Iceberg Lettuce & Colorado

It’s funnily odd to think of it now, but Colorado once was the iceberg lettuce capital of the United States.

From the early 1920s until the 1940s, several Colorado counties such as Eagle and Routt and locales such as Buena Vista and Salida were net exporters of thousands of railroad cars of head lettuce to points East and West all around the country, well into the autumn and early winter when lettuce exports from California had ceased.

The cars were packed with ice gotten from shallow ponds high in the Rockies, especially around the (now gone) town of Pando, about midway between Minturn and Leadville along Colorado Highway 24. Pando also marks the spot where the U.S. Army constructed Camp Hale in the early 1940s to train WWII troops for the army’s elite 10th Mountain Division who were sent to fight in the Italian Alps.

An April 6, 1942, issue of the Carbondale Chronicle hails Pando as an ideal site for such a camp, “for winter comes early to this area, and leaves late.” Pando’s ice was hauled to and cut at the Minturn icehouse and used up by the boxcars of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad that had been sidelined and waiting up the tracks a bit at the Avon Depot. Lettuce farmers from in and around Avon itself, Minturn, Beaver Creek and Bachelor Gulch brought in their head lettuce (and other crops) and filled up those boxcars.

The pattern was the same at other railway depots around Colorado, with other lettuce farmers, other ice houses and ice pond sources. During those early 20th-century years, head (sometimes called “crisp-head”) lettuce probably picked up its nickname—“iceberg” lettuce—due in large part to Pando’s ice.

Iceberg is presently much out of favor among the lettuscenti who prefer other greens such as mesclun, frisée, “spring mix” or “field” greens, or baby spinach. (There’s also the tireless kale boom.)

Nevertheless, iceberg lettuce remains the largest segment of U.S. lettuce production, much of it going into what some believe to be the greatest invention for the home kitchen since the dishwasher, bagged lettuce.

Despite the common assumption that iceberg is low in nutrition, it isn’t. The misconception is based on the bias that it isn’t dark green. Iceberg is strong in thiamin, the vitamins A, C and K, and in iron, potassium, fiber and manganese.

True, iceberg does sport less taste or flavor than many other lettuces or greens, but I’m convinced that its enduring appeal is textural. It’s a terrific lagniappe when you can hear your food as you eat it.

Recipes at GET COOKING WITH BILL ST JOHN using Iceberg Lettuce.

Hear me here: To learn more about the history of the foods and foodways of Colorado—in honor of the state’s 150th birthday this summer—attend my talks in August at Denver Botanic Gardens, “Food with a Story: A Timeline of Food in Colorado.”