Cobb Salad
The “How it Began” Story
Cobb salad was created at the Brown Derby Restaurant in Hollywood but, as with many
how this began stories, no one is sure how much is actual fact. The following is
considered to be the official story from the Brown Derby themselves.
One night in 1937, Bob Cobb, then owner of The Brown Derby, prowled hungrily in his
restaurants kitchen for a snack. Opening the huge refrigerator, he pulled out this and
that: a head of lettuce, an avocado, some romaine, watercress, tomatoes, some cold
breast of chicken, a hard-boiled egg, chives, cheese and some old-fashioned French
dressing. He started chopping. Added some crisp bacon -- swiped from a busy chef.”
Voila!....The Cobb salad was born.
“It turned out that it was so good that Sid Grauman (Graumans Chinese Theatre), who
was with Cobb that midnight, asked for a 'Cobb Salad’ the next day.”
Cobb's midnight invention became an overnight sensation with customers like movie
mogul Jack Warner, who regularly dispatched his chauffeur to pick up a carton of the
mouth-watering salad.
Since that night back in 1937, more than 4 million Cobb salads have been sold at Brown
Derby restaurants, according to the Brown Derby Restaurant Group (the company name
now that the two original Hollywood restaurants have closed).
BDRG has since licensed the restaurant name to Disney, who opened a reproduction of
the original Brown Derby in Orlando, Florida in 1989. The next year, a 20-year
agreement was negotiated for Brown Derby restaurants in Tokyo, Paris and Anaheim,
California.
How the Brown Derby got its famous name involves a colorful legend all its own. It’s
said that one night, Herbert Somborn, an ex-husband of Gloria Swanson, remarked to
friends -- speaking of the mood of Hollywood in the roaring 20s -- that You could open
a restaurant in an alley and call it anything. If the food and service were good, the
patrons would just come flocking. It could be called something as ridiculous as the
Brown Derby.
Hence, a restaurant - shaped like a hat - opened near Hollywood and Vine in 1926.
