Searching for a Mother-in-Law Sandwich
Eager enthusiasts track Chicago’s indigenous—and sometimes endangered—food traditions
- By Jamie Katz
- Smithsonian.com, April 20, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
It's unclear how the tamale, a staple of Mexican cuisine, became the hot dog of the African-American South. "Isn't this just an aberration?" Edge asks in an essay posted on tamaletrail.com. "Like finding curried conch in Collierville, Tennessee or foie gras in Fort Smith, Arkansas?" Not really, he suggests. In the early 20th century, Mexican laborers had begun to migrate from Texas by way of Arkansas to find work in the cotton harvest. There they would have encountered black farmhands, who may have adopted the tamale as their own. Engler has yet to connect all the dots. So far, he hasn't been able to document the existence of the mother-in-law before the 1950s. "My dream is someday to find a picture of a hot dog cart in the 1930s with a sign saying 'Mother-in-Law,'" he says.
What's more, if the mother-in-law did arrive in Chicago as an African-American specialty, that's no longer the case. Today it's more prevalent in the largely white Southwest Side, in areas like Marquette Park. Fat Johnnie's owner is a Polish-American who was initiated to the mother-in-law by a Lithuanian vendor, and the factory that provides the majority of South Side tamales was founded in the 1930s by a Greek family.
Chicagoans don't even agree that it should be served on a bun at all. Some prefer their mother-in-law served up in a cardboard French-fries boat. "Sometimes they're called a tamale boat or a tamale sundae," Engler says. Then there's the humdinger, which is a mother-in-law with melted cheese on top, and the Mighty Dog, which he describes as "a chili-and-cheese-covered hot dog cradled in a split tamale, all nestled in a poppy seed bun."
I don't know about you, but I'm starting to understand the part about heartburn.
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Comments (5)
Lived in Chicago for 20 years, left in '96- how could I have missed this gastronomic bonanza?? phumpf
Posted by Steven Bachenheimer on February 2,2010 | 07:41 AM
Fat Johnnies mother in law and a big baby. Who would believe that 2 of my favorite places would end up on Smithsonian. The home of the big baby was on 58th and Kedzie, we used to sit in the Jewel parking lot after midnight on Friday and hang out. The golden arches would be empty and there would be a line out the door at Nicky's Hot dogs just waiting to get a big baby and fries.
Posted by Kevin S. on May 8,2009 | 02:26 PM
Fat Johnnie's!!!!! Great news to hear he is still around. Moved away over 20 years ago and still hanker for his chili cheese dog with onions. Johnnie always got part of my allowance when I walked to Zayre's on Southwest Highway.
Posted by Meg on May 8,2009 | 10:55 AM
My gut is just craving one of these tonight but I am a couple hundred miles too far south in the land of Burgoo and the Hot Brown. I'll be on the search next time I am up there!
Posted by Otis T Grundy on May 7,2009 | 11:00 PM
Thank you for the kind mother-in-law tribute - I think you-re pretty good too. Love, F
Posted by Florence Grace on May 5,2009 | 09:04 AM