Skip to main content

Saucy Salads and Sandwiches at the Edgewater Beach Hotel

 The grounds of the Edgewater Beach Hotel. Postcard published by Curt Teich Co., Chicago. 
Seeing the pink high-rise Edgewater Beach Apartments on Sheridan Road near Bryn Mawr Avenue makes one think of the famed Edgewater Beach Hotel structures that once stood nearby.

In its heyday in the 1920s through the 1940s, the hotel was a popular spot with honeymooners and visiting celebrities alike. You could also eat one heck of a salad or sandwich there.

Arnold Shircliffe, who worked as the catering manager at the hotel, wrote A Book of Salads in 1926 and The Edgewater Sandwich Book in 1930. A sampling of recipes from these cookbooks shows that Shircliffe knew how to elevate these everyday convenience foods into works of art. He also had very different ideas about salads and sandwiches than what we typically eat today.

The Colonnade Room at the Edgewater Beach Hotel. Postcard published by Max Rigot Selling Agency of Chicago. 

A Book of Salads was referred to as “the bible of salad makers” according to the Chicago Tribune archives. In this book, Shircliffe lays out the 5 basic types of salad dressing: French dressing, mayonnaise, animal fat, sour cream, and “cooked dressing.” Cheese was a key ingredient in many of his salads, and presentation was key. For example, the Iron Salad consisted of dates, raisins, cottage cheese, endive, and cress artfully arranged on a plate. And although the Tribune states that Shircliffe was “exceedingly fond of lettuce,” this key ingredient seemed to be used mainly for decorative purposes. Shircliffe’s Breakfast Salad recipe begins with a measly 2 or 3 lettuce leaves, on top of which is piled tomato, scrambled eggs whipped with cream and Worcestershire sauce, and boiled ham.

The Edgewater Sandwich Book included recipes for a Pig’s Feet Sandwich, a Rabbit Sandwich, and even a Squirrel Sandwich, just to name a few. Shircliffe’s Prune Sandwich consisted of prunes, lemon juice, mayonnaise, butter, and lettuce on whole-wheat bread, offering a slightly healthier option. The Cannibal Sandwich featured raw ground beef mixed with onions and seasoning as its main ingredient. “Sprinkle with chopped chives and criss-cross with fork tines to give a decorative appearance,” the recipe concludes. Shircliffe dedicated The Edgewater Sandwich Book to none other than the Earl of Sandwich, the Brit who invented the lunchtime staple.  

Marine Dining Room. Postcard published by Curt Teich & Co. of Chicago.

Shircliffe went on to become manager of the Wrigley Building restaurant, a position he held until his death in 1952 at the age of 72. Perhaps Shircliffe’s fondness for rich ingredients stemmed from his time spent serving his country prior to his time at the Edgewater Beach Hotel. During World War I, he initiated food train service for U.S. troops in France. And during World War II, he was a food consultant to the U.S. Army and Navy. One thing is for sure: After reading samples from these cookbooks, I will never think of salads and sandwiches the same way again. And one more thing: If you’re going to make a Cannibal Sandwich, it had better look decorative.

Written by Emily Ruzich

Note: Special thanks to Amy Dobrowolsky for telling me about A Book of Salads and providing the inspiration for this post.
The following blogs also provided excerpts from the cookbooks:                                                                
Cookbook of the Day (www.cookbookoftheday.blogspot.com) 
A Study of Reading Habits (www.studyofreadinghabits.wordpress.com)

A second postcard of the Marine Dining Room. This postcard was published by Max Rigot Selling Agency of Chicago.


Comments

  1. A "Cannibal Sandwich" is just steak tartar.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The pink Edgewater Beach Apartments were never a hotel building; they’ve always been apartments. The two hotel buildings shown on the postcard were yellow and were torn down. This is a common mistake.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Out of curiosity I made a prune sandwich, and it was better than I expected.

    ReplyDelete
  4. MGM National Harbor - CDC
    Information on MGM National Harbor including room types, address, telephone number and address, hours, management, 창원 출장샵 opening 수원 출장마사지 hours and  Rating: 4 광명 출장안마 · ‎12 reviews · ‎Price range: 창원 출장마사지 from $25 구리 출장마사지

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Burlesque Dancer Sally Rand Took the Chicago World's Fair by Storm

Sally Rand danced at the Streets of Paris exhibit. Postcard printed by Curt Teich & Co, Chicago. Sally Rand was never supposed to perform her iconic “fan dance” at the 1933 Century of Progress World’s Fair in Chicago. The dancer’s requests to perform inside the Streets of Paris exhibit had been turned down several times. But Rand decided to take matters into her own hands by riding into a pre-opening party on the fairgrounds, uninvited, on a white horse wearing nothing but a velvet cape. The crowd loved it. Rand was arrested but released the next day, when she promptly accepted an offer to perform as the headliner in the Café de la Paix’s floor show for $90 per week. While her dancing broke boundaries and city decency ordinances at the time, her legacy was born and Rand made her cultural mark on the world. According to The 1933 Chicago World’s Fair by Cheryl Ganz, 29-year-old Sally Rand had previously worked as an acrobatic circus performer and film stuntwoman. She had also alread...

Marshall Field's at Christmas

  The aisle on the first floor of the State Street store is 358 feet long. Postcard publisher is unknown.  Many Chicagoans continue to miss visiting Marshall Field’s during the holiday season. Just talking about the famed Christmas windows and holiday decorations brings about memories of the department store’s glory days. Many of us can recall the strong smell of perfume that would greet visitors upon entering the flagship State Street store, along with the huge white Romanesque columns decorated with Christmas fare on the first floor. The real fun, however, was taking the elevator to the 7 th floor to get a glimpse of the giant Christmas tree inside the Walnut Room restaurant. The best place to view the tree was one floor up on a balcony area. Christmas decorations on the first floor. Postcard publisher is unknown.  Frango mint chocolates were piled high in various areas throughout the store, and many visitors couldn’t resist buying a box. Frango chocolates were once ...

Putting the “Toddle” Back in “That Toddling Town”

  Postcard designed and sold by appshop. The “toddle” was a jazz dance step that became popular across the nation just in time for the Roaring Twenties. And Chicago became known as “that toddling town” thanks to the lyrics of Fred Fisher’s 1922 song “Chicago (That Toddling Town).” While many still know Frank Sinatra’s famous cover version of that song, the dance step has largely been forgotten. In a 1921 South Bend News-Times article, dance teacher Arthur Murray describes the toddle as having the “delightful abandon so characteristic of everything American.” According to Murray, the toddle was similar to the shimmy but without the shoulder shakes. It also bore a resemblance to the fox trot but with an extra bounce added to the steps. Songwriter Fred Fisher was not the first to associate the toddle with Chicago. A variation of the toddle, which focused on movements of the hips rather than the feet, was called “the Chicago toddle” or simply “the Chicago.” In 1921, a print adverti...