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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
BBQ Pulled Pork Sandwich photo coming soon
1920s-present
The pulled pork sandwich carries Southern barbecue into a portable form. Pork shoulder is cooked low and slow until it can be pulled apart, then served chopped or shredded on a bun. In Memphis and the Carolinas, slaw on the sandwich is part of the experience; elsewhere the sauce and smoke take the lead.
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
Brisket Sandwich photo coming soon
1900s-present
The brisket sandwich can come from two American lines: smoked barbecue brisket on a soft bun, or Jewish deli-style brisket on rye. Both turn slow-cooked beef into a handheld meal, with sharp pickles, mustard, slaw, or sauce balancing the richness.
The Melting Pot
Fourth of July Burger Bar photo coming soon
2010-2026
The Fourth of July burger bar features grilled beef or plant-based burgers with a variety of toppings and condiments arranged for guests to assemble their own sandwiches. It reflects contemporary American celebration food trends prioritizing customization and casual outdoor dining.
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.
The Melting Pot
BBQ Beef Sandwiches photo coming soon
1970s-present
This sandwich turns pot roast into crowd food: cook beef until it pulls apart, simmer it in barbecue sauce, and serve it from a slow cooker or Dutch oven. It fits the late-20th-century world of booster clubs, church suppers, and game-day tables, where economical roasts could feed a line of hungry fans.
The Melting Pot
East Texas Chopped Beef photo coming soon
Cross-era
East Texas Chopped Beef is a barbecue style where beef brisket or chuck is smoked low and slow, then chopped and mixed with a tangy tomato-based sauce. The chopped meat is typically served on sandwich buns with pickles and onions, embodying East Texas barbecue traditions.
The Melting Pot
Firecracker Hot Dogs photo coming soon
2010-2026
Firecracker Hot Dogs are grilled or fried hot dogs dressed with spicy sauces, salsas, and various garnishes for a bold flavor experience. Popularized in the 2010s by food trucks and urban street food vendors, they exemplify new American fusion and viral street fare.