Tools
Change country:

Something Weird Is Happening With Caesar Salads

On a July weekend in Tijuana, in 1924, Caesar Cardini was in trouble. Prohibition was driving celebrities, rich people, and alcoholics across the border from San Diego, and Cardini’s highly popular Italian restaurant was swamped. Low on ingredients, or so the legend goes, he tossed together what he had on hand: romaine lettuce, Parmesan cheese, and croutons, dressed in a slurry of egg, oil, garlic, salt, Worcestershire sauce, and citrus juice. It was a perfect food.

On a November evening in Brooklyn, in 2023, I was in trouble (hungry). I ordered a kale Caesar at a place I like. Instead, I got: a tangle of kale, pickled red onion, and “sweet and spicy almonds,” dressed in a thinnish, vaguely savory liquid and topped with a glob of crème fraîche roughly the size and vibe of a golf ball. It was a pretty weird food.

We are living through an age of unchecked Caesar-salad fraud. Putative Caesars are dressed with yogurt or miso or tequila or lemongrass; they are served with zucchini, orange zest, pig ear, kimchi, poached duck egg, roasted fennel, fried chickpeas, buffalo-cauliflower fritters, tōgarashi-dusted rice crackers. They are missing anchovies, or croutons, or even lettuce. In October, the food magazine Delicious posted a list of “Caesar” recipes that included variations with bacon, maple syrup, and celery; asparagus, fava beans, smoked trout, and dill; and tandoori prawns, prosciutto, kale chips, and mung-bean sprouts. The so-called Caesar at Kitchen Mouse Cafe, in Los Angeles, includes “pickled carrot, radish & coriander seeds, garlicky croutons, crispy oyster mushrooms, lemon dressing.” Molly Baz is a chef, a cookbook author, and a bit of a Caesar obsessive—she owns a pair of sneakers with cae on one tongue and sal on the other—and she put it succinctly when she told me, “There’s been a lot of liberties taken, for better or for worse.”

It’s all a little peculiar, at least in the sense that words are supposed to mean something. Imagine ordering a “hamburger” that contained a bun and some lettuce, with chicken, marinara sauce, and basil Mad-Libbed between. Or cacio e pepe with, say, carrots and Christmas ham. To be clear, modifying the Caesar isn’t fundamentally a bad thing, as long as the flavors resemble those of the original. Baz likes her Caesar with anchovies (traditional! controversial! correct!) but said she’s happy to swap in fish sauce, capers, or “other salty, briny things.” Jacob Sessoms, a restaurant chef in Asheville, North Carolina, told me he doesn’t mind an alternative green but draws the line at, say, pomegranate seeds. Jason Kaplan, the CEO of a restaurant-consulting firm in New York, doesn’t mind a miso Caesar. “Because of the saltiness and the complexity, because it’s a fermented soybean paste, you know?” he told me. “That doesn’t piss me off as much as somebody saying that ‘this is a Caesar salad,’ when clearly there’s nothing to say it’s even closely related.”

The Caesar’s mission creep toward absurdity began long before the tequila and the fava beans. In fact, it has been going on for decades—first slowly, then quickly, swept along by and reflective of many of the biggest shifts in American dining. Michael Whiteman is a consultant whose firm helped open restaurants such as Windows on the World and the Rainbow Room, in New York. He remembers first seeing the Caesar start to meaningfully change about 40 years ago, when “hot things on cold things” became trendy among innovative California restaurants, and his friend James Beard returned from a trip out West raving about a Caesar topped with fried chicken livers. This was also, notably, the era of the power lunch, when restaurant chefs needed dishes that were hearty but still lunchtime-light, and quick to prepare. The chicken Caesar started appearing on menus, Whiteman told me, followed by the steak Caesar, and “it went downhill from there.”

In the 1980s and ’90s, as advances in agriculture, shipping, and food culture increased Americans’ access to a variety of produce, chefs started swapping out the traditional romaine for whatever the leafy green of the moment was: little gem, arugula, frisée. At that point, the Caesar was still found mostly in Italian American and New American restaurants. But as “fusion” took hold and culinary nationalism abated, the Caesar became a staple of Mexican American and Asian American chain restaurants, zhuzhed up with tortilla strips or wontons for a mainstream dining public who wanted something different yet familiar.

More recently, stunt food has come for the Caesar. “We’re living in a period of extreme eating, meaning extreme in terms of outlandish,” Whiteman told me, in which “innovation for its own sake” seems to be motivating chefs and restaurants up and down the price spectrum. Whiteman calls the resulting dishes “mutants.”

[Read: How American cuisine became a melting pot]

To some degree, the reason for all of this experimentation is obvious: Caesar salads—even bastardized ones—rock, and people want to buy them. “Isn’t it perhaps kind of the case that the Caesar salad might be close to the perfect dish?” Sessoms said. “It hits all of your dopamine receptors that are palate related, with umami, fat, and tons of salt.”

The Caesar is a crowd-pleaser salad, a name-brand salad, a safe-bet salad. It’s also a format that allows for a sort of low-stakes novelty. That helps explain the rise of the fake Caesar too. Though demand for restaurants has generally bounced back since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, labor and ingredient costs are much higher than they were four years ago. Just like Caesar Cardini before them, chefs are looking for relatively cheap, relatively fast dishes, and creative ones are looking for classics they can riff on without alienating customers. “Would untrained American eaters be more likely to order a Caesar salad than any other salad? Yes,” Sessoms said. Sometimes, when he’s trying to find a use for specialty greens—celtuce, radicchio—he’ll douse them in Caesar dressing to get diners to order them.

At the same time, Kaplan told me, it’s hard to overestimate how important the widespread adoption of the online menu has been over the past decade or so. Recognizable favorites sell. When diners can see what’s available before they make a reservation or leave the house, the menu is as much an advertisement as a utilitarian document. Appending the name “Caesar” to a salad is a shortcut to broad appeal.

Last week, I called up Stewart Gary, the culinary director of Nitehawk Cinema, the Brooklyn dine-in movie theater where I ordered that almond-and-pickled-onion salad. He told me essentially the same thing: In his line of work, people have limited time with the menu, and Caesar is a useful signifier. “Look,” he said. “If we called it a kale salad with anchovy dressing, no one would order it.”

[Read: In 1950, Americans had aspic. Now we have dalgona coffee.]

Ancient philosophers were bedeviled by the question of whether the ship of Theseus retained its fundamental essence after each of its component parts was replaced one by one over the course of centuries. I’ve been thinking about salads for a few weeks now and feel pretty sure that a true Caesar requires, at minimum, garlic, acid, umami, cold leaves, hard cheese, and a crunchy, croutonlike product. Beyond that, you can get away with one or maybe two wacky additions before you start straining the limits of credibility. It’s about principle, not pedantry.

Besides, the more you learn about Caesar salads, the more you come to realize that pedantry is useless. The original Caesar was reportedly made with lime juice instead of lemon. It was prepared tableside and intended to be eaten by hand, like a piece of toast, “arranged on each plate so that you could pick up a leaf by its short end and chew it down bit by bit, then pick up another,” as Julia Child and Jacques Pépin explained in their version of the recipe. It was meant to be dressed in stages, first with oil, then with acid, then with a coddled egg (to coat the lettuce leaves, so the cheese would stick to them), not with the emulsified, mayonnaise-adjacent dressing common today. Crucially, it didn’t have whole anchovies.

As soon as the recipe began showing up in cookbooks, in the early 1940s, it started changing: Some recipes called for rubbing the bowl with garlic, or adding blue cheese or pear vinegar or mustard. In her headnotes for one of the earliest printed versions of the Caesar recipe, published in West Coast Cook Book, in 1952, Helen Evans Brown described the Caesar as “the most talked-of salad of a decade, perhaps of the century.” She then went on to note that “the salad is at its best when kept simple, but as it is invariably made at table, and sometimes by show-offs, it occasionally contains far too many ingredients.” The Caesar is forever, which means it’s forever being manipulated. For better and for worse.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
What's next for crackdown on Haitian migrants as Dominican Republic leader enters new term?
After Dominican President Luis Abinader coasted into a second term over the weekend, he promised that 'the best is yet to come.'
7 m
latimes.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ ex Misa Hylton: Cassie Ventura abuse video ‘triggered my own trauma’
"I am heartbroken that Cassie must relive the horror of her abuse," the stylist wrote on Instagram alongside photos of Combs' seven kids.
8 m
nypost.com
These are the only exercises you need to prevent hip and back pain
When it comes to staying pain-free, sometimes it’s a joint venture between you and your physical trainer. 
9 m
nypost.com
Kevin Costner’s New Western ‘Horizon’ Debuts At Cannes With a Long Ovation But Disappointing Reviews
Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 1 premiered at Cannes on Sunday (May 19).
nypost.com
Not all NYC beaches will be open for swimming this Memorial Day weekend as lifeguard shortage drags on
Lifeguard staffing is no beach. Not all beaches will be open for swimming when the season officially kicks off on Memorial Day weekend — as the city has only secured a little over one-third of the necessary lifeguards. Just 230 lifeguards have been hired so far out of the 600 needed to fully staff beaches,...
nypost.com
Rent Is Harder to Handle and Inflation Is a Burden, a Fed Financial Survey Finds
The Federal Reserve’s 2023 survey on household financial well-being found Americans excelling in the job market but struggling with prices.
nytimes.com
Mouthwash made with this ingredient could be key to a healthy mouth
Researchers have uncovered an unexpected way to fight bacteria in the mouth.
nypost.com
‘Up In The Blue Seats’ Podcast episode 158: Rangers-Panthers Eastern Conference finals preview
The "Up In The Blue Seats" podcast breaks down the Eastern Conference finals between the Rangers and the Panthers.
nypost.com
Attorneys stop representing a Utah mom and children's grief author accused of killing her husband
She allegedly killed her husband, then published a kids book about loss, grief.
abcnews.go.com
Russian Propagandist Sounds Alarm Over Mossad Agent ‘Eli Copter’
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Russian propagandist Vladimir Solovyov says the death of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi should really be viewed as a potential “political murder”—because have you seen the reports that the pilot was a Mossad agent named “Eli Copter?”In an episode of his show on Rossiya 1 late Monday, Solovyov raged against those who celebrated the death of Ebrahim Raisi and took on a stern tone as he fell for a viral internet meme that exploded in the wake of the Iranian leader’s death.Citing “a French channel,” Solovyov aired a clip from a French-language segment of an Israeli TV network in which the anchor told viewers that Hamas “claims the helicopter pilot was a Mossad agent” named “Eli Copter.” The anchor, Daniel Haik, has already been widely mocked for taking the internet joke at face value and reciting it on-air.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
This year's Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival to feature women-led movies, a film market
The Latino Film Institute's Erika Sabel Flores said this year's Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival will put a spotlight on women filmmakers.
latimes.com
Spain withdraws its ambassador to Argentina over comments made by President Milei
Spain pulled its ambassador in response to comments made by President Javier Milei, who accused the Spanish prime minister’s wife of corruption.
latimes.com
Shooting suspect tries to hide from cops in ‘remarkably small’ clothes dryer as pics show his embarrassing capture
Sheriff's deputies in Florida tracked down a fugitive shooting suspect --- hiding inside a tiny clothes dryer with wrinkled shirts and "mismatched socks," police said.
nypost.com
‘The View’s Sunny Hostin Hits Back At Bill Maher After He Uses “Woke” In A Negative Way: “Why Is That A Bad Thing?”
Hostin said she believes the term "woke" has been "co-opted by the right and weaponized and bastardized."
nypost.com
Ex-Florida recruit Jaden Rashada sues coach Billy Napier, boosters over $13 million NIL deal gone sour
The ugly side of NIL is now entering the courtrooms.
nypost.com
Defense Rests Despite Trump Saying He’d ‘Absolutely’ Testify
Michael M Santiago/Getty ImagesSoon after he was indicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records over attempts to conceal a $130,000 payoff to a porn star, Donald Trump insisted he’d be absolutely delighted to take the stand at his criminal hush-money trial.“Yeah I would testify, absolutely,” Trump said in April. “I’m testifying. I tell the truth. All I can do is tell the truth.”Earlier this month, the former president told reporters he would “probably” testify.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Anti-Israel protestors interrupt Blinken Senate testimony, removed by Capitol police
At least four anti-Israel agitators were hauled out of a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing while Secretary of State Antony Blinken testified.
nypost.com
UK to distribute final compensation payments for victims of deadly infected blood scandal
Britain's government officials say thousands of victims of the U.K.’s infected blood scandal will start receiving their final compensation payments this year.
foxnews.com
‘90 Day Fiancé’ star details scandalous encounter with pro athlete that potentially cost her NYC nanny job
"90 Day Fiancé" star Stephanie Matto revealed her nightmare encounter with a pro athlete while working as a New York City nanny that she suggested may have led to her being fired.
foxnews.com
‘Southern Charm’ Alum Kathryn Dennis Arrested For DUI Following Three-Car Collision
Dennis starred on the first eight seasons of Southern Charm.  
nypost.com
Bill Maher clashes with 'The View' co-host over Israel-Hamas war, 'woke'
Comedian Bill Maher and co-host Sunny Hostin clashed on "The View" during a discussion on the Israel-Hamas war and anti-Israel protesters.
foxnews.com
UK zoo keeps its rhinos warm with upgraded heating system
Chester Zoo in northern England is partnering with Mitsubishi Electric to implement more sustainable heating, starting with the habitat of its critically endangered black rhinos.
foxnews.com
Israeli officials seize AP equipment, take down live shot of northern Gaza, citing new media law
Israeli officials have seized a camera and broadcasting equipment belonging to the Associated Press in southern Israel.
latimes.com
Israel tries to contain fallout after some allies support ICC prosecutor's request for warrants
Belgium, Slovenia and France each said they backed the decision by International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan.
latimes.com
Four Lawmakers Denounce Plan to Ease Sanctions on Mining Executive
A White House proposal to allow the billionaire Dan Gertler to sell off his assets in the Democratic Republic of Congo sparks a bipartisan rebuke.
nytimes.com
Daniel Radcliffe feels ‘really lucky’ for booking Broadway gigs after ‘Harry Potter’ success
The actor exclusively told Page Six that, unlike other child stars, he never felt “trapped” in his craft after starring as Harry Potter at such a young age.
nypost.com
Fauci adviser who bragged about deleting ‘smoking gun’ emails to be grilled by COVID panel
Ex-NIAID senior scientific adviser Dr. David Morens will testify about his potential violations of federal record-keeping laws and attempts to obstruct a House investigation.
nypost.com
Key Trump witness nixed after Merchan's stringent rulings reveals what his testimony would have been
Former FEC Commissioner Bradley Smith was set to testify in NY v. Trump, but was not brought before the court after presiding judge curbed what he could discuss.
foxnews.com
Mourners begin days of funerals for Iran's president and others killed in helicopter crash
Mourners began gathering for days of funerals and processions for Iran’s late president, foreign minister and others killed in a helicopter crash Sunday.
latimes.com
Aryna Sabalenka cozies up with Georgios Frangulis after ex-boyfriend’s suicide
Aryna Sabalenka appeared to confirm a new relationship with Georgia’s Frangulis, the CEO of Açaí brand Oakberry, while in Italy for the Italian Open over the weekend.
nypost.com
Woman Backed for Why She Refused To Return to Booked Seat on Plane
Although she got the "stinky eye" from another passenger, the woman said, "I don't really regret switching seats."
newsweek.com
Staind founding drummer Jon Wysocki dies at 56
Jon Wysocki, whose legacy encompasses mainstream and independent hard rock, has died. He was a founding member of Staind.
latimes.com
What do the cheapest Rangers-Panthers MSG tickets cost?
The Game 1 puck drops on May 22 at 8 p.m. EST.
nypost.com
Dog's Reaction to His Human 'Girlfriend' Coming Back From Trip Melts Hearts
"Goldens can be literally on top of you and they still want to be closer," commented one social media user.
newsweek.com
IDF troops raid Hamas compound, seize weapons cache from hidden tunnel in Rafah
Israeli forces raided a Hamas-held building on Tuesday, uncovering a tunnel and multiple weapons caches.
foxnews.com
Investigation continues into Matthew Perry's death, source of ketamine: Sources
The death investigation into "Friends" star Matthew Perry remains ongoing, law enforcement sources said.
abcnews.go.com
Video Shows Russia Beginning Nuclear Weapons Drills
Russia's Defense Ministry announced on Tuesday that it had begun nuclear weapons tests involving Kinzhal missiles.
newsweek.com
British man dies and several passengers injured when turbulence hit Singapore Airlines flight
Singapore Airlines says one of its flights hit severe turbulence over the Indian Ocean and descended 6,000 feet in a span of about three minutes.
latimes.com
Migrant DNA Flooding Criminal Investigation Database
Researchers who authored a new study are calling on the Biden administration to discontinue Trump-era policies left in place.
newsweek.com
Sen. Bob Menendez’s cluttered home loaded with gold bars, wad of cash stashed in boot: new photos
Photos shown at Sen. Bob Menendez's bribery trial reveal cash and gold bars stashed around his cluttered home -- including money stuffed inside a boot.
nypost.com
New York mayor defends police after videos show officers punching pro-Palestinian protesters
Video showed NYPD officers punching pro-Palestinian protesters in Brooklyn this weekend. Mayor Eric Adams praises 'how they handled an unruly group of people.'
latimes.com
Fulton County D.A. Fani Willis fights for her job in Georgia primary reelection
Fulton County D.A. Fani Willis is running for reelection in the Democratic primary in Georgia today as her prosecution of Donald Trump remains tied up in a state appellate court.
cbsnews.com
Cat owner baffled by ‘crazy’ neighbor’s ‘unhinged’ letter about her beloved pet: ‘Sheer insanity’
Taking to a local Facebook group, the woman shared the "unhinged" letter about her cat that was left in her letterbox the other day. 
nypost.com
This Father’s Day, gift dad one of the best meat deliveries: Snake River Farms
Quality, at its finest.
nypost.com
Relive Jennifer Lopez’s over-the-top Ben Affleck engagement announcement as they stay quiet about divorce rumors
Before the split rumors, Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck were a happy couple when they got engaged for a second time in April 2022.
nypost.com
Were Joe Biden's Hopes for a Pre-Convention Peace Deal Just Crushed?
Analysts weighed in on whether recent developments in the Middle East could affect a peace deal between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.
newsweek.com
Russian physicist accused of treason sentenced to 14 years in prison
Anatoly Maslov, a Russian physicist, has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for his alleged involvement in researching super-high flight speeds, officials say.
foxnews.com
The ICC wants to arrest Israeli and Hamas leaders. Experts weigh in.
A momentous decision has sent shockwaves around the world. Was it the right one?
washingtonpost.com