Category Archives: Kevin Harvick Inc.

Image of the Week – Jegs Truck

#2 Jegs Truck for Kevin Harvick

#2 Jegs Truck for Kevin Harvick


This weekend, Kevin Harvick will race the Camping World Truck Series Race in Loudon at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway. His KHI Chevy will be adorned in the colors of racing parts supplier JEGS. The yellow and black scheme is prominent on the track and as Harvick is one of the favorites to win, Jegs is sure to get plenty of TV time.

Vienna Sausage Anyone?

Kevin Harvick won Friday night’s Nationwide Series race at Richmond in dominate fashion.  His KHI Chevy was adorned in Armour livery and had a big can of Vienna Sausages on the hood.  This reminded me of a blog post I posted on my personal website last year at DanielVining.com

From DanielVining.com August 2009:

vienna-sausage-in-can

They are small, tasty, fattening little treats that are commonly seen as appetizers at parties or in the lunch boxes of construction workers.  I love the little burgers.  I know they are not healthy, and sometimes they do make me sick to my stomach.  They are cheap and easy to combine into thousands of recipes (The search terms “vienna sausage recipes” produces over 81,000 results.).  They are vienna sausages.  What are they?  What are they?  Why are they the red-headed step child of the luncheon meat category?

From Wikipedia.com query “vienna sausage”:

vienna sausage is a kind of wiener. The word wiener means Viennese inGerman.

In many European countries any pre-cooked and sometimes smoked wieners bought fresh from supermarkets,delicatessens and butcher shops are calledvienna sausage. Wieners sold as vienna sausage in Europe have a taste and texture very much like North Americanhot dogs or frankfurters but are usually longer and somewhat thinner, with a very light, edible casing. European vienna sausage served hot in a long bun with condiments is often called a hot dog, harking not to the wiener itself, but to the long sandwich as a whole.

In North America the term vienna sausage has most often come to mean only smaller and much shorter smoked and canned wieners, rather thanhot dogs. North American vienna sausage is made from meat such aschickenbeefturkey and pork (or blends thereof) finely ground to a paste consistency and mixed with salt and spices, notably mustard, then stuffed into a long casing, sometimes smoked and always thoroughly cooked, after which the casings are removed as with hot dogs. The sausages are then cut into short segments for canning and further cooked.

As with any sausage, the ingredients, preparation, size and taste can vary widely by both manufacturer and region of sale.

Anyone that knows me also knows that the classic American Hot Dog is my favorite food.  Behind that, comes another cheap, low class junk food… Top Ramen.  I have eaten ramen noodles in hundreds of ways, but my favorite combination is the addition of a can of vienna sausages and maybe a smidge of mustard completed with a glass of Mountain Dew or chocolate milk.  Mmmm good.

Why is it that this food is the the bastard of the other luncheon meats?  Probably because unlike some meats, like salami for example, vienna sausages are not meticulously blended with the best cuts of meat and seasoning before being aged to perfection. No, not vienna sausages.  They are a hodge podge of chicken, beef and pork.  Smashed together and pressed into a sausage shape.  Add the gelatin and the small fact that they perhaps one of the most unhealthy meats to choose from, and you get the outcast of the group.  Still, blue collar workers, the lower class, and phony socialites all embrace this little treat as a part of their lunches and appetizers for their parties.  I too, will continue to enjoy these tasty morsels; now at a more educated, select occasional pace.

Since I first posted this article, I have tried and failed several times to stop eating these things.  I’m currently turned off of the bastards and I hope to stay that way.  I know this isn’t a racing story, but Harvick’s car brought it to my mind, so I chose to share it.  Why can’t I ever be addicted to things that are good for me?  Like exercise.