviously paid a lot of money for product placement. But if it were my call, I'd dump them. My Film-Tech review: "D" This Blows!
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Gerard S. Cohen
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 975
From: Forest Hills, NY, USA
Registered: Sep 2001
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posted 06-08-2003 02:38 PM
Don,
These are Morningstar Farms CORN DOGS, (Veggie Dogs), 67% Less Fat, Four Corn Dogs in a 10 oz box, "4g fat and 0 mg cholesterol versus 12g fat and 15mg cholesterol for Meat Corn Dogs."
These are 8" long (including wooden stick,) light brown, and have a delicious taste that I thought was meat until my daughter had me read the box. They are distributed by Kellog Co. USA. The caveat for Allergic Consumers reads "This product contains wheat, soy, dairy and egg ingredients", and a complete Nutrition Facts and Ingredients chart appears on the carton.
My daughter probably buys them at The Natural, a very successful Korean-American family-owned and operated market in Forest Hills, NY, which specializes in natural, organic, health and upscale delicacy foods. From a single storefront they have expanded into a row of four or five, with fresh flowers and produce on sidewalk stands. I never heard of corn dogs before, let alone these vegetarian ones on-a-stick, but now I have a new snack.
Gerard
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