Cafeteria Cobb Salad
A large plate of lettuce topped with neatly aligned rows of chicken, crispy bacon, hard-boiled egg, avocado, tomato, and crumbled blue cheese, all drizzled with a tangy vinaigrette. A complete and colorful meal, designed to be assembled quickly and well.
A large plate of lettuce topped with neatly aligned rows of chicken, crispy bacon, hard-boiled egg, avocado, tomato, and crumbled blue cheese, all drizzled with a tangy vinaigrette. A complete and colorful meal, designed to be assembled quickly and well.
You want to know how I ate at PARC? No fuss. This salad is edible engineering: clean components, aligned in rows, and you reconfigure at will — too much bacon? you reorganize. The best way to predict your meal is to invent it on the plate. I'd gulp it down while discussing Smalltalk, a fork in one hand, a marker in the other, and frankly, the creamy avocado with the sharp blue cheese wakes you up better than coffee.
- •Iceberg and romaine lettuce — a large bowl (crunchy base)
- •Roasted chicken breast — two (protein)
- •Bacon — a few slices (salty crunch)
- •Hard-boiled eggs — two to three (garnish)
- •California avocado — one ripe (creaminess (signature))
- •Tomatoes — two (tangy freshness)
- •Blue cheese (Roquefort or local blue) — a handful crumbled (salty umami)
- •Red wine vinaigrette — to taste (tangy binder)
Cafeteria Cobb Salad
A large plate of lettuce topped with neatly aligned rows of chicken, crispy bacon, hard-boiled egg, avocado, tomato, and crumbled blue cheese, all drizzled with a tangy vinaigrette. A complete and colorful meal, designed to be assembled quickly and well.
Why this dish? At noon, Xerox PARC engineers grab a quick meal at the cafeteria or in Palo Alto bistros. The Cobb salad, born in Hollywood in 1937, became the quintessential California lunch: hearty, fresh, eaten with one hand while jotting down ideas with the other — exactly the pace of Kay's lab.
You want to know how I ate at PARC? No fuss. This salad is edible engineering: clean components, aligned in rows, and you reconfigure at will — too much bacon? you reorganize. The best way to predict your meal is to invent it on the plate. I'd gulp it down while discussing Smalltalk, a fork in one hand, a marker in the other, and frankly, the creamy avocado with the sharp blue cheese wakes you up better than coffee.
Ingredients (period version)
- Iceberg and romaine lettuce — a large bowl (crunchy base)
- Roasted chicken breast — two (protein)
- Bacon — a few slices (salty crunch)
- Hard-boiled eggs — two to three (garnish)
- California avocado — one ripe (creaminess (signature))
- Tomatoes — two (tangy freshness)
- Blue cheese (Roquefort or local blue) — a handful crumbled (salty umami)
- Red wine vinaigrette — to taste (tangy binder)
Ingredients
- Romaine lettuce hearts — 1 large, chopped (crunchy base)
- Chicken breast — 2 (≈300 g), cooked and diced (protein)
- Bacon slices — 4, grilled and crumbled (salty crunch)
- Eggs — 3, hard-boiled, quartered (garnish)
- Ripe avocado — 1, diced (creaminess (signature))
- Cherry tomatoes — 200 g, halved (tangy freshness)
- Crumbled blue cheese — 80 g (salty umami)
- Olive oil — 4 tbsp (vinaigrette)
- Red wine vinegar — 1.5 tbsp (vinaigrette)
- Dijon mustard — 1 tsp (emulsion)
- Salt, pepper, chives — to taste (seasoning)
Method
- Cook the chicken and dice it; hard-boil the eggs (10 min), then cool and peel.
- Grill the bacon until crispy, drain, and crumble.
- Line a large plate with chopped lettuce.
- Arrange in neat parallel rows: chicken, bacon, eggs, avocado, tomatoes, and blue cheese.
- Whisk oil, vinegar, mustard, salt, and pepper for the vinaigrette.
- Drizzle at serving time, sprinkle with chives, and mix only in each person's plate.
How it was made : Legend attributes the Cobb salad to Bob Cobb of Hollywood's Brown Derby around 1937, who supposedly improvised the dish with fridge leftovers late at night. The separate rows of ingredients became its visual signature, adopted by cafeterias and coffee shops across California.
The contemporary twist : Served in a transparent jar with layered ingredients (layered salad) for office takeout — a nod to object-oriented programming: each layer is a well-encapsulated module.
Alan Kay · Charactorium