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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Brown Bread photo coming soon
1800s-present
Irish brown bread is a daily table bread rather than a sweet holiday loaf. Irish immigrants and Irish American families carried versions of wholemeal soda bread into American kitchens, where buttermilk and baking soda made a quick, sturdy loaf possible without yeast.
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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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Chicken and Dumplings photo coming soon
1800s-present
Tender chicken in rich broth with soft dumplings, finished as a thick, comforting Southern and Appalachian main dish.
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Acorn Bread photo coming soon
1800-1860
A nutty, lightly sweet quick bread made with properly leached acorn flour, cornmeal, and wheat flour.
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Apple Cider Doughnuts photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cake doughnuts flavored with reduced apple cider and rolled in cinnamon sugar.
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Bloomin? Onion-Style Onion Blossom photo coming soon
1980s-present
The onion blossom is a late-20th-century chain-restaurant spectacle: part onion ring, part table centerpiece. Outback Steakhouse popularized the Bloomin Onion nationally after opening in 1988, though similar blooming onion ideas circulated before it.
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Boston Brown Bread photo coming soon
1700s-present
Boston brown bread is the dark, tender partner to baked beans. Colonial New England cooks used mixed grains, cornmeal, and molasses, then steamed the batter because the bread had little gluten and home ovens were not always reliable.
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Boxty photo coming soon
1800s-present
Boxty is a traditional Irish potato pancake especially associated with north Connacht, the north Midlands, and Ulster. Irish immigrants brought potato cookery with them to America, where boxty fits naturally beside other Irish American breakfast and supper dishes.
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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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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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Cheese Curds photo coming soon
1900s-present
A Wisconsin dairy-country snack of fresh cheddar curds, either eaten squeaky and fresh or battered and fried until crisp outside and molten inside.
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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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Buttermilk Pie photo coming soon
1800s-present
Buttermilk pie is a Southern pantry pie: inexpensive, tangy, and available when fruit is out of season. It sits near chess pie and other desperation pies, using buttermilk and a few staple ingredients to make a custard filling in a plain pie shell.
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Confederate Cornbread photo coming soon
1861-1900
Confederate cornbread is a straightforward Southern cornmeal bread commonly prepared during the Civil War period, using simple pantry ingredients and often cooked in a cast-iron skillet over open flames. This cornbread reflects the resourcefulness and culinary adaptation of Southern households during wartime, forming an iconic accompaniment to meals in 19th-century America.
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Whoopie Pies photo coming soon
Cross-era
Whoopie Pies are traditional New England treats featuring two soft chocolate or cake-like cookies sandwiching a fluffy sweet cream filling. Popular across generations, these desserts are a regional icon representing Northeastern American baking traditions.
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Ranch Powder Seasoning photo coming soon
Cross-era
Ranch Powder Seasoning is a spread with real American table personality: The dry-mix form of ranch: popcorn, crackers, pretzels, chicken, potatoes, and dips. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Avocado Ranch photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Avocado Ranch is a dressing with real American table personality: Modern Southwest-American variation. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Jalapeno Ranch photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Jalapeno Ranch is a dressing with real American table personality: Tex-Mex, food truck, and chain-restaurant favorite. It brings flavor from Texas and the Southwest to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Ranch Dressing photo coming soon
Cross-era
Ranch Dressing is a dressing with real American table personality: Buttermilk, herbs, garlic, onion, mayo/sour cream. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Buttermilk Dressing photo coming soon
Frontier & Expansion
Buttermilk Dressing is a dressing with real American table personality: Southern and farmhouse cousin of ranch. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Peppercorn Ranch photo coming soon
Cross-era
Peppercorn Ranch is a dressing with real American table personality: Steakhouse/ranch hybrid. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Cajun Ranch photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Cajun Ranch is a dressing with real American table personality: Sports bar and fried-food dipping sauce. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Chipotle Ranch photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Chipotle Ranch is a dressing with real American table personality: Modern fast-casual American dressing. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Sriracha Ranch photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Sriracha Ranch is a dressing with real American table personality: 2000s-2010s American fusion condiment. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Ranch Dip photo coming soon
Cross-era
Ranch Dip is a party dip with real American table personality: Thicker ranch for chips, wings, vegetables, pizza crust, and shame-free spooning. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.