where did green goddess dressing originate

I weirdly remember exactly how I learned about Green Goddess dressing. It was during an episode of Rachel Ray’s 30 Minute Meals though for the life of me I can’t remember what else was made in the episode. I do remember her talking about it being popular in the 1970s and it was not unusual for Rachel Ray to do kitschy and retro recipes. I will admit that it was quite some time till I made it myself and boy is it worth making homemade.

Who and where was Green Goddess Dressing created? This dressing was not named for its pretty green color instead it was named after a play by the same name. During the mid-1920s, actor George Arliss was starring in a play called The Green Goddess. While the play was in San Francisco, Arliss stayed at The Palace Hotel where the chef created this dressing in his honor. Richard Harned tells a slightly different story in his book The Palace Hotel. It was still George Arliss in town for his play and staying at The Palace Hotel but supposedly Arliss did not like any of the salad dressing choices and challenged chef Philip Roemer to make a better dressing. The chef then created this herb-filled concoction. This is confirmed for the most part in a 1936 newspaper article. A reporter was able to visit the kitchen of the famed Palace Hotel where she was given a tour by chef Philip Roemer. He told her that “I created the salad eight or nine years ago. I got the idea for it from the play of that name”.

What ingredients are in Green Goddess Dressing? The dressing is mayo-based with herbs stirred into the dressing. The herbs usually are parsley, tarragon, chives, and/or green onions. There is also vinegar in the recipe preferably of the tarragon variety. The original recipe also included anchovies but many modern versions use Worcestershire sauce instead. There has also been a huge crop of recipes in recent years that have tweaked the ingredients to make it more vegan-friendly finding alternatives to the mayo and anchovies or Worcestershire sauce.

When was Green Goddess Dressing popular? So I will admit, I did only find one mention of the salad dressing in a 1920s newspaper and it was a printing of the recipe from the Palace Hotel. The rest of the articles that had any mention of Green Goddess was about the play it was created for. This does not mean it was not popular but more likely a local favorite that eventually spread out to the rest of the country. By the 1930s you do start to see the dressing on other restaurant menus as well as printed in newspapers.

In the 1940s through to the 1960s, the dressing had a “well-deserved reputation” according to Duncan Hines. Cookbook author Helen Evans Brown in her very popular The West Coast Cookbook included the Palace Hotel recipe for Green Goddess dressing as well as another version. She felt that the salad dressing had a lot of imitations and versions but that many attempts were unsuccessful. In 1967 Wishbone introduced a bottled version of Green Goddess dressing which if felt “adds spirited taste to any salad”.

The 1970s is definitely a period where this salad dressing regained popularity. The 2018 cookbook The Fred’s At Barney’s New York Cookbook talks about the height of popularity for this dressing being the 1970s as it was everywhere. Many articles popped up to explain how to make a homemade version of the recipe despite by now there being commercially bottled versions available in grocery stores. Actually, in her 1977 food column, Mary Moore was so surprised by the flood of inquires in which she wrote “suddenly many of you are writing to me asking for the recipe for Green Goddess Dressing for salads like you buy in the stores”. Mary Moore went on to call the flavor “lovely”. A 1971 article called the dressing “rich and delicious” while another from the same years proclaimed that Green Goddess dressing will “make a true gourmet delight out of crispy greens”.

Green Goddess dressing has been gaining in popularity within the last decade. Marrion Cunningham in the cookbook Lost Recipes: Meals to Share with Friends and Family talks about the dressing gaining in much-deserved popularity. Jessica Battilana in her book Repertoire: All the Recipes You Need (2018) says “I am not sure that I want to live in a world where ranch is more beloved than Green Goddess, which is superior in both name and taste”. She goes on to says that she is doing everything in her “power to bring this vibrant, herb-packed green dressing into the limelight”.

A recipe for green goddess dressing has also been included in many popular cookbooks of the past decade. Martha Stewart called the recipe a “beloved California creation” when it was included in her 2015 Martha Stewarts Appetizers. The Barefoot Contessa herself, Ina Garten, swapped out the tarragon for basil in her version in the 2012 Barefoot Contessa at Home. New York Times Food writer Melissa Clark calls the dressing in her 2018 cookbook, Melissa Clark’s Kitchen, a “classic that I don’t mess with much” and that it “tastes good on almost any kind of vegetable matter (and fish, too)”.

Why should I make Green Goddess Dressing? It is creamy, herby with such a nice green color and honestly, the taste payoff is so much better when it is homemade versus buying it bottled. Food writer and columnist Russ Parson agrees. In a 2007 article he wrote, “If all you’ve ever had is the bottled version of this, you might be surprised”. Rachel Smith Borrman agrees in her book Iconic San Francisco Dishes, Drinks & Desserts by saying “There’s something irresistible and mid-century about the tang combined with intense creaminess, brightened with densely incorporated herbs.”

Green Goddess dressing really does work on more than just salad. Try it with seafood, fish, or any protein really. It works as a dip for a veggie platter as a nice change from the classic ranch dressing. I quite like tossing with some shredded cabbage and carrots for a refreshingly different coleslaw. A 2020 newspaper article called the 100-year-old dressing a “special sauce” that has stood the test of time despite being old school.

A Green Goddess recipe adapted from a 1950s recipe served to President Eisenhower during his time in the White House.

sources: Allen, Ida Bailey. “A Salad Buffet Add Variety to the Menu”. The Day. August 17, 1968.

Anderson, Jean. The American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century. New York: Clarkson Potter, 1997.

Clark, John and Pirie, Gayle. The Foreign Cinema Cookbook: Recipes and Stores Under the Stars. USA: ABRAMS, 2018.

Clark, Melissa. Favorite Recipes from Melissa Clark’s Kitchen: Family Meals, Festive Gatherings, and Everything in Between. USA: Running Press, 2018k.

Cunningham, Marrion. Lost Recipes: Meals to Share with Friends and Family. USA: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.

Garten, Ina. Barefoot Contessa at Home: Everyday Recipes You’ll Make Over and Over Again. USA: Clarkson Potter/ Ten Speed, 2012.

Gilbar, Steven. Chicken a la King and The Buffalo Wing: Food Names and the People and Places That Inspired Them. Ohio: Writer’s Digest Books, 2008.

Hile, Bette. “For Your Own Salad Luncheon Try Caesar Salad”. Ellensburg Daily Record. June 5, 1971.

Littlefield, Susan and Strausman, Mark. The Fred’s At Barney’s New York Cookbook. USA: Grand Central Publishing, 2018.

Stewart, Martha. Martha Stewarts Appetizers: 200 Recipes for Dips, Spreads, Snacks, Small Plates and Other Delicious Hors D’oeuvres. USA: Clarkson Potter/ Ten Speed, 2015.

The dressing is named for its tint. The most accepted theory regarding its origins points to the Palace Hotel in San Francisco in 1923, when the hotel’s executive chef Philip Roemer wanted something to pay tribute to actor George Arliss and his hit play, The Green Goddess.
where did green goddess dressing originate

For the love of the vintage kitchen

I weirdly remember exactly how I learned about Green Goddess dressing. It was during an episode of Rachel Ray’s 30 Minute Meals though for the life of me I can’t remember what else was made in the episode. I do remember her talking about it being popular in the 1970s and it was not unusual for Rachel Ray to do kitschy and retro recipes. I will admit that it was quite some time till I made it myself and boy is it worth making homemade.

Who and where was Green Goddess Dressing created? This dressing was not named for its pretty green color instead it was named after a play by the same name. During the mid-1920s, actor George Arliss was starring in a play called The Green Goddess. While the play was in San Francisco, Arliss stayed at The Palace Hotel where the chef created this dressing in his honor. Richard Harned tells a slightly different story in his book The Palace Hotel. It was still George Arliss in town for his play and staying at The Palace Hotel but supposedly Arliss did not like any of the salad dressing choices and challenged chef Philip Roemer to make a better dressing. The chef then created this herb-filled concoction. This is confirmed for the most part in a 1936 newspaper article. A reporter was able to visit the kitchen of the famed Palace Hotel where she was given a tour by chef Philip Roemer. He told her that “I created the salad eight or nine years ago. I got the idea for it from the play of that name”.

where did green goddess dressing originate

What ingredients are in Green Goddess Dressing? The dressing is mayo-based with herbs stirred into the dressing. The herbs usually are parsley, tarragon, chives, and/or green onions. There is also vinegar in the recipe preferably of the tarragon variety. The original recipe also included anchovies but many modern versions use Worcestershire sauce instead. There has also been a huge crop of recipes in recent years that have tweaked the ingredients to make it more vegan-friendly finding alternatives to the mayo and anchovies or Worcestershire sauce.

When was Green Goddess Dressing popular? So I will admit, I did only find one mention of the salad dressing in a 1920s newspaper and it was a printing of the recipe from the Palace Hotel. The rest of the articles that had any mention of Green Goddess was about the play it was created for. This does not mean it was not popular but more likely a local favorite that eventually spread out to the rest of the country. By the 1930s you do start to see the dressing on other restaurant menus as well as printed in newspapers.

where did green goddess dressing originate

In the 1940s through to the 1960s, the dressing had a “well-deserved reputation” according to Duncan Hines. Cookbook author Helen Evans Brown in her very popular The West Coast Cookbook included the Palace Hotel recipe for Green Goddess dressing as well as another version. She felt that the salad dressing had a lot of imitations and versions but that many attempts were unsuccessful. In 1967 Wishbone introduced a bottled version of Green Goddess dressing which if felt “adds spirited taste to any salad”.

The 1970s is definitely a period where this salad dressing regained popularity. The 2018 cookbook The Fred’s At Barney’s New York Cookbook talks about the height of popularity for this dressing being the 1970s as it was everywhere. Many articles popped up to explain how to make a homemade version of the recipe despite by now there being commercially bottled versions available in grocery stores. Actually, in her 1977 food column, Mary Moore was so surprised by the flood of inquires in which she wrote “suddenly many of you are writing to me asking for the recipe for Green Goddess Dressing for salads like you buy in the stores”. Mary Moore went on to call the flavor “lovely”. A 1971 article called the dressing “rich and delicious” while another from the same years proclaimed that Green Goddess dressing will “make a true gourmet delight out of crispy greens”.

Green Goddess dressing has been gaining in popularity within the last decade. Marrion Cunningham in the cookbook Lost Recipes: Meals to Share with Friends and Family talks about the dressing gaining in much-deserved popularity. Jessica Battilana in her book Repertoire: All the Recipes You Need (2018) says “I am not sure that I want to live in a world where ranch is more beloved than Green Goddess, which is superior in both name and taste”. She goes on to says that she is doing everything in her “power to bring this vibrant, herb-packed green dressing into the limelight”.

A recipe for green goddess dressing has also been included in many popular cookbooks of the past decade. Martha Stewart called the recipe a “beloved California creation” when it was included in her 2015 Martha Stewarts Appetizers. The Barefoot Contessa herself, Ina Garten, swapped out the tarragon for basil in her version in the 2012 Barefoot Contessa at Home. New York Times Food writer Melissa Clark calls the dressing in her 2018 cookbook, Melissa Clark’s Kitchen, a “classic that I don’t mess with much” and that it “tastes good on almost any kind of vegetable matter (and fish, too)”.

Why should I make Green Goddess Dressing? It is creamy, herby with such a nice green color and honestly, the taste payoff is so much better when it is homemade versus buying it bottled. Food writer and columnist Russ Parson agrees. In a 2007 article he wrote, “If all you’ve ever had is the bottled version of this, you might be surprised”. Rachel Smith Borrman agrees in her book Iconic San Francisco Dishes, Drinks & Desserts by saying “There’s something irresistible and mid-century about the tang combined with intense creaminess, brightened with densely incorporated herbs.”

Green Goddess dressing really does work on more than just salad. Try it with seafood, fish, or any protein really. It works as a dip for a veggie platter as a nice change from the classic ranch dressing. I quite like tossing with some shredded cabbage and carrots for a refreshingly different coleslaw. A 2020 newspaper article called the 100-year-old dressing a “special sauce” that has stood the test of time despite being old school.

How do you make Green Goddess Dressing?

A Green Goddess recipe adapted from a 1950s recipe served to President Eisenhower during his time in the White House.

  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1 cup mayo
  • 2 tablespoons tarragon vinegar ( white vinegar can be used)
  • 2 tablespoons green onions or chives, roughly chopped
  • 2 tablespoons parsley, roughly chopped
  • 1 tablespoon basil, roughly chopped
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • 1 tablespoon anchovy paste or Worcestershire sauce (or omit)
  • 1/2 teaspoon black or white pepper
  • 1/2 tablespoon lemon juice
  • Put all the ingredients in either a food processor or blender and process or blend until smooth. The ingredients can also be mixed in a bowl and an immersion blender can be used to make smooth.

NOTES:

  • Tailor the herbs to what you like. The amounts can easily be increased as well as other fresh herbs used as well.
  • If you want this to more like what was served to Dwight D. Eisenhower during his presidency, then start with the garlic clove, anchovy paste and green onions and chop together until very fine and almost paste like. Combine with the other ingredients but omit the basil and parsley. Stir in 1 drop of green food coloring and then chill in the refrigerator for at least two hours.

sources: Allen, Ida Bailey. “A Salad Buffet Add Variety to the Menu”. The Day. August 17, 1968.

Anderson, Jean. The American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century. New York: Clarkson Potter, 1997.

Battilana, Jessica. Repertoire: All the Recipes You Need. New York: Little Brown, 2018.

Beard, James. James Beard’s American Cookery. New York: Little, Brown, 2009.

Borrman, Laura Smith. Iconic San Francisco Dishes, Drinks & Desserts. South Carolina: American Palate, 2018.

Brown, Helen Evans. The West Coast Cookbook. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1952.

Chumley, Virginia. “Some Recipes Concocted by a Famous Chef”. The Chattanooga News. January 10, 1936.

Clark, John and Pirie, Gayle. The Foreign Cinema Cookbook: Recipes and Stores Under the Stars. USA: ABRAMS, 2018.

Clark, Melissa. Favorite Recipes from Melissa Clark’s Kitchen: Family Meals, Festive Gatherings, and Everything in Between. USA: Running Press, 2018k.

Cunningham, Marrion. Lost Recipes: Meals to Share with Friends and Family. USA: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.

Garten, Ina. Barefoot Contessa at Home: Everyday Recipes You’ll Make Over and Over Again. USA: Clarkson Potter/ Ten Speed, 2012.

Foster, Kell. Buddha Bowls: 100 Nourishing One-Bowl Meals. USA: Harvard Common Press, 2018.

Gilbar, Steven. Chicken a la King and The Buffalo Wing: Food Names and the People and Places That Inspired Them. Ohio: Writer’s Digest Books, 2008.

“Grecian Tomatoes Make Best Lunch”. Fort Lauderdale News. June 7, 1967.

“Green Goddess Dressing Adds Flavor to Special Salads”. Daily News-Post. January 13, 1971.

“Green Goddess Salad Dressing (Palace Hotel)”. Oakland Tribune. November 19, 1927.

Harned, Richard. The Palace Hotel. USA: Arcadia Publishing, 2009.

Hile, Bette. “For Your Own Salad Luncheon Try Caesar Salad”. Ellensburg Daily Record. June 5, 1971.

Hines, Duncan. “Green Goddess Salad Dressing Serves 6 to 8”. Pittsburge Sun-Telegraph. May 27, 1948.

Hines, Duncan. “Palace Hotel Salad”. Youngstown Vindicator. October 28, 1952.

“Keep It Cool Keep It Light.” Meriden Journal. August 16, 1967.

Kimbrough, Kara. “Green Goddess Dressing a Summer Fav”. The Magee Courier. July 9, 2020.

Kressy, Jean. “Homemade Dressing Might be Easier Than You Think”. Corvallis Gazette-Times. January 24, 2007.

Leighton, Frances and Rysavy, Francois. “My White House Cookbook”. The Tampa Tribune. October 27, 1957.

Littlefield, Susan and Strausman, Mark. The Fred’s At Barney’s New York Cookbook. USA: Grand Central Publishing, 2018.

Mariani, John F. The Encyclopedia American Food and Drink. New York: Bloomsbury, 2013.

Moore, Mary. “Colorful Dressings”. Red Deer Advocate. September 19, 1977.

“New Flavor from Green Goddess Ad”. Herald and News. June 5, 1958.

Parson, Russ. “Reinvent Summer Barbecue”. The Vindicator. July 25, 2007.

“Pineapple Adds Golden Touch to Springtime Salads.” The Tuscaloosa News. May 14, 1976.

Savage, Kay. “California Sends Ideas for Menus”. Detroit Free Press. May 12, 1946.

Stewart, Martha. Martha Stewarts Appetizers: 200 Recipes for Dips, Spreads, Snacks, Small Plates and Other Delicious Hors D’oeuvres. USA: Clarkson Potter/ Ten Speed, 2015.

Westmoreland, Susan. Good Housekeeping Great American Classics Cookbook. New York: Hearst Books, 2004.

The Story of Green Goddess Dressing

FAQ

What is the origin of the Green Goddess?

Where did the popular dressing originate? The most widely-accepted origin story for green goddess claims that the dressing was invented in the early 1920’s at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. Of course, chefs have been making whipped herby sauces for centuries.

What is the difference between goddess and Green Goddess dressing?

Not to be confused with Green Goddess dressing, which is a creamy dressing flavored with mixed green herbs, Goddess dressing is a tahini (sesame paste) and lemon dressing seasoned with soy sauce, cider vinegar and spices.

Why is Green Goddess Green?

The “green” part of the name is in reference to the dressing’s green tint which it gets from various herbs. Roemer’s original recipe included mayonnaise, vinegar, parsley or chervil, tarragon, chives, scallions, and anchovies.

What is the oldest salad dressing?

French dressing is the oldest one on our list, but vinegar and oil dressing goes back nearly two-thousand years to ancient Babylonia.

Where did the Green goddess dressing come from?

The most accepted theory regarding its origins points to the Palace Hotel in San Francisco in 1923, when the hotel’s executive chef Philip Roemer wanted something to pay tribute to actor George Arliss and his hit play, The Green Goddess. He then concocted this dressing, which, like the play, became a hit.

Who invented Green Goddess salad dressing?

Green Goddess salad dressing was invented in the 1920s, by the chef at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, to commemorate the actor George Arliss and this play. In 1925 a railway locomotive was named after it, the locomotive’s owner having been inspired by the stage play. Jeffrey Richards. Visions of Yesterday.

Why is it called the Green Goddess?

This dressing was not named for its pretty green color instead it was named after a play by the same name. During the mid-1920s, actor George Arliss was starring in a play called The Green Goddess. While the play was in San Francisco, Arliss stayed at The Palace Hotel where the chef created this dressing in his honor.

Do you know a lot about green goddess dressing?

Two people who do know a lot about Green Goddess Dressing are Renee Roberts, who’s worked with the Palace Hotel for more than 20 years, and Laura Borrman, author of the new book Iconic San Francisco Dishes, Drinks & Desserts. I met Roberts and Borrman at the Palace’s Garden Court Restaurant to try some of the famous dressing at its birthplace.

Leave a Comment