Savoring
the Memories:
Van’s Café Served Up Comfort Food for Six Decades
Van’s Café Served Up Comfort Food for Six Decades
Auburn—There’s basic, small-town café food, and then
there’s home-cooked café food that’s so good people come back for generations.
That’s how it was at Van’s Café in Auburn.
Richard Vanderheiden gives a thumbs-up outside Van's Café. |
While everyone seemed to have their favorite
breakfast and lunch items at Van’s Café, the Smothered Hash Browns were always
a best seller. Topped with sausage, onions, green peppers, mushrooms and cheese
(along with two fried eggs on top, if desired), this perennially popular dish sold out during the
last weekend in March before Van’s Café closed permanently after 61 years.
Some guests came for the first time to try classics
like the Smothered Hash Browns, while long-time customers took the opportunity
to joke with Richard Vanderheiden, owner. “Hey, Richard,” said one of the old timers when
Vanderheiden stepped out of the kitchen. “I thought sure after all these years
you’d learn how to cook before you quit!”
Vanderheiden takes it all in stride, just as he has
for decades. The story of Van’s Café began in January 1954, when his parents,
George and Rose Vanderheiden, moved their eight children (including Dorothy,
Donald, Larry, Karen, Richard, Michael, Patrick and Mary) from Carroll to
Auburn. They opened the Maidrite Café, which was located one lot over from
where Van’s Café sits today on the west side of Highway 71.
Richard prepares an omelet. |
The whole family pitched in waiting tables, washing
dishes, taking out the trash and handling all the other duties required to run
a restaurant. Those were the days when menu items like potato soup cost 30
cents, tuna salad was 35 cents and roast beef cost $1.15.
Vanderheiden
was especially interested in the family business. “I started working there at
age 10,” said Vanderheiden, 70, who enjoyed growing up in Auburn and remembers
when the town boasted three grocery stores, a creamery, a hatchery, a drug
store, two filling stations, a bank and a hardware store. “My mother was a very
good cook, and I learned a lot from her.”
People
could count on Van’s
In
the spring of 1967, Vanderheiden came back from school to help his mother run
the restaurant after his father became ill. After his father passed away,
Vanderheiden took over the family business in 1972 and bought the building
(which dates to 1893) where Van’s Café would be located for the next 43 years.
Good enough to eat! |
He
operated Van’s Café each Monday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 1:30 or 2 p.m.
and Sundays from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. “People knew they could count on Van’s being
open,” said Vanderheiden, who served breakfast whenever the café was open.
Lorene Knobbe, who
grew up in the area and now lives in Davenport, recalled eating at Van’s many
times. She was sad to hear the café was closing for good. “My mom and dad loved that place and liked to go there on Sundays
after church,” she said.
Other
customers began reminiscing about the unforgettable meals they enjoyed at this iconic, small-town café. Kurt
McCaulley, a Lake City native who now lives in DeWitt, recalled how he and Larry
McCaulley, Lynn Dial, Mike Carisch, Gregg Gass, Ronnie McCaulley and other guys
who baled
hay for Marj Richardson looked forward to
lunch at Van’s Café. “We used to
eat the hot-beef sandwiches for lunch, and lots of times we’d have two
helpings.”
The café was also special to Luanne Redenius of Lake City, a
former waitress who still recalls her first $5 tip. “My first job with a real paycheck was
waitressing at Van’s during the early morning shift,” said Redenius, who was 17
at the time and had just graduated from Lake City High School in 1974. “Richard
was a hard worker and kind man who always took time to answer my questions, no
matter how busy things got—and it seemed like we were always busy.”
It’s not Auburn
without Van’s Café
Through
the years, Van’s Café has became known for a variety of comfort foods,
including the signature Van’s Potato Soup (created by Rose Vanderheiden),
meatloaf, goulash and famous 3-bean salad, which is often the most popular salad
bar item.
Serving up a hot breakfast at Van's Cafe |
While
Vanderheiden kept a low profile most of the time, he always said “yes” when
people walked in the door of his restaurant and asked, “Is this the famous
Van’s Café?” He knew they probably heard the 1040 WHO Radio morning show when
broadcaster Van Harden came to Auburn a few years ago to help Vanderheiden
celebrate 40 years in business.
“That was a super day,” said Vanderheiden, who noted that
nearly 600 customers showed up to be part of the unique event and enjoy a free
breakfast.
Customers became
more like friends at Van’s Café, which also became a part of many local
family’s mealtime traditions. Jim Daisy of Lake City began bringing his son to
Van’s Café for breakfast on Saturday mornings starting in the early 1980s. “I
started doing this when my son was about four years old, and it was a good way
for us to bond through the years,” Daisy said.
Van's famous Smothered Hash Browns |
While some people offered to buy Van’s Café after hearing
that Vanderheiden planned to retire at the end of March, Vanderheiden is more
focused on relaxing and spending time with family. For Beth Buelt, a waitress
from Auburn, working the final weekend at Van’s Café was a bittersweet
experience. “I don’t know Auburn without Van’s Café,” she said.
Vanderheiden
himself acknowledged it was hard at times to say goodbye after serving a final
Sunday dinner of turkey, dressing, baked ham, dessert and coffee on March 29.
“For decades we’ve been very blessed with wonderful employees and loyal
customers,” said Vanderheiden, who offered a special thank you to the people of
Lake City for their huge support through the years. “It has been a pleasure to
serve everyone. I’ll miss the people, because it’s the people who make the
café.”
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