Articles (sacbee & SacTicket)
Shopping Yellow Pages

Site Navigation

Sacbee: Appetizers with Mike Dunne

SUBSCRIBE: Internet Subscription Special


BACK TO THE APPETIZERS HOME PAGE

Get news, notes and plenty of tidbits on wine, food and dining from our resident tastemaker.

« Houston, We Have Absolutely No Problem | | Real Butter, Real Fruit, Real Pie »
November 13, 2006

What's in a Name? It's a Toss-Up

Everywhere, Caesar salad. Nowhere, Alex salad. Where's justice in the culinary world? Well, if Carla Cardini isn't upset about this - and she isn't - I guess I won't be, either.

Carla Cardini, sommelier at Pappas Bros. Steakhouse in Houston, was a fellow judge at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo International Wine Competition this weekend. She's the granddaughter of Alex Cardini, who with his brother Caesar landed in Tijuana from their native Piemonte in northern Italy not long after World War I.

During a break in the judging, she briefed me on some family history. Caesar Cardini generally is recognized as the creater of the Caesar salad, which he is widely believed to have tossed for the first over the Fourth of July weekend in 1924 in Tijuana. That date, however, long as been questioned. At least one culinary historian has said the first Caesar salad wasn't made until more than a decade later. The late Julia Child, on the other hand, swore she had a Caesar salad made by Caesar himself when she visited his restaurant in Tijuana "in 1925 or 1926."

Carla Cardini isn't sure when the salad first was tossed, but she's convinced it was the inspiration of her grandfather Alex, not Caesar. The two had neighboring and competing restaurants in Tijuana, but when Alex's Fior d' Italia burned down he went to work at Caesar's Place and Hotel, and there introduced the salad.

According to her version of the salad's history, it wasn't conceived to entertain at tableside Hollywood celebrities who flocked to Tijuana to drink and party during Prohibition. Alex Cardini actually first tossed the heady blend of romaine, garlic, olive oil, Parmigiano, Worcestershire sauce, coddled eggs and anchovies for a group of hungover military pilots from Rockwell Field at San Diego. "He called it the 'aviator salad'," said Carla Cardini. She figures that name didn't stick because visitors to Tijuana got in the habit of saying, "Let's go to Caesar's and have that salad." Thus, the name of the restaurant rather than the aviators became closely identified with the salad.

Subsequently, when Alex Cardini moved to Mexico City, where he opened three restaurants, the salad was listed on his menu as "the original Alex Cardini Caesar salad."

Carla Cardini would like the record set straight on a couple of other misconceptions concerning the salad. For one, the salad originally included anchovies, but they were pulverized into a paste that was used to coat the croutons. Secondly, lime juice rather than lemon juice originally was used in the dressing of the salad, though most recipes today customarily call for lemons.

So, should every restaurant that offers a "Caesar salad" rewrite its menu to "Alex salad?" Carla Cardini has another suggestion: Why not call the salad by its original name, "aviator salad?"

Posted by mdunne at November 13, 2006 9:47 AM

 

Getting in touch

E-mail Mike Dunne
Mike's biography

Subscribe to Appetizers

Get the Bee's Taste newsletter

Where to go

Previous reviews

10 Wine Sites to Check Out

10 Dining Sites to Check Out

Recent Entries

An Off Note

Peter Torza Pulls the Plug

A Prospector Returns to Foothills

Mondavi Took the Highway, Others Take...

Battered, But Hanging In

One Tossed, Another Appears

Peter Torza Cuts Back

Slowing Down in the Delta

Folsom Gets a Wine Bar

Zagat is Sniffing About Sacramento


May 2008

S M T W T F S
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Archives

May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006






 
 

News | Sports | Business | Politics | Opinion | Entertainment | Lifestyle | Cars | Homes | Jobs | Shopping | RSS

Contact Bee Customer Service | Contact sacbee.com | Advertise Online | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Help | Site Map

GUIDE TO THE BEE: | Subscribe | Manage Your Subscription | Contacts | Advertise | Bee Events | Community Involvement

Sacbee.com | SacTicket.com | Sacramento.com | CapitolAlert.com

Copyright © The Sacramento Bee, (916) 321-1000