Devil Dog Deliverance

(Photo: Next time, don’t forget the Ring Dings, Yodels, Yankee Doodles, Sunny Doodles, Apple Pies, and Coffee Cake Juniors.)

When Sole Man Donn called last Friday to tell me he was on a spur-of-the-moment weekend trip in New York, he asked if I wanted him to bring anything back from my long-ago hometown. “No, thanks,” I said and put my iPhone back in my pocket.

Ten seconds later I found myself frantically pulling it out again. Before Donn could manage a greeting, I yelled into the phone, “Devil Dogs!” Several times.

Let’s just get this out of the way now. To a New York City native, Hostess snack cakes suck. Don’t misunderstand me, I’m not saying Hostess products are bad. I’m saying they’re less appetizing than smelly goo on the end of a Q-Tip or toothpaste poop that just won’t wipe off.

Real Gothamites grow up with Drake’s Cakes: Ring Dings (ahem, the original Ding Dongs); Yodels; Yankee and Sunny Doodle cupcakes (no frosting needed, thank you very much); two-in-a-pouch Apple Pies; little teeny Coffee Cake Juniors. All labeled with that timeless blue and orange image of a male duck wearing a neckerchief and bearing a spoon.

And then there are Devil Dogs. Like hot dogs with devil’s food cake buns and creme filling in place of the frank, these have been my lifelong chocolatey muse. Their dry and airy cake-iness surrounding a more manly creme filling than any Hostess Twinkie could ever hope to boast, frozen in the freezer and accompanied by a glass of milk got me through grade school, half-a-dozen teenage boyfriends, college, my first eight years on my own in Brooklyn, and September 11th, for good measure.

Even though back east Drake’s shares bakeries and delivery drivers with Hostess (don’t get me started), my lucky ducky snack cakes absolutely cannot be found in the Midwest. When I realized that fact after moving to Chicago in 2003, I almost cried. When my old NYC friend, Babs, surprised me with a box of Devil Dogs while I was staying at her apartment in Rego Park, Queens during my misguided 2007 attempt to move back to Gotham, I did well up, right there in the Keyfood.

Before hanging up with Donn again, I begged in every way possible for him to bring me back my long-lost favorite snack cakes. I expected him to arrive with a couple of two-dog pouches, not much more. Yesterday, he walked into my Marina City high-rise home with three family-size boxes.

When I realized Donn had brought me a frenzy-inducing 24 Devil Dogs (minus the two he and his roommate sampled), I looked him straight in the eye and said, “If I didn’t have a boyfriend right now, I’d fuck you.”

I wasn’t surprised when Donn responded, “You wouldn’t be the first today,” but I digress.

As I carefully arranged the glorious boxes of Devil Dogs on my dining table, Donn started to get the message. “Oh my God, you’re gonna do a photo shoot, aren’t you?” he remarked, slightly horrified. “You really are obsessed, huh.”

In lieu of responding, I opened a box, pulled out an individually wrapped Devil Dog, pulled off its wrapper, took an almost life-saving bite, giddily teetered into the nearest wall, and slowly slid down.

The process continued long after Donn left. After my fifth Devil Dog in eight hours, I knew the food porn needed to stop. I thought maybe peeking at the ingredients list and Nutrition Facts on the back of the too-good-to-be-true, eight-in-a-box boxes would be enough to give me pause.

SIlly me, for attempting to hold a transitory thing like health up against my immovable yen for Drake’s snack products. 170 calories each? Seven grams of fat, three of them saturated? 20 grams of sugar? Yum!

High fructose corn syrup? (And yes, unlike those insipid sugar-industry commercials, I do know what they say it does to your liver.) Hydrogenated cottonseed oil? Sodium aluminum phosphate? I am so there! Servings per container: 8? I’ve never met those other seven people.

I have 16 Devil Dogs left and a Chicago-native boyfriend who has yet to try them. I’ve talked them up to him greatly over the past few days. I’ll see my guy this weekend.

We’ll see if the Devil Dogs make it that long.

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In Keeping with Tradition
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13 Comments

  1. Mike, you can buy these online. I checked it out when I did a devel dog search. I thought they where spicy hotdogs. Oh well, now I want a hotdog…

  2. Think Pizzeria Due would let you take out one of those as a BYO dessert?

  3. For me, it wouldn’t even be Hostess… It’s Little Debbie Snack Cakes, especially the Swiss Cake Rolls. Loved seeing Artie yesterday.

  4. That reminds me, as a kid in Southern Indiana, Little Debbie is what we had too.

  5. I have friends in Oak Park who have a similar love of Phladelphia’s TastyKakes. I like them, too. Smaller than Drake’s products but equally unique, they’re also available in New York and serve as a good second choice to avoid the dreaded Hostess.

  6. Haha, yeah, when I saw your tweets about said Devil Dogs, I thought you were talking about the old hot dog place by DePaul.

  7. Matt, that would be Demon Dogs, my old neighborhood hot dog stand. And I’m still sorry that one got whacked. Lots of character.

  8. Isn’t the Devil Dog kinda sorta the generic Suzy Q?

  9. J.J., you must, of course, now die for even thinking something like that. Suzy-Qs are squishy, airy, awful things. Devil Dogs are dry, dry, dry to properly soak up the milk you dunk them in. They are substantial, proud, and hold their shape when held from one end.

    School yourself, fella!

  10. Well, I’ll have to put *that* to a little taste test; I just ordered 5 boxes on-line.

  11. I’m glad I checked in here. I had no idea why you were emailing me about Devil Dogs or what they even were. (See: Chicago native).

  12. You know, the only snack-cake thing I can think of that’s native to Chicago were the Buttermaid donut gems. Hostess bought them a few years back, and has gradually changed the packaging in phases and has now completely removed “Buttermaid. A Chicago Favorite” from the package of “Hostess Donettes.” Yet another institution gone.

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