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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Arroz con Gandules photo coming soon
Cross-era
A Puerto Rican arroz con gandules made in one pot with medium-grain rice, pigeon peas, sofrito, sazon, pork, olives, and a patient steam for fluffy grains and coveted pegao.
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Avgolemono Soup photo coming soon
1900-1929
A silky Greek-American chicken, rice, egg, and lemon soup made by tempering eggs into hot broth for a creamy dairy-free finish.
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Bagels and Cream Cheese photo coming soon
1990-2009
Toasted bagels spread with plain or scallion cream cheese, built as a simple breakfast with roots in New York bagel shops and American dairy innovation.
The Melting Pot
Bagels with Schmear photo coming soon
1861-1900
A deli-style bagel with a thick schmear of plain or scallion cream cheese, with optional onion, capers, tomato, and cucumber.
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Barbecued Chicken photo coming soon
1946-present
A backyard barbecued chicken recipe with bone-in chicken pieces cooked over indirect heat and brushed with vinegar-tomato barbecue sauce.
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Air Fryer Wings photo coming soon
2010-2026
Chicken wings air-fried until crisp, then tossed with buttered hot sauce and served with celery and blue cheese or ranch.
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Apple Cider Doughnuts photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cake doughnuts flavored with reduced apple cider and rolled in cinnamon sugar.
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Arepas photo coming soon
1990-2009
A basic arepa recipe made with masarepa, water, salt, and a hot skillet, ready to eat plain, buttered, cheesed, or split for fillings.
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Arepa Sandwiches photo coming soon
2010-2026
A street-food arepa sandwich filled with avocado chicken salad, black beans, cheese, and bright lime, built for the American food-truck table while respecting its Venezuelan and Colombian roots.
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Bagel and Lox photo coming soon
1900-1929
A toasted bagel layered with cream cheese, lox, red onion, capers, tomato, and dill in the New York appetizing-shop tradition.
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Bagel Pizza photo coming soon
1970-1989
Split bagels topped with tomato sauce, mozzarella, oregano, and pepperoni or vegetables, baked until bubbly for a lunchbox and after-school classic.
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Bagels photo coming soon
1861-1900
A basic homemade bagel recipe using high-protein flour, malt or brown sugar, a short boil, and a hot bake for chewy New York-style results.
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Baked Ziti photo coming soon
1900s-present
A crowd-friendly baked ziti casserole layered with marinara, ricotta, mozzarella, Parmesan, and optional Italian sausage.
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Bao Buns photo coming soon
2000s-present
Soft steamed buns filled with pork belly or tofu, hoisin, cucumber, scallions, pickles, and peanuts, framed as a Taiwanese gua bao-inspired American restaurant favorite.
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Bialys photo coming soon
Late 1800s-present
Bialys are not bagels without holes. They are their own Ashkenazi bread: baked rather than boiled, dimpled in the center, and traditionally filled with onion and sometimes poppy seeds. Polish Jewish immigrants brought them to New York, where bakeries kept the tradition alive.
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Bibimbap photo coming soon
1960s-present
Bibimbap is a Korean classic with several origin stories, from palace meals to farmers mixing available vegetables. In the United States it became a Korean American restaurant and home-cooking staple because the format is flexible, colorful, and practical.
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Brisket Sandwich photo coming soon
1900s-present
The brisket sandwich can come from two American lines: smoked barbecue brisket on a soft bun, or Jewish deli-style brisket on rye. Both turn slow-cooked beef into a handheld meal, with sharp pickles, mustard, slaw, or sauce balancing the richness.
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Buffalo Chicken Dip photo coming soon
1990s-present
Buffalo chicken dip turns Buffalo wing flavors into a scoopable party dish. It belongs to the Super Bowl and tailgate era of American entertaining, with Frank's RedHot, cream cheese, shredded chicken, and ranch or blue cheese becoming the familiar formula.
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Buffalo Chicken Pizza photo coming soon
1980s-present
Buffalo chicken pizza merges two American party foods: Buffalo wings and pizza. Once wings became a national bar-food favorite, pizza shops and home cooks started using buttery hot sauce instead of tomato sauce and topping pies with chicken and cooling cheese or ranch.
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Buffalo Wings photo coming soon
1960s-present
Buffalo wings became a national American bar-food icon after their rise in Buffalo, New York, especially through Anchor Bar lore around Teressa Bellissimo in 1964. Other Buffalo cooks also shaped local wing culture, but the hot-sauce-and-butter wing became the template.
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Cannoli photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cannoli came to Italian American bakeries from Sicily, where fried pastry shells and ricotta filling have deep carnival and regional roots. In the United States, Little Italy bakeries made cannoli a signature Italian American dessert, often sweeter and larger than Sicilian versions.
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Chicken a la King photo coming soon
1890s-present
Tender chicken and mushrooms in a rich cream sauce with pimentos and sherry, served over toast, pastry shells, rice, or biscuits.
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Chicken Cacciatore photo coming soon
1900s-present
Bone-in chicken browned and simmered with tomatoes, wine, peppers, mushrooms, onions, garlic, and herbs in the Italian American style.
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Baklava photo coming soon
1900s-present
A Greek American-style baklava made with buttered phyllo, walnuts and pistachios, cinnamon, honey syrup, and lemon.
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Brisket photo coming soon
1800s-present
Before brisket became a barbecue shorthand, it was a holiday braise in many Jewish American homes. The tough cut becomes tender with long moist cooking, making it practical for Rosh Hashanah, Passover, Hanukkah, Shabbat, and make-ahead family meals.
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Black and White Cookies photo coming soon
1900s-present
Black and white cookies are New York bakery icons, commonly linked to Glaser Bake Shop in Yorkville and to German Jewish bakery traditions. Their half-vanilla, half-chocolate tops made them instantly recognizable on deli and bakery counters.
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Egg Cream photo coming soon
1900-1929
An Egg Cream is a nostalgic New York City fountain drink made from milk, carbonated water, and chocolate syrup. Despite its name, it contains no egg or cream and is served iced in a tall glass, celebrated for its frothy head and sweet, chocolatey flavor.
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Waldorf Salad Dressing photo coming soon
Cross-era
Waldorf Salad Dressing is a spread with real American table personality: New York hotel-origin mayonnaise fruit salad culture. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Thousand Island Dressing photo coming soon
Cross-era
Thousand Island Dressing is a dressing with real American table personality: Popularized in the Thousand Islands region along the New York/Canada border; later became the basis for many "special sauces.". It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Buffalo Sauce photo coming soon
Cross-era
Buffalo Sauce is a condiment with real American table personality: Butter and hot sauce, tied to Buffalo wings at the Anchor Bar in Buffalo, New York, in 1964. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.