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ThrowOregonAway | 8 months ago

Hint - it existed long before they claim it did. I have found similar recipes for dressing going back hundreds of years.

Also what's with the lazy restauranteurs allowing their employees to serve lettuce without even chopping it? That's a deal breaker for me, if I am expected to chop the lettuce myself I'm ordering tap water only and no food and never ever EVER going back lol.

discuss

order

tptacek|8 months ago

A classic Caesar uses whole leaves; the dish was originally meant to be eaten with hands. You can have whatever preferences you like, but I don't think the attitude you're expressing it with is helpful.

testfrequency|8 months ago

Same energy as complaining their pizza and steak isn’t cut for them.

analog31|8 months ago

Sure, the enjoyment of food involves etiquette and aesthetics. When I learned to cook (from my mom), she said that a knife should never enter the salad plate, and if it does, the cook should be embarrassed.

Of course I'm influenced by that lesson, even though it's perfectly arbitrary and I don't always follow it myself, nor do I complain if it's not strictly adhered to.

Aloisius|8 months ago

I'm curious about these similar dressing recipes as I've found nothing similar enough to call them the same thing.

I've seen plenty of anchovy/mustard/aioli dressings that one might call predecessors, but they lack the egg yolks, parmigiano reggiano and Worcestershire sauce, so they would not taste like Caesar salad dressing.

Please share.

ThrowOregonAway|8 months ago

I do not have access to my library right now, sadly. Watch this space.