Suburban chic: Sliders come to Forest Lake Chuck Haga Star Tribune
Published Oct 2 2001
Employees wore blue-and-white boutonnieres and Mayor Ray Daninger presided over a ribbon-cutting Monday for Forest Lake's newest business, and a new phrase was added to the town's culinary lexicon:
"Gimme a case of 30 sliders to go, willya?"
"You can call 'em sliders if you want," said a smiling George Simon, White Castle's regional director. "We consider it a term of endearment."
Sure, it was only 9 a.m., but you could smell the onions.
"It's the hot, moist, steamed onions," said Peggy Kolnberger, 79, of Forest Lake, who left with a heavy morning sack of burgers -- just like the sacks she used to carry home to her children many years ago.
White Castle came to Forest Lake Monday, 75 years after the fast-food chain opened its first Minnesota restaurant in south Minneapolis. It joins 16 others in the state, most of them in the Twin Cities area.
Some would call it the coming of civilization. Others would not.
"Some people are, like, 'White Castles are so gross!'" said Matt Schneller, 17, who came in for two bacon cheeseburgers and mozzarella sticks. "Others are, like, 'White Castles are so good!' But there's nobody who says, like, 'White Castles are pretty good'"
The company was founded in Wichita, Kan., in 1921, by Billy Ingram, a livestock reporter for an Omaha newspaper, and Walt Anderson, who had been experimenting with ways to grill ground meat and persuade customers that he wasn't trying to hide anything.
Unlike McDonald's, the company doesn't sell franchises but retains ownership of its 348 restaurants, mostly in the Midwest and on the East Coast. Its headquarters are in Columbus, Ohio.
If it makes you nervous to be far from a slider at any time, you can move to Chicago, where there are 63 castles.
In "Selling 'Em By The Sack," a 1997 history of the company, author David Hogan credited White Castle with marketing the hamburger so successfully that it became Americans' "most common meal and their primary ethnic food." The company's success "inspired a legion of imitators and gave birth to the multi-billion-dollar fast-food industry."
In addition to "sliders," the little, five-holed (so you don't have to flip them) square burgers have been called "gut-busters" and "whitey one-bites" -- by the people who love them, also known as Cravers. Cheeseburger? That's "a slider with vinyl."
White Castle claims to be the first chain to offer frozen burgers for sale -- demanded by cravers who lived too far away to drive in for a fresh sackful. A group of Ohioans transplanted to Arizona once phoned in an order for 10,000.
Roger Bosman, 50, of Wyoming, was Customer No. 2 Monday at White Castle No. 36 in Forest Lake. (Some restaurants have closed over the years, and others have received new numbers after a move.)
"I've got a chore to do that brings me over here, but I planned it so I'd be here when they opened," Bosman said. "I hated always having to run to St. Paul for White Castles.
"It's a unique flavor they have," he said. "Either you like White Castle or you don't. And if you like them, you have to have them."
Customer No. 1 was Duane Mund, 70, of Forest Lake.
"I've been waiting for them to open here for two years," he said. "I used to go to one in St. Paul, but that's a 22-mile drive from where I live."
True believers stood on the other side of the counter, too, taking orders and filling sacks.
"My mom used to take us out for Sunday drives that ended at White Castle in St. Paul," Toni John, 54, said. "And I met my husband at White Castle 35 years ago. We were both out drag racing."
On a bed of onions
Mary Leonard, 45, the restaurant's general manager, has been with White Castle since she was 16 and serving sliders in Bloomington. "I eat them every day," she said. "And I make a very good one.
"They're not what people are used to, because they're steam-grilled on a bed of onions. If you want a hamburger, you can go to McDonald's or Wendy's or Burger King or one of the other places. But if you want a White Castle, you have to come to White Castle."
(Why "White Castle"? The white building symbolizes purity and cleanliness, the founders said, and the castle motif is to suggest strength, or maybe endurance.)
In Forest Lake, White Castle will compete with McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's "and the other places."
"We have all the rest of them here," Daninger said. "We've achieved the maximum of our goals for fast food."
In 1980, a team of six University of Minnesota students set out to break what then was the record for slider consumption: 350 in an hour. (Who held the record then and what it might be today are details that disappeared in onion-flavored steam, but the locals fell just two hamburgers short. The effort did disprove the widely held notion that "just two sliders" took virtually no stomach space at all.)
A few of the early Twin Cities White Castle buildings, purged of their pungency long ago, have been converted into other businesses, but the distinctive battlements remain. The one at 33rd St. and Lyndale Av. S., for example, houses a jewelry business.
A White Castle opened Sept. 12 in Duluth. Before that, the most recent opening in Minnesota was in Blaine in January 1998. Simon, the regional director, said the company is looking at other possible Minnesota locations, so people who live in communities without a White Castle can hope. Either way.
-- Chuck Haga is at crhaga@startribune.com . © Copyright 2001 Star Tribune. All rights reserved. |