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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Cabbage Soup photo coming soon
1800s-present
Cabbage soup is old-world thrift cooking that fit American boardinghouses, mining camps, immigrant kitchens, and wartime tables. Cabbage stored well, stretched broth, and could become a light vegetable soup or a heartier meal with potatoes, beans, or meat.
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Army Bean Soup photo coming soon
1861-1900
A hearty military-style bean soup built on navy beans, smoked ham hock, onion, celery, carrot, and bay leaf, adapted for a home pot from large-batch service traditions.
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Bean Soup photo coming soon
1930s-present
Bean soup is a humble American constant: inexpensive dried beans, water or stock, onion, and a ham bone when one was available. During hard times, that kind of pot could stretch flavor and protein across several meals. The U.S. Senate version made navy bean soup famous, but home kitchens kept it practical.
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Black Bean Soup photo coming soon
1900s-present
Black bean soup connects Caribbean, Spanish, and Cuban cooking traditions with American tables through Florida, Cuban American restaurants, and home kitchens. It is economical, filling, and deeply flavored when the beans are simmered slowly.
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Bologna Sandwich photo coming soon
1900s-present
The bologna sandwich is lunchbox America: inexpensive sliced meat, soft bread, and a condiment. Fried bologna versions became especially beloved in Southern diners, Midwestern bars, and home kitchens where a quick skillet turned lunch meat into comfort food.
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Cabbage and Noodles photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cabbage and noodles is Depression-friendly comfort food with Central and Eastern European roots. In American Polish, Slovak, Czech, Hungarian, and Appalachian communities, buttered cabbage and noodles became a cheap dish that could feed many people.
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Canned Corned Beef Hash photo coming soon
1910s-present
Canned corned beef hash moved through military rations, Depression-era thrift, and diner breakfasts because it was shelf-stable, filling, and quick. The key home technique is simple: spread it in a hot skillet and let it brown before turning.
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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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Baked Potato Bar photo coming soon
1970s-present
Fluffy baked russet potatoes served with chili, cheese sauce, broccoli, bacon, sour cream, scallions, and other toppings for a crowd-friendly bar.