Hockey fans visiting Buffalo will no doubt want to sample some authentic Buffalo chicken wings — after all, the recipe was invented at the Anchor Bar here in 1964.
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The legend of their creation goes something like this: Dominic Bellissimo was tending bar late one Friday night when a bunch of his friends stopped by, looking for something to eat.
Dominic asked his mother Teressa to see what she could whip up. Around midnight, she came out with a couple of plates of what looked like chicken wings — usually used in soup stock — with a pungent aroma wafting from them that caught everyone’s attention. Teressa had deep fried the wings and coated them with butter and hot sauce.
The new dish was such a hit that it soon became a staple on the menu, not just at the Anchor Bar, but in watering holes all around Buffalo.
But besides Buffalo wings — by the way, they just call them wings here — there are a couple of other regional food peculiarities available at the game that sporting gourmands will want to sample.
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One tavern staple served at the arena, and rarely available or even heard of outside of Western New York, is the Beef on Weck sandwich. “Weck” is short for kimmelweck, a kaiser roll with covered with caraway seeds and coarse salt. Steamed roast beef is layered on the roll, which is best topped with a healthy dose of pickled horseradish.
Another Buffalo favorite served at the game is the fried bologna sandwich, popularized here by the city’s large Polish immigrant population. A quarter-inch thick slab of bologna is topped with fried onions and peppers and a slice of American cheese.
If you try these regional delicacies, make sure you sample them at a local joint, especially the wings. A chain restaurant’s version just won’t be authentic, even if it is located here in Buffalo.