Last month, Kari mentioned a mall food court favorite called Hot Sam’s that is no longer around. This got us both waxing nostalgic in the comments section about others we miss, like Hot Dog on a Stick, Sbarro, and Gloria Jean’s Coffee Bean.

As a self-described former mallrat, I spent years working in malls during college – all in the Bay Area – and got to know the food courts pretty well. Kari mentioned Mrs. Fields, and while their cookies were good, I was a bigger fan of Blue Chip Cookies myself. She had never heard of them, which makes sense: they originated on San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf in 1983. They were best known for their White Chocolate Macadamia cookies, which were made with Guittard white chocolate bars. Really good stuff.

Blue Chip was purchased by an Ohio-based company in 2005. Like many other mall-based chains, they closed most of their retail stores, shifting to an online sales model that focuses on corporate and holiday gifts. Business is apparently thriving. I had no idea they were still around until that conversation with Kari, but naturally, this gave me inspiration. I know I just wrote that you can never go home again, but I thought, maybe it’s possible to reignite a cherished part of your youth without making a physical journey. Only one way to find out: I’d order some Blue Chip cookies and see if they lived up to my fondest memories!

Memory is a fickle thing. We tend to romanticize the past, glossing over the bad parts. Billy Joel said it best: the good ole days weren’t always good/and tomorrow ain’t as bad as it seems.

(He also said, “Wheel of Fortune”, Sally Ride, heavy metal suicide/Foreign debts, homeless vets, AIDS, crack, Bernie Goetz/Hypodermics on the shore, China’s under martial law/Rock and roller, cola wars, I can’t take it anymore, so take the Piano Man’s wisdom with a grain of salt.)

Which is why I began to second-guess my decision to order them. What if the cookies weren’t as good as I remembered? How could they be, given that I used to order them freshly baked and still warm? These were being shipped via UPS. But by then, it was too late to cancel.

“That’s the way the cookie crumbles,” I said to myself, resigned to letting the chocolate chips fall where they may.

In the end, all my worries were for naught. Were the cookies as good as I remembered? It’s hard to say, because quite frankly, I don’t remember what they tasted like. But I will say, they were good. Very good, actually. Biting into my go-to white chocolate macadamia cookie for the first time in 30 years instantly transported me back to the golden age of Camelot Music. I felt like I was back in college again!

…and then I got up from my recliner and my back seized up for a few seconds with the strain of rising and I glanced outside and saw some kid on the lawn and I yelled at him to get off and so I knew I most certainly was not back in college again.

Good thing, though. Those mall jobs barely paid minimum wage. Even with inflation and the cost of shipping, I can much more easily afford Blue Chip cookies these days.


Since I’ve embarked upon this little stroll down The California Years of my Memory Lane, just for kicks, I looked up how much a one-bedroom apartment rents for in the San Jose complex where I first lived after flying the coop. The same floor plan, on the same floor, now costs $3,070/month. For 780 square feet, which isn’t much bigger than a studio.

Holy crap. That’s why you can never go home again. You can’t afford the rent! Unless you’re a Silicon Valley exec, I suppose. I don’t know how we pulled it off in 1992. Rent was a lot lower back then, of course, but it still wasn’t cheap. And that’s why I left California in 1994: I knew I’d forever struggle to simply make ends meet.

Granted, the complex is nice…

But not $3,000 a month nice. Or even $800 a month nice, or however much we paid, 30 years ago.

What can I say? I always did enjoy the finer things in life. Or at least I used to. No more champagne wishes and caviar dreams for me. College Mark would never in a million years believe Middle Age Mark would one day own a John Deere lawn tractor and call a small Wisconsin town home.

I guess that means I now have Brandy Old Fashioned wishes and cheese curd dreams.


47 responses to “A Blue Chip off the old block.”

  1. Rents are astronomically insane everywhere, as are home prices… and since we just got our new property tax bill which went up over $2,000 from last year? I’m going to scream “get off my lawn!” the next time I see that damn assessor.
    😡

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    1. ‘Tis true. BTW, the 3-bedrooms rent for $6,000+ a month. Can you even imagine?

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  2. There’s a Sbarro in the Janesville Mall if you really want to eat gross food!

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    1. Oh, really? I thought they’d all gone extinct. I might actually have to try a slice next time I’m down there (I was just there this morning, dammit!) just for old time’s sake.

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  3. I know people who live nearby who pay more to rent a tiny one-bedroom than I pay for the mortgage of my 4-bedroom house. Insane. I’ve often been disappointed when I retry foods from my past. Glad the cookies were a hit!

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    1. It’s just so hard to recapture the past. I remember watching “Poltergeist” years ago for the first time since childhood; that movie had scared the bejesus out of me when it first came out, but seeing it again, I wondered why. Maybe movies have just gotten so over the top these days, that one seems downright quaint.

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  4. I saw a Sbarro somewhere recently, although I don’t remember where.

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    1. Apparently they’re still around – in fact, one of my readers mentioned one in Janesville about 20 minutes from me. Now I’m curious.

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  5. I cannot remember the last time I actually walked into a mall, but my guess (because we have/had a few that have indoor play spaces for kids) was probably when grandchild #1 was a toddler. She’s now 12. It seems like every 10-15 years the biggest mall about 30 minutes away goes through a reinvention. It’s in that phase again but it’s also super high in crime so… Two big food places I do remember: Orange Julius and Cinnabon. I always felt so sorry for the HDOAS crews with those ridiculous hats.

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    1. I went to the Mall of America last November and it was like stepping back in time. Such a fun experience. I’d totally do it again.

      I loved Orange Julius, but I really loved the lemonade from HDOAS. Even if the people serving it looked like total dorks.

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  6. I love that you ordered those cookies for a walk down memory lane – and took us along! That is a nice looking complex – but wowsa, the rent!

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    1. The complex was brand new when I first rented my apartment there, but still, I really should have set my sights lower. After a couple of years we let our lease expire and rented a ranch house in San Jose for about the same price.

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  7. I went and looked up my old apartment complex in Burbank–also about $3,000 a month now. Damn. Even our mortgage in SoCal as way less than that. My friends and I are hoping they will turn the old malls into Gen X retirement communities and bring back our favorite food court vendors.

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    1. I’ve always said I don’t want to end up in a “home,” but a repurposed mall with Hot Sam’s and Blue Chip Cookies wouldn’t be a terrible thing at all.

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  8. what about Auntie Anne’s pretzels?! last year I was finally able to get a jar of sander’s hot fudge, a local Detroit bakery that I grew up with and makers of their famous hot fudge. for a while, they closed most of the bakeries, sold the recipes to new owners, who continued on with their baked goods and sauces. in the last year, most products have not been available and I finally found a jar and was so excited, but – the recipe was definitely not the same!

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    1. Auntie Anne’s is still very much around. In fact, there’s a standalone store on State Street in Madison, and a few months ago I stopped in for a pretzel. I’m happy to report it was every bit as good as I remembered (though we also used to get AA’s at the mall in Rapid City, so it hadn’t exactly been a long time since I’d been).

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      1. something about those mall food places…

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  9. I’ve not heard of Blue Chip Cookies. Maybe warming them up in the microwave would give you that momentary good feel! I worked at a few malls right after college. I was in the executive training program for May Department stores (swallowed up by Macy’s). Good times, but NOT good hours or pay. We got discounted meals at the store’s restaurant (yes, fancy department stores had nice restaurants, back in those dinosaur days) so I never ate mall food except for the occasional Orange Julius.

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    1. You’re right…warming them up would’ve done the trick. I guess I have an excuse to order more sometime.

      I never worked anyplace that had a store restaurant. That would’ve been pretty cool. Probably my favorite spot was Boudin’s Bakery at the upscale Valley Fair Mall in Santa Clara. Another Fisherman’s Wharf spinoff that had the most incredible turkey and havarti sandwich on freshly baked sourdough. Now that is something I’d love to try again!

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  10. I remember Blue Chip Cookies — on the Wharf in the 80’s…but not until I read your post. Ah…a great memory! 🥰😎🥰

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    1. The very best thing I ever had on the Wharf was clam chowder. I don’t remember the name of the place, but man alive, that was good stuff. Their shrimp cocktail, too.

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      1. The whole Wharf experience in the 80s was a VIBE. Good times! 😎

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  11. What a cracking closing line Mark! 🙂

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    1. I like to end on a high note!

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  12. I knew rents were out of control now and realize how lucky we are to own our home. I understand the weirdness that happens when you think about who you were in college and those dreams compared to who you are now and where you are. No way would I have believed I’d be living in suburbia, yet all I can say is… pass me a Brandy Old Fashioned!

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    1. Makes me wonder what surprises 80 y/o Mark will have in store for me!

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  13. CAMELOT MUSIC! Whoa, talk about a blast from the past.

    I’m glad the cookies still turned out pretty good, but nothing ever quite lives up to how we remember them, does it? I always pop my cookies in the microwave for about 5-10 seconds—total chef’s kiss. It takes them to a whole new level.

    When you mentioned they were bought out by an Ohio company, I instantly thought of another Ohio favorite: Cheryl’s Cookies. I wonder if they have a good white chocolate macadamia nut cookie…

    $3,000 a month—wow. Just imagine what that could get you in Wisconsin!

    Great post, my friend! Thank you for sharing my post.

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    1. You’re the second person to mention warming them up for a few seconds in the microwave. Can’t believe I didn’t think of doing that! Especially given that my parents warm everything up in the microwave. Cereal, ice cream, you name it. Duh.

      I’m pretty sure $3,000 a month up here would get me a gorgeous place on the water somewhere!

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  14. The housing prices – to rent or buy – around here are nuts! I am so glad we bought our house 30+ years ago for a fraction of what it would cost today (and we stretched to buy it). I know salaries have gone up, but I can’t imagine paying that much for a tiny one-bedroom.

    I’ve spotted a Sbarro somewhere recently and I also was surprised to see a Mrs. Fields not too long ago. I also loved white chocolate macadamia nut cookies but I’m not sure I could eat one now. One of the many disappointments of growing older is my lower tolerance for sweets. Should have eaten more when I could.

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    1. I’ve always preferred salty or savory to sweet, but I do have a weakness for cookies. I may have to find a Mrs. Fields next.

      My parents wish they’d hung onto their duplex in Milpitas, which cost them something like $125K brand new in 1986 and last sold for over $1 million. To say California real estate is insane is an understatement.

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  15. It’s a bit sad what’s happened to the malls. The last mall I was in that was nearly fully booked with stores was in Anchorage last year. I saw places I’d forgotten about, and the whole experience was like being in a 25 year old time warp.

    For what it’s worth, I was in Lloyd Center Mall a few weeks back to try one of the two restaurants left at the food court. Pretty good BBQ and fried chicken, actually.

    I can’t imagine paying 3,000 for a small apartment. I mean people (including some guy named Mark) claim it’s expensive in this berg, but that’s a whole ‘nother level.

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    1. That’s how the Mall of America felt, and I loved every second of it. I look forward to going back someday. The nostalgia alone is worth five hours on the road.

      I rarely made it out to Lloyd Center when I lived there. It was usually Clackamas Town Center or the Vancouver Mall (or, if I was feeling especially fancy, Pioneer Square).

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  16. Hey… You mentioned an Old Fashioned. 🙂 I’ve had one of those! So great that the cookies were still really good. I fell in love with a Choco-love candy bar once. The second time around I wondered what all my initial fuss was about. Probably just as well. As far as candy bars go, they’re kind of pricey.

    I’m guessing you didn’t really yell at a kid to get off your lawn, but you did make me wonder. I always feel like I need to tell people I’m kidding on my blog. Newer folks may not quite get me yet. Best not to scare people.

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    1. I used to add disclaimers to my blog regularly, but I’m at the point now where my attitude is, eff it. If people really think I’m serious, then they don’t know me. And if they choose to stick around, they’ll quickly realize what a smartass I am. Saves me from typing a few extra sentences so I will take it.

      Never heard of Choco-love, but it’s always sad when foods you once loved don’t live up to the way you’ve built them up in your mind.

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      1. I once tried to rewatch an episode of Thundercats, a childhood love…

        Yeah. That was a big mistake too.

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  17. This made me laugh out loud. Thanks! We left the Bay Area in 1990 for the Midwest where we could afford to buy a home on a lake. So glad we did.

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    1. Hey, you GET me! Where did you end up settling?

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  18. Never heard of Blue Chip. Even if they weren’t AS good as you remembered, they were still chocolate chip cookies, which for me is ALWAYS a winner! For some reason, if I go back to my old stomping grounds, everything looks smaller than I remember., even if I was an adult when I used to live there. So, my memory expands and inflates everything??

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    1. Right? It’s kind of like pizza: even bad pizza is good pizza! I’ve experienced the memory expansion/inflation thing, too. Especially when I stopped by my old elementary school in Ohio 30 years after I’d last seen it. I swear, the playground seemed a LOT bigger years ago!

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  19. If you rent out an extra room in your house, you and Tara can order all the cookies you can eat!

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    1. Yeah, but then we’d have to deal with another person in the house. Even the best cookies wouldn’t be worth that hassle.

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  20. I’m glad to hear the Blue Chip Cookies were still delicious, even if they brought on back pain. 🤣

    “Brandy Old Fashioned wishes and cheese curd dreams.” You should start your own reality tv show using that as your catch-phrase. Robin Leach would be proud!

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    1. Love this idea. It’ll be very low-key Midwest humble. Forget the yachts and Michelin-star restaurants; I’ll be featuring tractor riders and supper clubs!

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  21. […] rediscovered a favorite cookie, we entertained Tara’s cousin from Nevada, and I finally crossed the Northern Lights off my […]

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