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NOVEMBER 2008 (1
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Left: Sophie Cubbison in a publicity photo
advsertising her products. Right: Cubbison, center, at a
supermarket demonstration. (Photos courtesy of Mrs.
Cubbison’s Foods)
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Tradition began with San Marcos native
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Healthy eating, entrepeneurial spirit were
Cubbison’s recipe
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By Lauren Ciallella
Is it stuffing or is it dressing?
“There’s really no
difference,” says Leo Pearlstein, Mrs. Cubbison’s
PR man since 1948. A personal friend of San Marcos legend
Sophie Cubbison, Pearlstein watched as this inventive
entrepreneur used her passion for health food to become a
national icon.
“I was a youngster when I got her
account,” remembers Pearlstein, who was working for the
California Turkey Promotion advisory board at the time.
“We were doing PR and I was looking for any opportunity I
could to talk about turkey. So I saw an ad in the paper, maybe
a 2-inch ad. It said, ‘Turkey tastes great with Mrs.
Cubbison’s dressing.’ Other ads followed ‘Ham
tastes great’, chicken, fish. I thought it was very
clever.”
Pearlstein saw a natural match between the
two and visited Cubbison’s bakery on Pasadena Avenue in
Los Angeles. He asked if she’d like to work together,
“… and we lasted forever. I’m still with the
company, still doing PR,” Pearlstein said. “She was
a great lady and she told me a lot. She would often tell me
about her ranch down in San Marcos.”
Cubbison grew up on a Spanish land grant in
San Marcos, where she combined knowledge from her
mother’s Mexican heritage with her father’s
know-how as a master baker (from Germany) to cook for about 40
workers on her parents’ lima bean ranch.
Sophie, 16 at the time, worked the same
long hours as the laborers (5 a.m.-8:30 p.m.), providing them
with five meals a day (breakfast, snack, lunch, snack, dinner).
“They didn’t have any modern
equipment in those days. They didn’t have electric
mixers,” Pearlstein chuckled, “but they had pots
and pans.”
Sophie was already used to hard work when
she left the ranch to attend California Polytechnic in San Luis
Obispo, where she graduated with a home economics degree in
1912 and pursued her passion for health food.
“When she got out of college, she and
her husband, Harry Cubbison, who was a salesman, got married in
San Marcos (1916) and they borrowed $300 to open up a little
bakery in San Diego County.” The Cubbisons officially
started their baking business, but it was necessity that drove
the couple since both Harry and Sophie had invalid parents to
care for.
After selling the bakery in 1925, they
moved to Los Angeles to open another. This time. the bakery was
accompanied by a health food store alongside. “She made
whole wheat crackers, which nobody made, and she made Melba
toast out of soy flour (now acknowledged as a pioneer of soy in
American diets),” he noted.
“When she made the Melba toast,
a lot of the times the toast would break,” added
Pearlstein. “Being an entrepreneur, she didn’t want
to waste the bread, so she tried to think what she could do
with the broken pieces.”
Enter Mrs. Cubbison’s dressing. After
years of testing recipes in her own kitchen, she introduced the
new product to the market, but her entrepreneurial skills
didn’t stop at the stove. Sophie approached top grocery
competitors and friends, Walter Ralphs (Ralphs supermarkets)
and Ted Von der Ahe (Vons supermarkets) about selling her
dressing by giving them a face-to-face demonstration. This
hands-on approach was enough to convince both men to stock
their shelves with Mrs. Cubbison’s.
She would say, “You can’t sell
stuffing by itself. You have to sell the whole meal.”
Sophie devoted herself to supermarket demos and television
appearances, illustrating the ease in which her product could
be incorporated into any entree.
“She was so dedicated to it,”
Pearlstein said. Even after retirement, Sophie stayed involved.
“She spent her whole life working and wanted to travel.
She toured Europe and South America, but would always come home
during holiday time and walk the stores to see that they had
her stuffing in.”
Holidays had always been important to
Sophie because it meant family, especially Thanksgiving.
“Thanksgiving was the holiday of the year. It was a big deal for
her. Of course, making that stuffing sort of added to the whole
thing.”
Sophie Cubbison died in 1982 at the age of
92. Her legacy continues through her variety of products (now
owned by Interstate baking Corp.) and her generous contribution
to California Polytechnic “to perpetuate food and
nutrition.”
Lauren Ciallella is a San Diego freelance
writer
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Comments
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From: paperdollart
Subject: Re: Mrs. Cubbison’s
Posted: 11/27/08 2:58 p.m.
Hi! What a GREAT STORY! Perfect for
today (Thanksgiving), so
entertaining, informative and uplifting.
Kudos to Ciallella, and to the
CURRENT for highlighting this enjoyable
story! Have a great
Thanksgiving. B in Cardiff
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North Coast Current: Entire contents Copyright 2008
Reproduction without permission is
prohibited
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