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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Beer Cheese Dip photo coming soon
1930s-present
Kentucky beer cheese is a Central Kentucky bar snack with a loyal regional following. The usual story traces it to chef Joe Allman in the 1930s, where salty, spicy cheese spread helped sell another round of beer.
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Cheese Logs photo coming soon
1960s-present
Retro party cheese logs made from cream cheese, cheddar or blue cheese, Worcestershire, hot sauce, and a nut or herb coating.
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Chex Mix photo coming soon
1950s-present
A savory baked party mix of Chex cereal, pretzels, nuts, butter, Worcestershire sauce, garlic, and seasoned salt.
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Cheese Ball photo coming soon
1950s-present
A midcentury-style cheese ball made with cream cheese, cheddar, green onion, Worcestershire, and a crunchy pecan coating.
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Bison Burgers photo coming soon
1980s-present
Bison burgers are a modern restaurant and backyard form of a much older Great Plains food story. Bison sustained Indigenous nations for centuries; after near-destruction in the 19th century, ranching and restoration made bison meat more available again.
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Beef Jerky photo coming soon
Pre-1776-present
Jerky is preservation food before it is snack food. Indigenous drying traditions, pemmican, pioneer travel, soldiers, cowboys, and later road-trip convenience all helped make dried meat part of American food culture.
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BBQ Meatballs photo coming soon
1960s-present
BBQ meatballs are a descendant of midcentury cocktail meatballs, especially the grape-jelly-and-chili-sauce party formula that kept showing up at buffets and church gatherings. Swapping in barbecue sauce made the dish feel at home on game-day tables: easy to spear with toothpicks, easy to keep warm, and unapologetically sweet-savory.
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Welsh Rarebit photo coming soon
1930-1945
Welsh Rarebit is a rich, cheesy sauce served over toasted bread, popularized in Depression and wartime kitchens as an affordable, hearty meal. Using simple pantry staples, this dish offers comforting warmth and protein, reflecting resource usage during times of scarcity.