With COVID-19 canceling this year's fair, the creation of the first-ever (and quickly sold out) Minnesota State Fair Food Parade cemented what most already knew: Minnesotans aren't giving up their fair food that easily — or their fair food loyalties.
This particular decades-old question is a nearly guaranteed way to start an argument in the group chat — corn dogs or Pronto Pups?
We recently asked the question ourselves on the Star Tribune's Instagram account. "Pronto Pups all the way," someone said, while another person submitted, in similar but noticeably more emphatic language: "CORN DOG ALL THE WAY!!!"
We took a look at the debate after one of our readers turned to Curious Minnesota, the Star Tribune's community-driven reporting initiative, to ask, "What's the difference and why are people so loyal to one or the other?"
"You can eat a Pronto Pup for breakfast, but not a corn dog," argued Danielle Fitzgerald, a recent St. Olaf College graduate.
That's likely because Pronto Pup batter only uses a dash of sugar in comparison to the sweeter corn dog crusts. While there is cornmeal in the Pronto Pup batter, according to Minnesota franchise owner Gregg Karnis, there's also corn, wheat and rice flours, giving it a more grain-forward taste.
While the Pronto Pup is considered a type of corn dog, the Midwest has a particular claim on it, with the sausage blended fresh in Wisconsin. Pronto Pup also claims to have debuted at the Minnesota State Fair in 1947 as the original corn dog on sale.
According to Karnis, Pronto Pups make up roughly 55% of hot dogs sold each year at the fair, despite having at least eight competitors.