Loading
Setting the table...
Fetching the latest recipes from the archive.
Loading
Fetching the latest recipes from the archive.
Recipe tag
Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Tater Tot Hotdish photo coming soon
Postwar & Diner Age
A practical Upper Midwest casserole layered with seasoned beef, vegetables, creamy sauce, cheese, and crisp tater tots.
The Melting Pot
Taco in a Bag photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
A portable concession-stand meal of chips, taco meat, cheese, lettuce, salsa, and toppings served right in the bag.
The Melting Pot
Beer Cheese Soup photo coming soon
1900s-present
Beer cheese soup is a Wisconsin-style comfort dish where dairy country meets brewing culture. It echoes European beer soups but becomes distinctly Midwestern with cheddar, lager, supper-club richness, and sometimes popcorn or pretzels on top.
The Melting Pot
Booyah photo coming soon
1850s-present
Booyah is more than soup in Green Bay and northeast Wisconsin. It is a community event food tied to Belgian American settlements, church picnics, fundraisers, and enormous kettles stirred for hours.
The Melting Pot
Air Fryer Cheese Curds photo coming soon
2010-2026
Fresh cheese curds coated in seasoned panko, chilled, and air-fried until crisp outside and molten inside.
The Melting Pot
Brats photo coming soon
1800s-present
Brats are bratwurst in their American backyard form: pork sausages grilled or beer-simmered, tucked into buns, and served at picnics, tailgates, baseball games, and summer cookouts. Wisconsin made the brat especially visible through German American sausage culture and stadium food.
The Melting Pot
Braunschweiger Sandwich photo coming soon
1800s-present
American braunschweiger is a smoked liver sausage closely associated with German-style deli and butcher traditions. In the Midwest and other German American communities, it became a quick sandwich filling with rye bread, mustard, onion, and pickles.
The Melting Pot
Butter Burgers photo coming soon
1930s-present
Butter burgers are Wisconsin dairy pride in sandwich form. Local restaurants such as Solly's and Kroll's helped popularize butter-topped burgers in the 1930s, while Culver's later carried a buttered-bun version far beyond Wisconsin.
The Melting Pot
Cardamom Bread photo coming soon
1800s-present
Cardamom bread came into Upper Midwest kitchens with Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, and other Scandinavian immigrants. Finnish pulla and Swedish cardamom breads became coffee-table, holiday, and family celebration loaves in Scandinavian American communities.
The Melting Pot
Cheese Curds photo coming soon
1900s-present
A Wisconsin dairy-country snack of fresh cheddar curds, either eaten squeaky and fresh or battered and fried until crisp outside and molten inside.
The Melting Pot
Apple Strudel photo coming soon
1800-1860
A German-American apple strudel made with crisp apples, raisins, cinnamon, buttered crumbs, and flaky phyllo for a practical home version of a Central European pastry.
The Melting Pot
Bratwurst photo coming soon
1800s-present
Bratwurst is older than the American brat on a bun. German immigrants carried regional sausage-making traditions to the United States, where Midwestern butcher shops, especially in Wisconsin, made fresh bratwurst part of everyday cooking and community events.
The Melting Pot
Booster Club Brats photo coming soon
1970s-present
Brats are Midwestern event food: easy to scale, easy to hold warm, and strongly tied to Wisconsin football and German American sausage culture. Booster clubs and tailgaters use beer, onions, and grills to feed a crowd without much fuss.