All New England Books

Sad news


 The Weiner Genie will close on Feb. 3.2023


The business noted that the past several years have been very difficult.

Staffing has been an issue, as well as the owner's personal health.

"COVID definitely made things very challenging for all of us. The current work climate has been very difficult to navigate and without sufficient staff and without sufficient support in the kitchen it fell more heavily on me to pick up the slack. I did so but at a cost," the post said. "After after much discussions with our family, we have made the difficult decision to close."

Weiner Genie thanked customers for their loyalty.

Countless Celebrities Have Loved This Iconic Rhode Island Diner For Decades

  



Rhode Islanders know good food and, in some cases, they’re responsible for that good food. Like New York Systems, also commonly known as hot wieners, a hot dog topped with meat sauce, onions, mustard, and celery sauce. You’ll find a few places that grill some downright delicious hot wieners, a scrumptious Rhode Island invention. However, this iconic Rhode Island diner has been drawing locals and celebrities since the 1930s.

With locations in Providence and Cranston, Olneyville New York System bills itself as serving the best hot wieners in Rhode Island. However, you’ll really want to judge for yourself by sinking your teeth into one of their New York Systems.

 

One bite into a classic hot wiener, and, well, you might think you’re in paradise. You’ll certainly understand why this diner in Rhode Island has gotten plenty of attention over the years and from some pretty big names.

 

It should come as little surprise, then, that this Rhode Island original has attracted such famous chefs as Guy Fieri and Alton Brown.

 

Some beloved sports figures, including former New England Patriots star Rob Gronkowski, have also stopped by for a famous hot wiener.

 

Whether you’re craving a snack or a meal, you’ll quickly find a hot wiener fits the bill. How many will you order? One or two? Maybe more?

 

While a hot wiener is sure to fill you up, it always pairs well with such classic sides as fries, chili cheese fries, cheese fries, and onion rings. Or how about an order of sweet potato fries?

 

Olneyville New York System is famous for its hot wieners, but that’s not all it serves. You’ll also find other favorites – cheeseburgers, BLTs, and grilled cheese – on the menu, too.

 

If you ever find yourself craving a New York System but can’t get to Providence or Cranston, Olneyville New York System’s got you covered. Stock up on wieners and wiener sauce on your next visit.


Behold the Hot Wiener, Rhode Island’s All-American Classic

 

Don’t you dare call this Providence staple a hot dog.

By

Brian Yaeger (and photos)






Joey Chestnut will attempt to eat 77 mustardless, water-drenched hot dogs this Independence Day, but for the truly patriotic, nothing beats heading to one of the 13 original colonies, Rhode Island, for a few well-appointed hot wieners.

You’d think the name alone would make these meaty morsels a nationally renowned dish, but hot wieners remain the realm of Providence. Don’t you dare call them hot dogs or chili dogs, especially not to Greg Stevens’s face.

Stevens is the great-grandson of Anthony Stevens, who with his son Nicholas founded New York Systems in 1946 (now officially named Olneyville New York Systems) after moving to Providence from New York City. The iconic fourth-generation eatery—which received the James Beard Foundation America’s Classics Award—is actually the second-oldest of the Providence-based “New York Systems” restaurants, but is probably the city’s best-known, even ahead of Baba’s Original New York Systems, established in 1927. It’s a staple for locals and a destination for visitors, but remains largely off the radar of everyone who doesn’t live in, or find themselves in, the nation’s smallest state.

What is a Rhode Island hot wiener?

A wiener is a blend of beef, pork, and veal in natural casing. Visually, the only distinction you’d observe between these wieners and a hot dog is that the wiener is sliced from an even longer, cylindrical, carnal rope with a sheer terminus rather than its own individual tube with rounded ends. Picture a flat circle versus a tapered, semi-sphere at each end. But what really makes it distinctly Rhode Islandish is ordering one “all the way.”

“All the way” means the wiener comes dressed with diced yellow onions, yellow mustard, celery salt (like they use in Chicago), and the real pièce de resistance is the special meat sauce simmered for two and a half hours before being ladled on top. Not chili. Not Bolognese. The unfortunately named “wiener sauce.” A thin ground-beef condiment that, at Olneyville, Stevens personally blends himself with five spices he does not divulge.

“If I get hit by a bus today, we have to close, because I’m the only one who knows how to make it,” Stevens says.

Here’s one-fifth of a hint: it’s got chili powder in it. And Olneyville goes through so much that Stevens buys the chili powder alone in 500-pound increments. The only other Stevens at this Rhode Island landmark is Greg’s sister, Stephanie, but even she allegedly doesn’t know the recipe.




There used to be multiple “New York Systems” as a result of Greek families moving out of New York City and up to Providence. This was the Stevens family path, beginning when Anthony Stevens emigrated in the 1920s, two decades before transplanting to Rhode Island. There’s a Zee’s Wiener System in Austin, Texas that bills itself as “Rhode Island hot wieners” and rightly took it as an affront when, earlier this year, Austin Monthly named it the foodie city’s best “hot dog.”

As for why “Systems” stuck, that’s a little less clear. (According to Greg Stevens’s Uncle Ernie, “No one gives a…”) It’s believed to be the Greek immigrants’ homage to the first American city that took them all in, having initially arrived at Ellis Island among millions of other new arrivals.

Everyone needs a reasonably priced meal to feed their families, and Stevens says that the price of a hot wiener had always been in sync with the cost of gas (pointing out that in 1975, gas was half a buck while a wiener was 35 cents). But while we’re all grousing about gas topping $5 per gallon in 2022, a hot wiener’s currently selling for only $2.99 (if you’re really cash-strapped, a lettuce and tomato sandwich runs $1.20), making it seem as vintage as the yellow and orange formica tables at Olneyville that date back to 1954.

Olneyville New York Systems is open 24 hours a day and does brisk business around 3 a.m. when the bars close. The dive doesn’t serve any alcohol, but customers are allowed to BYO.

That said, perhaps the ideal way to wash down this Rhode Island delicacy is with the official Rhode Island state drink, coffee milk (think chocolate milk but with coffee syrup, which is readily available in every grocery store statewide). And a few wieners are best accompanied by a large plate of fries, especially when ordered as “beef stew.” As the quotes indicate, there’s no actual stew, nor does it contain a scrap of beef. It’s a plate of French fries pre-loaded with ketchup, cider vinegar, salt, and pepper, ordered more as a verb: “I’d also like some fries and can you beef stew that?”

Somewhat ironically, the wiener jockeys are more than happy to put ketchup on your fries, but they just might show you the door if you request any ketchup on your hot wieners.

Grapenut Pudding



A New England diner favorite, grapenut pudding is a classic sweet treat. Top with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream for the best results.
Yield: 6 servings


Ingredients
  • 1 cup Grapenuts cereal
  • Scant 1/2 cup sugar
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 quart milk, scalded
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla
  • Pinch of cinnamon or cardamom or both
  • Nutmeg
  • Dash of salt
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Pour scalded milk over cereal and let sit 5 minutes.

Beat eggs, sugar, salt, cinnamon or cardamon and vanilla. Add to milk and Grapenuts.

Pour into a greased 2-quart casserole dish. Sprinkle very generously with nutmeg.

Set in a pan of hot water and bake until a knife inserted 1 inch from the center comes out clean which is usually 45 minutes or longer.



5 Reasons Why the Lobster Dinner Is Better Than the Lobster Roll



Seafood expert Mike Urban firmly believes that eating a whole lobster dinner beats a lobster roll any day of the week. Here’s why.


Mike Urban

I’ve been on the New England seafood trail intensively for the past seven summers, and I’ve had more wonderful gustatory experiences than anyone can reasonably expect in a lifetime. It recently occurred to me that with the continuing surge in popularity of lobster rolls, the experience of devouring a whole boiled or steamed lobster in its shell is being eclipsed and often overlooked. This is not as it should be. I firmly believe that eating a whole lobster dinner beats a lobster roll any day of the week. Want to know why? Read on.
Whole lobsters are fresher than lobster rolls.
A boiled or steamed lobster is as fresh as lobster gets. The trip from pot to plate usually takes a matter of minutes, allowing very little time for the lobster meat to age. By contrast, the meat in your lobster roll may be “fresh-picked,” but chances are it’s been out of the shell (which had sealed in its flavor) for hours and perhaps days.
It’s more fun to eat a whole lobster.
Dismantling a whole lobster and extracting the sweet, salty meat can be a lot of work, but it’s also a lot of fun — if you are persistent and have the right attitude. You need to square off against your crimson foe, remove and crack the claws, wrestle out the tail meat, extract the knuckle meat with your pinky or a poker, coax out sweet bits of lobster from the legs using your teeth, and nibble on the tomalley, roe, and any other innards that may appeal to you. It’s messy, but with a bib, claw crackers, a poker, and plenty of napkins, you’re in for a great feast with family and friends.
There’s no bun.
Much as I like buttered, toasted, split-top New England buns, let’s face it: The bread gets in the way. Lobster is meant to be gorged upon, not nibbled around the edges, as is the case with a neatly packaged lobster roll. Roll up your sleeves and dig in for the entire whole-lobster experience!
The side dishes are better.
A lobster roll typically comes with a bag of chips, perhaps a pickle, and not much else. With a whole lobster, corn on the cob, salt potatoes, chowder, steamers, and coleslaw are de rigueur — all part of the lobster dinner experience.
The butter is the bomb.
Dipping big chunks of steaming hot lobster meat into small plastic containers of warm, melted butter (which often runs down your chin) is a transcendent experience.
All this is not to say that I don’t enjoy a good lobster roll. I’ve had hundreds of them, and nearly every one has put a smile on my face. But what really sends me into orbit is a freshly cooked, bright red lobster with all the trimmings in a sunny New England seaside spot in the middle of summer. Viva the lobster dinner!