What is Caesar Salad?
Caesar Salad is a classic American-Mexican salad consisting of crisp romaine lettuce leaves tossed with garlic-anchovy-lemon dressing, topped with crunchy garlic croutons and abundant freshly grated Parmesan cheese, and traditionally finished tableside with a flourish of additional cracked black pepper. The salad has a bracing, intensely flavored character — sharp, salty, garlicky, and umami-rich — that distinguishes it from the milder green salads popular in mid-20th-century American dining. The dish is one of the most internationally recognized preparations of 20th-century North American restaurant cuisine, invented at Caesar Cardini’s restaurant in Tijuana, Mexico in 1924, and remains a defining presence on virtually every steakhouse, brasserie, and casual-dining menu worldwide.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
The classic Original Cardini Caesar Salad follows the 1924 Tijuana recipe: whole romaine leaves dressed tableside with a coddled egg, garlic, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce, olive oil, Parmesan, and Dijon mustard, tossed by the diner using their hands or a fork. Notably, the original recipe did not contain anchovies — the Worcestershire sauce provided the umami and salty notes. The leaves were eaten by hand, picked up by their stems and dipped into the dressing pooling at the bottom of the bowl.
The Modern American Caesar Salad adds anchovy fillets directly into the dressing for additional umami, chops the romaine into bite-sized pieces, and serves on plates rather than as whole leaves. The Chicken Caesar Salad adds grilled chicken breast as a protein, transforming the side salad into a complete meal — one of the most popular American restaurant lunches. The Steakhouse Caesar uses larger leaves, anchovy garnish, and is presented as an elegant first course.
Modern variations include Caesar Salad Wraps, where the salad is rolled in a tortilla; Kale Caesar, the trendy 2010s version using massaged kale leaves; Caesar Pasta Salad; Grilled Caesar, where romaine hearts are charred on the grill; Caesar Wedge, served as iceberg quarters; Vegan Caesar using cashew-based dressing; Brussels Sprout Caesar; and creative restaurant interpretations including raw tableside preparations at upscale steakhouses and modernist deconstructed presentations at fine-dining establishments.
Preparation Technology
Begin with the croutons: cut 200 g of day-old rustic bread (sourdough, country loaf, or baguette) into 2 cm cubes. Toss with 60 ml olive oil, 2 minced garlic cloves, ½ teaspoon salt, and ¼ teaspoon black pepper. Spread on a baking sheet and bake at 175°C for 12–15 minutes until golden and crisp throughout. Cool completely before using; warm croutons wilt the lettuce. Stale or fresh bread can both work — the key is dehydrating thoroughly during baking.
For the dressing, mash 2 garlic cloves with ½ teaspoon coarse salt into a smooth paste using a mortar and pestle. Transfer to a bowl and whisk in 4 finely chopped anchovy fillets (or 2 teaspoons anchovy paste), 2 large egg yolks, 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard, 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice, and 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce. Slowly stream in 120 ml extra-virgin olive oil while whisking continuously to emulsify into a thick, creamy dressing. Whisk in 50 g freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, ½ teaspoon black pepper, and adjust salt and lemon to taste.
For food safety, use pasteurized eggs or briefly coddle whole eggs in barely simmering water for 60 seconds before separating. The egg yolks provide essential emulsification and the silky body that distinguishes proper Caesar dressing from mere vinaigrette. Some modern recipes substitute mayonnaise for the raw egg, producing acceptable but slightly less complex results. The traditional anchovy-egg-garlic combination is what makes Caesar dressing distinct.
To assemble: wash and dry 2 large heads of romaine lettuce thoroughly — wet lettuce dilutes the dressing and produces soggy salad. Use a salad spinner and pat with paper towels for maximum dryness. Tear leaves into bite-sized pieces (or leave whole for traditional presentation). Place in a large chilled bowl. Add 60 ml of dressing and toss gently using clean hands or salad servers, coating each leaf evenly. Add the cooled croutons, another 30 ml of dressing, and 30 g of additional shaved Parmesan. Toss once more and serve immediately on chilled plates with extra Parmesan shavings and freshly cracked black pepper. The salad must be eaten within 5 minutes of dressing — the lettuce wilts rapidly under the acidic dressing.
Tips and Common Mistakes
Dressing the salad too far in advance is the leading cause of soggy, wilted Caesar. The acidic dressing breaks down lettuce cells rapidly — within 5–10 minutes of tossing, even crisp romaine becomes limp and watery. Always dress the salad immediately before serving, and never prepare a tossed Caesar more than 5 minutes ahead. For buffet or party service, prepare components separately and toss in batches as guests arrive at the table.
Using bottled Caesar dressing from supermarkets produces a fundamentally inferior salad lacking the bright, fresh, garlic-anchovy character that defines authentic preparations. Commercial dressings rely on stabilizers, vinegars, and shelf-stable substitutes that produce flat, one-dimensional flavors. A proper homemade Caesar dressing takes 5 minutes and dramatically elevates the dish — even acceptable versions of the salad require fresh dressing made within 1 hour of serving.
Skipping the lettuce-drying step produces watered-down dressing pooling at the bottom of the bowl rather than coating each leaf evenly. Romaine must be washed and thoroughly dried — spun in a salad spinner, then patted with paper towels. Even slightly damp leaves dilute the dressing and prevent proper coating. Many restaurants chill cleaned and dried lettuce for 2–4 hours before service, producing maximum crispness and ensuring complete dryness when assembled into salads.
History and Cultural Significance
Caesar Salad was created at Caesar Cardini’s restaurant in Tijuana, Mexico on July 4, 1924 by the Italian-American restaurateur Caesar Cardini. According to Wikipedia’s account of Caesar salad, Cardini operated his restaurant just across the U.S. border to circumvent American Prohibition, attracting Hollywood celebrities and wealthy Americans seeking legal alcohol. On a busy Independence Day, Cardini reportedly invented the salad from limited kitchen ingredients on hand, presenting it as a tableside spectacle that became the restaurant’s signature dish and made his reputation as a culinary innovator.
The salad was popularized internationally during the 1930s and 1940s through Hollywood actors and food critics who experienced it at Cardini’s establishment. Julia Child famously recalled visiting Tijuana with her parents as a child and being delighted by the tableside Caesar preparation. The dish became a fixture of American restaurant culture during the post-war boom, with steakhouses and continental restaurants adopting it as a standard first-course offering. Cardini’s daughter Rosa later codified the original recipe and the family launched a commercial Cardini’s dressing brand still sold today.
Today Caesar Salad is one of the most internationally consumed restaurant salads, appearing on virtually every American casual dining menu, every steakhouse first-course list, and on menus at restaurants from Tokyo to Buenos Aires. The dish has spawned countless adaptations and variations, with modern chef-driven establishments continuing to innovate while traditional Mexican preparations remain available at Caesar’s Restaurante in Tijuana — the original location, which still serves the salad in the original tableside style. The salad is also frequently the subject of culinary debates about authenticity, anchovy inclusion, and the boundaries between traditional and modern preparations of this defining 20th-century dish.