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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Sausage Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Sausage Gravy is a creamy gravy made from breakfast sausage drippings, milk, and flour, traditionally served over biscuits. Originating in Southern American breakfasts, this dish is a comforting staple across various regions of the United States and represents classic American breakfast fare.
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Feta Omelet photo coming soon
1900-1929
Feta Omelet is a savory breakfast or brunch dish featuring eggs cooked with salty feta cheese and often fresh herbs. Rooted in Greek-American culinary influence, it was popular in American diners, lunch counters, and state fairs in the early 20th century.
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Avocado Toast photo coming soon
2010-2026
A simple avocado toast with lemon, olive oil, chile flakes, and flaky salt, framed as a California and internet-era food with much older roots.
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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.
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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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Blueberry Muffins photo coming soon
1900s-present
Blueberry muffins are everyday American breakfast baking, but Boston gave them a particular legend through Jordan Marsh department store. The oversized, sugar-topped muffin became a coffee-shop and bakery standard long after the department store disappeared.
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Breakfast Burrito photo coming soon
1970s-present
The breakfast burrito belongs to the modern Southwest, with Santa Fe and New Mexican restaurants especially important to the name and style. It can be handheld with chile tucked inside or smothered with red or green chile on the plate.
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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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Apple Pancake photo coming soon
1900s-present
A German-American Dutch baby-style pancake baked over cinnamon apples in a hot skillet.
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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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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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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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Blueberry Buckle photo coming soon
1800s-present
Blueberry buckle is a classic American fruit cake, especially at home in New England where native blueberries are abundant. The streusel topping sinks and cracks into the cake as it bakes, giving the dessert its buckle name.
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Bran Muffins photo coming soon
1910s-present
Bran muffins became part of American breakfast culture through cereal marketing, home economics, and recurring waves of interest in fiber and wholesome baking. They can be plain and practical or sweetened with raisins, molasses, honey, or brown sugar.
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Breakfast Casserole photo coming soon
1950s-present
Breakfast casserole is built for mornings when the cook wants the work done early. Midcentury casserole culture, church cookbooks, and holiday hosting made the overnight egg, bread, sausage, and cheese bake a reliable American brunch dish.
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Breakfast Pizza photo coming soon
1990s-present
Breakfast pizza turns pizza into a convenience-store and school-morning breakfast. In the Midwest, Casey's helped make the style famous with slices topped with gravy or cheese sauce, eggs, sausage or bacon, and plenty of cheese.
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Breakfast Skillet photo coming soon
1970s-present
Breakfast skillets are classic American diner and family-restaurant food: potatoes on the bottom, eggs on top, and enough meat, cheese, and vegetables to make breakfast feel like a full meal. They also translate easily to home cooking because one pan does most of the work.
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Breakfast Tacos photo coming soon
1970s-present
Breakfast tacos are a Mexican American and Tejano morning food strongly associated with South Texas, San Antonio, and Austin. They became a food-truck and cafe staple because a warm tortilla makes eggs, potatoes, beans, bacon, and salsa portable without turning them into a burrito.
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Biscuits and Gravy photo coming soon
1800s-present
Biscuits and gravy grew from practical working food: cheap flour biscuits, pork drippings, milk, and enough richness to carry a hard morning. Modern sausage gravy is the familiar diner version, but older versions often used salt pork or any available pork fat.
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Cheese Grits photo coming soon
1800s-present
Creamy Southern grits cooked with milk or water, finished with butter, sharp cheddar, and black pepper.
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Beignets photo coming soon
1700s-present
Beignets carry French and Acadian roots into Louisiana, where New Orleans coffee stands made them a breakfast and late-night ritual. The familiar square, sugar-dusted version is now inseparable from cafe au lait and the French Quarter.
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Cinnamon Roll Hack photo coming soon
2010-2026
The Cinnamon Roll Hack is a contemporary improvised breakfast featuring store-bought cinnamon rolls enhanced or transformed with simple ingredients and quick cooking techniques, often popularized through social media and food trucks. This approach exemplifies inventive modern American home cooking and viral food trends.
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Apple Butter on Biscuits photo coming soon
1700s-present
Warm buttermilk biscuits split and served with butter and spiced apple butter.
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Dutch Baby photo coming soon
Cross-era
The Dutch Baby is a large, puffy, oven-baked pancake known for its golden, crisp edges and soft, custardy center. It is typically flavored with lemon or powdered sugar and served hot. Thought to have origins tied to German pancakes and popularized in American brunch culture, it offers a simple yet impressive breakfast treat.
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Eggs Benedict photo coming soon
Cross-era
Eggs Benedict is a classic American brunch dish featuring English muffins topped with Canadian bacon, poached eggs, and rich hollandaise sauce. Though its origins are debated, it has become an iconic part of the American breakfast table.
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Monte Cristo photo coming soon
1946-1969
Monte Cristo is a fried ham and cheese sandwich dipped in egg batter and often served with fruit jam or powdered sugar. Originating in the post-World War II era, it became a diner and family restaurant staple across the United States, blending French croque-monsieur influences with American tastes for indulgent sandwiches and carnival-style foods.
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Pancakes photo coming soon
Cross-era
Pancakes are a quintessential American breakfast food consisting of flat, round cakes made from a simple batter of flour, eggs, milk, and leavening. They are typically cooked on a griddle and served with syrup, butter, or fruit toppings.
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Pancake Stack photo coming soon
1990-2009
A tall stack of fluffy pancakes commonly served in American family restaurants and breakfast chains, often topped with butter, syrup, and sometimes fruit or whipped cream.
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Quiche Lorraine photo coming soon
1970-1989
Quiche Lorraine is a savory pie combining a buttery crust with a rich custard of eggs, cream, cheese, and smoky bacon. Popular in American households since the 1970s, it is a standard offering for brunches, parties, and family meals, reflecting fusion of French cuisine into American home cooking.
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Quiche Squares photo coming soon
1990-2009
Quiche Squares are small, savory slices of quiche perfect for individual servings at coffee shops and bakery counters. Emerging in the 1990s as grab-and-go fare, these squares make classic egg custard pies with fillings accessible for casual snacking and light meals.
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Sourdough Pancakes photo coming soon
Cross-era
Sourdough Pancakes use naturally leavened starter to produce fluffy, tangy pancakes popular in Alaska and West Coast regions. Inspired by traditional sourdough practices, these pancakes offer a flavorful breakfast option rooted in frontier heritage.
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Waffles photo coming soon
Cross-era
Fluffy waffles traditionally served for breakfast, made from a simple batter of flour, eggs, milk, and baking powder. This recipe has American roots and remains a popular morning meal.