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Pork pies
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Why are pork pies sometimes called "growlers"
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This word 'growler' for 'pork pie' probably came into use in much the same way as 'dog' did in the sense of 'hot dog' = sausage roll. Students at Yale University began to refer to the wagons selling hot sausages in buns outside their dorms as "dog wagons." There was also a suspicion during the 19th century that sausages probably contained dog-meat, so that may have helped spread the idea.
Growlers didn't start at Yale, of course! More probably in Leeds or wherever, as it is mainly a Yorkshire usage, I understand. The animal most likely to be called a growler, of course, is the dog. Accordingly, I suspect the dog-meat connection probably applied there, too.
Growlers didn't start at Yale, of course! More probably in Leeds or wherever, as it is mainly a Yorkshire usage, I understand. The animal most likely to be called a growler, of course, is the dog. Accordingly, I suspect the dog-meat connection probably applied there, too.