Remembering The Silver Grille

Higbee's was one of the late, great urban department stores, where you could get your nails done, buy furniture, browse through books and greeting cards, try on dresses, and -- oh yes -- have lunch.
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This photo, courtesy of the Ritz-Carlton Cleveland, depicts the Silver Grille as it is today, used as an event space by the hotel. Photo courtesy the Ritz-Carlton.

My morning's ritualistic reading of the New York Times unexpectedly transported me to my childhood, thanks to "A Lunch that Tastes Like Nostalgia," Alex Witchel's lively account of a midday repast at Bergdorf Goodman's. Her article pays homage to a fading rite -- the department store lunch -- and shuttled me back to the 1960s, when my Aunt Helen would occasionally take me with her on the bus to downtown Cleveland, where she had standing Saturday appointments at Higbee's hair salon with Miss Rose.

Higbee's was one of the late, great urban department stores, where you could get your nails done, buy furniture, browse through books and greeting cards, try on dresses, and -- oh yes -- have lunch. Back in the day Cleveland boasted four such retail havens: Besides Higbee's there was Halle's, the May Company, and Sterling Lindner-Davis.

At the Higbee salon I idled away the time looking at fashion and movie magazines, with the promise of lunch afterwards at the terribly sophisticated Silver Grille, followed by a visit to the girls' clothing department, where Aunt Helen always bought me a dress.

So comforting were my memories of lunch with Aunt Helen at the Silver Grille that when Cleveland Landmarks Press published The Silver Grille: Memories and Recipes a number of years ago, I snapped up a copy at Walden Books.

Higbee's and the other stores are gone, now. (So, for that matter, is Walden's.) The sturdy but elegant Higbee building still stands kitty-corner to the landmark Terminal Tower on Public Square (flanked, on the tower's other side, by the Ritz-Carlton Hotel). The grand old store is now home to the Horseshoe Casino, and has been for exactly one year to the day that I'm posting this. Fans of A Christmas Story filmed primarily in Cleveland, will remember Higbee's; its iconic display windows feature prominently in the film and contained Ralphie's holy grail--the Red Ryder BB gun.

But I digress. Nostalgia will do that to you. Witchel's article inspired more than this reverie: It compelled me to pull out my copy of the Silver Grille cookbook.

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The first recipe I turned to, for Maurice Salad, had become a longstanding favorite of mine long after I outgrew the creamed chicken, which arrived in its own cardboard oven.

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Large cities with renowned department stores invariably opened satellites in suburban shopping malls, and Higbee's was no exception. I often ordered this salad when my mother and I ate at the "Attic" in the Elyria Higbee's. It was a charming place, but it was no Silver Grille. There could only be one. Happily, the food--if not the name--was the same.

The Silver Grille's Maurice Salad with Classic Maurice Dressing

Adapted from The Silver Grille: Memories and Recipes. Used with permission.

--Serves four

Six cups diced iceberg lettuce
4 ounces julienned cooked ham
4 ounces julienned cooked turkey or chicken
4 ounces julienned Swiss cheese
4 teaspoons chopped sweet pickle

Combine all ingredients. Mix with one cup of classic Maurice dressing and place in a bowl lined with lettuce leaves.

FOR THE DRESSING (makes one cup):

One cup mayonnaise
One hard-boiled egg, chopped
Two tablespoons chopped parsley
One teaspoon vinegar

Combine salad ingredients with the dressing and mix.

Note: The Silver Grill made the original Maurice Dressing with a commercial base not currently available, according to the cookbook. A recipe former Silver Grill employee devised this recipe.

Two more things you should know:

1. James A. Toman, publisher of Cleveland Landmarks Press, tells me that they are reissuing all of the previously published Silver Grille recipes in a new volume, Recipes from the Silver Grille. The book is forthcoming sometime in late summer; be sure to check out the publisher's website for details.

2. The Silver Grille underwent an award-winning restoration in 2002 by the Ritz-Carlton Cleveland. Although no longer a restaurant, the hotel uses the spacious tenth-floor room as a "function space," according to Kelsey Williams, senior marketing and PR coördinator of the Ritz-Carlton, which is the venue's exclusive caterer.

Do you have department store lunch memories of your own? Share them in the comments section below!

Images from the book "The Silver Grille: Memories and Recipes," used with permission. Copyright © 2000 by Cleveland Landmarks Press, Inc.

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

Melissa Sue Anderson: Then

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