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Nick's Original Coney Island Hotdogs

534 S. Main St., Fall River, MA - (508) 677-3890
Posted By Michael Stern on 8/31/2010 11:21:00 AM
The website of Nick's (where you can mail-order its exemplary Coney Island sauce) offers a history of the hot dog dating back to 1500-century BC Babylonia. This little storefront restaurant is slightly newer than that, going back only to 1920, when Nicholas Pappas came to Fall River with a hot-dog sauce formula he learned in Philadelphia. The wood-paneled wall holds a gallery of photos showing some of the celebrities who have eaten here since then, among them Lucille Ball, Judy Garland and Larry, Moe and Curly of the Three Stooges.

Similar to the New York System weenies of adjacent Rhode Island, a hot dog at Nick's is small and pink with gentle flavor that begs to be doctored up. The standard "works" configuration is a squiggle of mustard, a line of the spicy, dark meat sauce and a scattering of chopped raw onions, all loaded into a fleecy bun. In my book, this is one of those curious dishes of which no single ingredient is glorious (although an argument could be made for the sauce); nor is the whole package one of those swoonfully delicious things that induces love at first bite. No, I find these little things offer a more progressive pleasure that leads from taste-buds bafflement to intrigue to pleasure and ultimately, to addiction. One is only the beginning. Two is a nice snack. Four would be a meal, except for the fact that if you buy five at Nick's ($1.26 each), you get the sixth one free. Nick's weenies are the foundation also for a Fall River delight known as the bean dog; it is a tube steak bedded on a scattering of sweet baked beans.

Smoky chourico is huge in this region thanks to the Portuguese roots of so many citizens; and another local creation is the chourico and fry plate, which is sliced discs of sausage along with a few French fries in a bun surrounded by lots more French fries. Nick's makes its fries as they are needed. When you order them, someone steps to the back, grabs a potato, puts it in the French fry cutter, then takes the little white spud logs and throws them into a vintage Autofry machine that automatically dispenses the cooked potatoes after their allotted cooking time.

And speaking of vintage kitchen equipment, boss Fred Beaudry (Nick died in '48) opened up his coffee milk machine to show that his coffee milk does NOT come from some sterile plastic container, but from actual, old-fashioned aluminum milk buckets like dairy farmers used to use. It is sweeter than most coffee milks I've had and seems to have a slightly higher proportion of coffee to milk.

But wait, there's more. On Nick's window, along with "Hot Dogs," "Bean Dogs," "Sausage Sandwiches," "Chourico and Chips" and "Chourico Dogs" is this: "Melted Cheddar Sandwiches." Honestly, if I visited a dozen times, eager to try out local exotica and hot dog variations, my brain likely would never even have registered "Melted Cheese Sandwiches," much less ordered one. But thankfully, dining partners Chris Ayers and Amy Breisch were more astute. Having done some serious homework about Fall River, Amy discovered that, sure enough, melted cheddar cheese sandwiches are a big deal in many of the city's hot dog joints. While the other examples we sampled around town used cheddar so finely shredded that it seemed to have been through a ricer, Nick's makes its version using tiles of sharp cheddar that melt but don't quite drip. With some of that magic hot sauce on top, sandwiched in a supersoft bun, it's a wonderful little sandwich.

And what better place to eat these nostalgic treats than in one of the 100-year-old school desks lined up along Nick's wall?

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Scorecard

4 - Overall: One of the Best - Worth a Trip
Overall: One of the Best - Worth a Trip
Hot Dog
Cheese Sandwich
Bean & Cheese Dog
Coffee Milk
Chourico & Fry Plate
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Reviewers Photos [Upload Your Photos]

A signature of Fall River cheap-eats diners: chourico sausage and French fries, the latter cut and fried to order for each sandwich.
"A signature of Fall River cheap-eats diners: chourico sausage and French fries, the latter cut and fried to order for each sandwich."
Michael Stern





There is enough sauce to eclipse the little hot dog that is the foundation of this classic gaggah. (Gaggah = local patois for gagger, which is what Coney Island hot dogs are called on New England's South Coast.)
"There is enough sauce to eclipse the little hot dog that is the foundation of this classic gaggah. (Gaggah = local patois for gagger, which is what Coney Island hot dogs are called on New England's South Coast.)"
Michael Stern


The melted cheddar sandwich, a little-known specialty of Fall River hot dog shops. Sauce atop the cheese is optional but highly recommended.
"The melted cheddar sandwich, a little-known specialty of Fall River hot dog shops. Sauce atop the cheese is optional but highly recommended."
Michael Stern


A close view of Nick's melted cheddar sandwich shows how the sauce seeps into the absorbent bun and flavors it.
"A close view of Nick's melted cheddar sandwich shows how the sauce seeps into the absorbent bun and flavors it."
Michael Stern


A Spartan bean dog. We probably would have liked it more if we had some optional cheddar and hot sauce, too.
"A Spartan bean dog. We probably would have liked it more if we had some optional cheddar and hot sauce, too."
Michael Stern


Fall River is close enough to Rhode Island that coffee milk seems a natural weenie companion. Chef Fred Beaudry shows how it comes in old-fashioned dairy milk cans.
"Fall River is close enough to Rhode Island that coffee milk seems a natural weenie companion. Chef Fred Beaudry shows how it comes in old-fashioned dairy milk cans."
Michael Stern


You want French fries? Upon receiving the order, a member of the staff steps to the back of the open kitchen and slices a potato in half so it can fit in the French fry cutter.
"You want French fries? Upon receiving the order, a member of the staff steps to the back of the open kitchen and slices a potato in half so it can fit in the French fry cutter."
Michael Stern


There are two Autofry machines behind Nick's counter. All you need to do is put in the food and set the timer and presto, the finished fried food emerges perfectly cooked.
"There are two Autofry machines behind Nick's counter. All you need to do is put in the food and set the timer and presto, the finished fried food emerges perfectly cooked."
Michael Stern


An alternative to coffee milk: birch soda, bottled in a small plant outside Boston. Chris, Amy and I all agreed that it did NOT taste like chewing gum (the downfall of so many birch sodas). It is rather brut, a respectable thirst-quencher.
"An alternative to coffee milk: birch soda, bottled in a small plant outside Boston. Chris, Amy and I all agreed that it did NOT taste like chewing gum (the downfall of so many birch sodas). It is rather brut, a respectable thirst-quencher."
Michael Stern


These school-desk seats actually are older than Nick's, dating back 100 years.
"These school-desk seats actually are older than Nick's, dating back 100 years."
Michael Stern


A humble place, source of many distinctly local specialties, the most obscure of which is the melted cheddar sandwich.
"A humble place, source of many distinctly local specialties, the most obscure of which is the melted cheddar sandwich."
Michael Stern



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