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Salchipapa (Peruvian Hot Dogs and French Fries)

Peru's irresistible platter of hot dogs and French fries pulls no punches.

There's a world in which the instructions for homemade salchipapa consists of little more than this:

1. Cook a bag of frozen French fries following the package instructions.

02. Sauté sliced hot dogs in a skillet with some oil until lightly browned.

3. Pile hot dogs on top of French fries and serve with sauces of your choosing.

And there would be nothing wrong with that recipe, because salchipapa is fast food, it's street food, it's bar food, it's restaurant food, and it's very much the kind of snack that, if you're craving it, is probably something you want right now and rather than something you want to be spending a couple hours making from scratch. (If you are going the quick-and-easy route, I should note that this would be a great time to break out the air fryer for both the fries and the hot dogs.)

But while there's nothing wrong with making salchipapa at home in the manner above, there is something wrong with publishing a recipe like that—especially on a website defined by its willingness to go deeper. So this is how to make salchipapa the hard way, because that's why you're here, right? Like I said, though, if you want to read this and then tear into a bag of frozen fries, please do.

What is Salchipapa?

Just in case you've had the misfortune of not knowing of the existence of this platter of franks-frites, here's a bit of background. Salchipapa is a portmanteau of salchicha (sausage) and papa (potato). According to Peru's national tourism site, it first cropped up in the 1950s as a street food in Lima, where it became popular among time- and money-pressed workers. The affordable, filling, quick snack (it can, let's be clear, suffice as a meal) soon became popular enough that it spread from the street carts to restaurants, bars, homes, and beyond.

Today it's a popular dish not just in Peru, but abroad, with regional, national, and personal variations that each give their own spin on the basic concept. In some places, other meats are added, like chicken, various sausages, and cuy (guinea pig). In others, seafood sneaks into the mix. Some vendors squirt all the sauces on top, others serve them as dips on the side. I've heard of cabbage salad mounded onto the hot dogs, as well as fried eggs balanced on top and veils of of melted cheese. There are Colombian versions and Ecuadorian versions and Bolivian versions and...I mean, I think you get it: Take hot dogs, put them on a pile of French fries, then get creative. It's a pretty obvious sequence of events.

In Peru, common sauces with salchipapa include salsa de aceitunas, a briny black-olive mayo; ketchup; and sauces made from ají amarillo chile peppers (one of the easiest is made by simply blending mayo with ají amarillo chile paste).

The From-Scratch Version: How to Make Great Salchipapa at Home

Even in its most pared-down form, salchipapa is still something of a choose-your-own adventure dish. There are questions of potato type, which is much more limited here in the States than in Peru, where the domesticated potato was born and varieties abound. There are questions of the potato cut and size (skinny fries, large fries, wedges, and so on). And the same goes for the hot dogs. Do you cut them crosswise into little logs? Slice them into rounds? Do that cute little octopus thing where you make cross-cuts into logs so they form legs when fried?

For my recipe, I opted for creamy Yukon Gold potatoes over starchy russets. Russets are the more common choice for fries, but I noticed in my recipe research that in Peru yellow varieties are a popular choice for salchipapa, and while we may not have the same yellow potato options as in Peru, Yukon Golds are our closest alternative. They're more flavorful than russets, and they have a creamier texture that I think works well with the hot dogs and dips. You lose a little bit of crispness in exchange, but in some ways that's less important here—after all, we're piling hot dogs on top of the fries in a way that will trap some steam and slightly soften some of them anyway.

Prep: 15 mins

Cook: 90 mins

Total: 105 mins

Serves: 6 to 8 servings

Ingredients

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· 2 1/2 pounds Yukon Gold or russet potatoes (1130g; about 5 medium potatoes)

· 2 1/2 tablespoons (37ml) distilled white vinegar

· Kosher salt

· 1/2 cup store-bought or homemade mayonnaise (4 1/2 ounces; 128g)

· 1/2 cup whole pitted kalamata olives (2 1/2 ounces; 70g)

· 2 quarts (1.9L) peanut oil or other neutral oil

· 1 pound hot dogs, frankfurters, or other similar wiener, cut crosswise on the bias about 1/2-inch thick

· Ketchup

· Other dips, such as mayo, mustard, ají amarillo sauce, etc., as desired (see note).

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