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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Buttermilk Biscuits photo coming soon
1800s-present
Buttermilk biscuits are a cornerstone of Southern breakfast and supper tables. Their tenderness depends on soft wheat flour, cold butter or shortening, and a light hand, and they became especially identified with Southern brands such as White Lily.
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Chaffle photo coming soon
2010s-present
The chaffle became a keto and low-carb internet staple in the late 2010s because it promised bread-like structure from two common ingredients: cheese and egg. Mini waffle makers, Facebook groups, blogs, and TikTok-style sharing helped it spread fast.
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Biscuits with Molasses photo coming soon
1800s-present
Biscuits with molasses are less a formal recipe than a habit of American farm and Southern tables: make simple biscuits, split them hot, and drizzle on a dark sweetener that was cheaper and more available than refined treats.
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Cornbread photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornbread is a versatile quick bread made primarily from cornmeal, commonly baked or fried in the South and Appalachia during the Great Depression and World War II eras. It was a dietary staple in military mess halls and home kitchens, valued for economical ingredients and satisfying flavor. Often served alongside barbecue and holiday meals, this cornbread represents resilience and regional culinary heritage in trying times.
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Cornbread and Beans photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornbread and beans was a nutritional and affordable meal staple during the Great Depression, combining inexpensive ingredients to create a filling dish. Beans, often pinto or kidney varieties, provided protein and fiber, while cornbread offered a comforting starch. This pairing sustained many American families through economic hardship and is now a symbolic representation of depression-era resourcefulness in foodways.
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Corn Dodgers photo coming soon
1861-1900
Corn dodgers are small, dense cakes made from cornmeal, historically used as portable food by cattle drivers and settlers in the Great Plains from 1861 to 1900.
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Corn Dogs photo coming soon
1900-1929
Corn dogs are hot dogs coated in a thick cornmeal batter and fried until golden, a popular carnival and state fair food emerging in early 20th-century America.
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Cornmeal Pancakes photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornmeal pancakes were a practical and hearty breakfast staple during the Depression and Dust Bowl years, offering an affordable, nourishing start to the day in rural and urban kitchens alike. Using simple pantry staples like cornmeal and flour, these pancakes sustained families through hard economic times and food shortages.
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Dutch Oven Cobbler photo coming soon
Cross-era
A classic outdoor dessert, the Dutch Oven Cobbler combines fresh or canned fruit topped with a simple biscuit or cake-like batter, baked in a cast iron Dutch oven over coals or an open fire. A favored treat at camps and cabins, it's valued for ease of preparation and comforting, warm sweetness.
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Dutch Oven Peach Cobbler photo coming soon
1861-1900
This classic peach cobbler bakes juicy sweet peaches under a biscuit-like topping inside a cast iron Dutch oven. Originating from cattle camps and chuckwagon cooking on the Great Plains during late 19th century, it is a rustic comfort dessert reflecting resourceful frontier foodways.
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Field Biscuits photo coming soon
1930-1945
Field Biscuits are basic, hearty biscuits commonly prepared for military meals and mess halls during the Great Depression and World War II. They exemplify economical baking with minimal ingredients designed for mass production and nourishment.
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Corn Pone photo coming soon
1776-1800
Corn pone is a simple, unleavened corn bread originating in early American Southern kitchens. Made with basic ingredients, it was a staple food for families from the Revolutionary period onward, often baked in a skillet or hearth oven.
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Molasses Cornbread photo coming soon
1776-1800
Molasses Cornbread is a slightly sweet cornmeal bread flavored with molasses, common in early American households during the Revolutionary era. Combining locally grown cornmeal with molasses provided a hearty and economical bread that complemented savory dishes and breakfast tables alike. Its enduring popularity reflects early American adaptation of indigenous and imported ingredients.
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Molasses Pound Cake photo coming soon
1861-1900
Molasses Pound Cake is a rich, moist cake sweetened with molasses, characteristic of Southern American desserts during the Reconstruction era. The cake features traditional pound cake proportions with the addition of molasses and warm spices, reflecting the culinary adaptation to available and affordable sweeteners post-Civil War. It embodies Southern resilience and culinary identity in comfort baking.
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Ramp Biscuits photo coming soon
1800-1860
Ramp Biscuits are tender American biscuits flavored with chopped ramps, a wild onion native to Appalachia. This early 19th-century Appalachian recipe celebrates local foraged ingredients and rustic baking techniques central to frontier cooking and regional food traditions.
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Washington Pie photo coming soon
1776-1800
Washington Pie is a layered dessert combining cake and fruit preserves, dating back to late 18th-century America. This simple yet elegant sweet features moist cake layers sandwiched with jam or jelly and optionally dusted with sugar, reflecting colonial baking practices and early American tastes for fruit desserts.
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Yule Log photo coming soon
Cross-era
The Yule Log, or Buche de Noel, is a rolled sponge cake decorated to resemble a tree log, traditionally served at Christmas. This dessert's American adoption reflects European holiday customs, featuring chocolate sponge with cream filling and decorative frosting representing the winter season.