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
'Wordle' #1,048, Today's Answer and Clues for Thursday, May 2 Game
Finding today's "Wordle" puzzle a struggle? Newsweek has gathered a few clues to help you find the answer.
newsweek.com
Clay Holmes picks up big five-out save in Yankees’ victory
Clay Holmes secured a dominant five-out save to finish off the Yankees' 2-0 win over the Orioles on Wednesday night at Camden Yards.
nypost.com
Boeing Whistleblowers Keep Suddenly Dying
Joshua Dean, a former Spirit AeroSystems employee, had accused the aircraft manufacturer of ignoring defects in the production of 737 MAX planes.
newsweek.com
In 'A Man in Full,' Jeff Daniels plays a real estate mogul whose life crumbles. Sound familiar?
David E. Kelley's loose adaptation of Tom Wolfe's novel depicts two men, played by Jeff Daniels and Jon Michael Hill, whose lives fall apart in parallel.
latimes.com
Jeff Daniels on 'A Man in Full's' Ending: 'Some Will Be Offended'
Daniels is proud his new show "goes out with a bang" and will have people talking long after it finishes.
newsweek.com
Netflix’s Flimsy A Man in Full Makes Tom Wolfe’s Epic Novel Feel Small
Created by David E. Kelley and starring Jeff Daniels, this slight adaptation of Tom Wolfe's era-defining book is permeated by bad choices
time.com
Jeff Daniels’ ‘A Man in Full’ Is Swinging With Big Dick Energy
Mark Hill / NetflixA Man in Full is about the power (and pitfalls) of big dick energy, of which it boasts plenty. David E. Kelley’s adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s 1998 best-seller is a multi-pronged portrait of cocksure macho arrogance and, in particular, the idea—espoused by its protagonist—that “a man has got to shake his balls.” Shake them he does, often and aggressively, as do many others in this six-part Netflix series, which launches May 2. While it’s ultimately a thin and reductive take on the famed author’s sprawling saga of southern America, it nonetheless struts about with swaggering ferocity, led by Jeff Daniels’ full-bodied performance as a blustery, bloviating capitalist predator.In myriad ways, from missing characters and subplots to a rather pedestrian style, A Man in Full is a stripped-down rendition of Wolf’s enormously colorful and descriptive book. Yet on its own limited terms, it remains a lively and eminently watchable affair about Charlie Croker (Daniels), an Atlanta mogul with his hands in just about every facet of the city he calls home. Those innumerable concerns, however, have put Charlie in a perilous spot, as he learns when he’s summoned to the offices of PlannersBanc for a meeting with Harry Zale (Bill Camp), the head of the Real Estate Management Department. Along with his colleague Raymond Peepgrass (Tom Pelphrey), Harry informs Charlie that he owes their institution $800 million, and given that he’s in hoc to other lenders to the tune of an additional half a billion, it’s time to settle his debt.With a southern accent that’s almost as thick as the coat of arrogance that he wears like armor, Charlie is a titan who’s used to being the biggest swinging dick in the room, and he naturally bristles at Harry’s antagonistic demands that he pay up or risk foreclosure on all his assets, including his prized skyscraper. Listening to Harry lambaste Charlie is music to the ears of Raymond, a wimpy paean who’s long resented being ill-treated by Charlie, and who later admits to what’s written all over his face: namely, that he simultaneously loathes, resents, and envies Charlie for his bulldozer confidence and the success it begets. Pelfrey plays Raymond like a sniveling loser who desperately wants to destroy that which he covets, and he turns out to be a persistent thorn in Charlie’s side, even if Kelley’s series—which he wrote, and is passably directed by Regina King and Thomas Schlamme—expands its scope to deal with a collection of related strands.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
In an Online World, a New Generation of Protesters Chooses Anonymity
Doxxing and other consequences have led many student protesters on college campuses to hide their identities. That choice has been polarizing.
nytimes.com
Princess Charlotte Turns 9: Her Year in Photos
Charlotte has taken on some high-profile appearances over the past year, including the coronation of her grandfather.
newsweek.com
Dear Abby: I spent a decade faithful to my wife just to find she has affairs
Dear Abby weighs in on a husband finding out his wife is having an affair after eight years of marriage and a man looking to rekindle with his family.
nypost.com
Pro-Palestinian And Pro-Israel Protesters Unite To Chant 'F*** Joe Biden'
The protesters were seen chanting the slogan while separated by barriers at the University of Alabama on Wednesday, according to videos posted online.
newsweek.com
Full List of Democrats, GOP Who Voted Against Antisemitism Awareness Act
A total of 70 Democrats and 21 Republicans voted against the act on Wednesday, signaling opposition to the bipartisan bill.
newsweek.com
Ex-Mets prospect Pete Crow-Armstrong gets clutch RBI to propel Cubs
Ex-Met Pete Crow-Armstrong's sacrifice fly in the fifth inning was the difference in the Cubs' 1-0 win on Wednesday night at Citi Field.
1 h
nypost.com
Britney Spears and Sam Asghari finalize divorce
The "Family Business" actor filed to dissolve his marriage to the Princess of Pop in August after 14 months. They tied the knot in June 2022.
1 h
nypost.com
U of Michigan trans athlete, 31, sparks outrage over competing at national water polo tournament for second time
Paans was on the 2023 Wolverine's National Champions team that defeated UC Santa Barbara 8-6 in the final.
1 h
nypost.com
Body of fifth Baltimore bridge victim has been recovered, authorities say
The victim, one of six construction workers who died when the Key Bridge collapsed, was identified as Miguel Angel Luna Gonzalez, 49, of Glen Burnie, Md.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Internet-famous pet alligator ‘Wally’ missing, owner says he was stolen in emotional plea for help
"We need all the help we can get to bring my baby back," Wally's dad Joie Henney said, breaking down. "Please we need your help."
1 h
nypost.com
Tensions High at UCLA as Protesters Ignore Police Orders to Disperse
Mike Blake/ReutersLaw enforcement officers in riot gear converged on the UCLA campus Wednesday night, ordering a crowd of over a thousand pro-Palestinian supporters gathered at a student encampment to disperse.Social media videos captured police warning those on a loudspeaker that those who did not leave would face arrest, though no arrests have yet been made.Late Wednesday night, live video from the Associated Press showed a large crowd applauding and listening to various speakers, while chanting, “Free, free, free Palestine” and, “We will not stop, we will not rest.” The outlet reported student, alumni and neighbors mostly remained after the police warning. Speakers could be heard assuring protesters, with one claiming, “we’re making history tonight.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
DOJ official Kristen Clarke comes clean after falsely testifying to Senate that she had never been arrested
Clarke asserted that since the arrest was expunged, she wasn’t required to disclose it to lawmakers.
2 h
nypost.com
Large police presence at UCLA as protests disrupt colleges nationwide
Police are cracking down on protests against Israel's bombardment of Gaza at campuses across the US. Follow for live updates.
2 h
edition.cnn.com
High school baseball and softball: Wednesday's scores and updated playoff pairings
High school baseball and softball scores, including updated Southern Section playoff pairings, from Wednesday, May 1.
2 h
latimes.com
Caitlin Clark already having fun with Indiana Fever teammates during bling-filled photo shoot
Caitlin Clark is already making friends in Indiana.
2 h
nypost.com
Student Journalists From Columbia to UCLA Are on the Frontlines Covering Campus Unrest
On American campuses awash in anger this spring, student journalists are in the center of it all, sometimes uncomfortably so.
2 h
time.com
Adam Ottavino continues eye-popping start to season for Mets after 2022 struggles
And since giving up runs in his first two appearances of the season, Adam Ottavino has gone 34 straight batters without allowing a hit — although his latest outing came in a 1-0 loss to the Cubs.
2 h
nypost.com
Trump praises NYPD for arresting Columbia University anti-Israel protesters: ‘Beautiful thing to watch’
Former President Donald Trump praised “New York’s finest” Wednesday for rounding up hundreds of anti-Israel and pro-terror demonstrators at Columbia University and City College of New York the previous night. “New York was under siege last night,” the presumptive Republican nominee for president said at a campaign rally in Wisconsin, referring to the protesters as...
2 h
nypost.com
Pilot, passenger escape injury after small plane makes emergency landing on Long Island beach
Thrilling video shows the single-engine Cessna 152 hover along the small strip of sand at Cedar Beach in Mt. Sinai just as the sun was setting over the horizon.
3 h
nypost.com
Brittney Griner reveals she thought about killing herself while she was jailed in Russia
Brittney Griner spoke for the first time about her months-long detention in Russia during an hourlong interview that aired Wednesday night on ABC.
3 h
nypost.com
For third year in a row, Kings' season ended by Edmonton
The Edmonton Oilers eliminate the Kings from the playoffs once again, this time beating them in five games.
3 h
latimes.com
Widowed dad should not take girlfriend on annual father-daughter trip, Reddit users insist
A Reddit user whose girlfriend objected to being left out of his annual father-daughter trip is completely right to exclude her, said other Reddit users and experts who spoke to Fox News Digital.
3 h
nypost.com
Over 242,000 Ford Maverick trucks recalled due to risk of tail light failure
Ford recently launched a recall of over 242,600 Maverick trucks, citing an issue that may lead to their tail lights not lighting up.
3 h
nypost.com
Lotto player wins $800K jackpot after his sister dreams about finding ‘a bunch of gold’
A North Carolina man won more than $800,000 in the lottery after his sister says she dreamt about riches. David Atwell, of Kannapolis, won $837,187 in Saturday night’s drawing off a Cash 5 on a $1 ticket he bought at a local Jiffy Quik, North Carolina’s Education Lottery announced. “I was stunned,” he said. “At...
3 h
nypost.com
Now Republicans Are Blaming George Soros for Campus Protests
NewsNationA number of Republicans are now suggesting—or in some cases, flat-out declaring—that George Soros, often the target of right-wing conspiracy theories, is funding the pro-Palestine protests on college campuses.House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), during a NewsNation interview Wednesday, speculated that the billionaire philanthropist and Holocaust survivor was behind the unrest at universities like Columbia in New York, where the city’s police department the day prior removed and arrested student protesters from a building they had broken into and occupied.“I think the FBI needs to be all over this,” Johnson said on The Hill. “They need to look at the root causes and find out if some of this was funded by—I don’t know—George Soros or overseas entities. There’s sort of a common theme and a common strategy that seems to be pursued in many of these campuses.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
3 h
thedailybeast.com
Clippers on brink of playoff elimination after losing Game 5 to Mavericks
Luka Doncic has 35 points and 10 assists to lead the Mavericks to a Game 3 victory on Wednesday night, putting the Clippers down 3-2 in best-of-seven series.
3 h
latimes.com
Not about revenge: Dodgers earn series win, but no October redemption, in blowout of Dbacks
The Dodgers don't look at defeating the Diamondbacks as making up for last year's loss in the postseason.
3 h
latimes.com
Survivors Read Mean Tweets From Depraved Holocaust Deniers
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/ClaimsConferenceIt can’t have been easy for Holocaust survivor Herbert Rubinstein to read aloud the words that a Holocaust denier posted online. “We have all been cheated, lied to, and exploited,” the post says. “The Holocaust did NOT happen the way it is written in our history books.” In no uncertain terms, Rubinstein sets the record straight. “That is a lie,” he says.Ahead of Holocaust Remembrance Day on May 6, several survivors are taking part in a powerful campaign seeking to address the ongoing spread of Holocaust denialism online by reading posts dismissing the real atrocities that they lived through. The #CancelHate campaign, organized by the Claims Conference, features a series of videos of survivors speaking the words of Holocaust denial and distortion that still proliferate on social media platforms—and debunking those smears with the testimony of their own lived experiences.One of the survivors taking part is Hedi Argent. Born into a Jewish family in Vienna in 1929, she was expelled from school the day after the Anschluss, Adolf Hitler’s annexation of Austria into a union with Nazi Germany. Soon she and her family would also be forced out of their home. Eventually, 17 of her family members would be murdered in the Holocaust.Read more at The Daily Beast.
3 h
thedailybeast.com
Kristi Noem Echoes Trump Line in Reply to Dog-Killer Drama
Fox NewsTwo of the first words out of Kristi Noem’s mouth when asked Wednesday on Fox News to justify her strange decision to kill her puppy and her goat by shooting them in a gravel pit were “fake news.”In the fashion of a typical Trump ally, Noem blamed the media for simply reporting on what she reportedly wrote in her forthcoming book.“Well, Sean, you know how the fake news works. They leave out some or most of the facts of a story, they put the worst spin on it, and that’s what’s happened in this case,” said Noem, who had been considered a potential Trump running mate until her admission.Read more at The Daily Beast.
3 h
thedailybeast.com
Democrats Divided on Response to Anti-Israel Protests, NYPD's Columbia Raid
Democrats are seemingly divided on how to respond to the anti-Israel protests and encampments that have sprouted up throughout the nation, especially in the wake of the New York Police Department's (NYPD) raid of Columbia University Tuesday night. The post Democrats Divided on Response to Anti-Israel Protests, NYPD’s Columbia Raid appeared first on Breitbart.
4 h
breitbart.com
Appeals court rejects climate change lawsuit by young Oregon activists against US government
A federal appeals court panel on Wednesday rejected a long-running lawsuit brought by young Oregon-based climate activists who argued that the U.S. government’s role in climate change violated their constitutional rights
4 h
abcnews.go.com
Solomon Islands lawmakers elect Foreign Minister Jeremiah Manele as new prime minister
Solomon Islands lawmakers have elected former Foreign Minister Jeremiah Manele as prime minister in a development that suggests the South Pacific island nation will maintain close ties with China
4 h
latimes.com
5th victim's body recovered from Baltimore Key Bridge collapse
The body of a fifth victim of the Baltimore Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse has been recovered.
4 h
abcnews.go.com
Brittney Griner says she thought about killing herself during first few weeks in Russian jail
WNBA star Brittney Griner says she thought about killing herself during her first few weeks in a Russian jail after her 2022 arrest on drug-related charges
4 h
abcnews.go.com
5/1: CBS Evening News
Several college protests turn violent; police called in to clear encampments; Bee colony delays Arizona Diamondbacks game
4 h
cbsnews.com
5 Takeaways From the Times Interview of Brittney Griner
Highlights from a Times Magazine profile of the basketball star.
4 h
nytimes.com
Brittney Griner Talks Candidly About Her New Book, Russia and Recovery
In an interview, the basketball star reveals her humiliation — and friendships — in Russian prison, and her path to recovery.
4 h
nytimes.com
Ask Amy: My wife’s sister confessed her feelings for me
She confessed her long-held feelings for her sister’s husband – then asked that he keep it a secret.
4 h
washingtonpost.com
Miss Manners: Offering my bedroom to guests
Is it good manners to offer guests your bedroom instead of a guest accommodation?
4 h
washingtonpost.com
Carolyn Hax: Will request for a postnup offend much younger wife?
A “not delusional” letter writer with a son wants a postnup with much-younger wife, but doesn’t want to offend her.
4 h
washingtonpost.com
More money is going to African climate startups, but a huge funding gap remains
African climate-tech startups are increasingly raising money from private sources, but while those funds for climate solutions are growing, a huge gap remains in meeting the actual financial needs for climate action in Africa
4 h
abcnews.go.com