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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Minnesota Wild Rice Soup photo coming soon
2010-2026
Minnesota Wild Rice Soup is a comforting, creamy soup showcasing native wild rice combined with mushrooms, vegetables, and savory broth. Popularized in the modern era through food trucks and farmers markets, this regional specialty integrates indigenous ingredients with contemporary cooking techniques, reflecting Minnesota's culinary heritage and evolving food culture.
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Corned Beef and Cabbage photo coming soon
1800-1860
Corned beef and cabbage is a staple Irish-American dish popularized in the United States during the early 19th century, especially among immigrant communities.
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Lamb Stew photo coming soon
1800-1860
Lamb stew is a savory dish featuring tender lamb pieces simmered with root vegetables and herbs. Irish immigrants brought such recipes to the United States during the early 19th century, adapting them to American ingredients. The stew reflects sustenance cooking suited to family gatherings and everyday meals in immigrant households.
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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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Booyah photo coming soon
1850s-present
Booyah is more than soup in Green Bay and northeast Wisconsin. It is a community event food tied to Belgian American settlements, church picnics, fundraisers, and enormous kettles stirred for hours.
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Carrot Cake photo coming soon
1960s-present
Carrot cake has older European roots in carrot puddings and cakes, but the American layer cake with oil, warm spices, nuts, and cream cheese frosting surged in the 1960s and 1970s. It became a party, bakery, and Easter-table classic.
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Carrot Marmalade photo coming soon
1910s-1940s
Carrot marmalade became useful in wartime kitchens because carrots were available, productive in victory gardens, and naturally sweet. Recipes appeared during World War I and returned during World War II as cooks stretched scarce citrus and sugar.
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Boiled Dinner photo coming soon
1800s-present
New England boiled dinner is practical one-pot cooking shaped by salt meat, root cellars, cabbage, and later Irish American corned beef traditions. It remains strongly tied to St. Patrick Day in the United States but is older and broader than the holiday plate.
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Buffalo Wings photo coming soon
1960s-present
Buffalo wings became a national American bar-food icon after their rise in Buffalo, New York, especially through Anchor Bar lore around Teressa Bellissimo in 1964. Other Buffalo cooks also shaped local wing culture, but the hot-sauce-and-butter wing became the template.
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Coleslaw photo coming soon
1946-1969
Coleslaw is a popular American salad made from shredded cabbage and carrots tossed in a creamy mayonnaise-based dressing. It became widespread in the postwar period as a favorite side for barbecues, picnics, and holidays such as the Fourth of July. Refreshing and versatile, coleslaw complements grilled meats and sandwiches in American backyard dining traditions.
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Corn Soup photo coming soon
1800-1860
Corn soup is a nourishing dish rooted in Indigenous American foodways, made with fresh or dried corn and vegetables. It was a common staple during the early 19th century, reflecting traditional methods of using native crops for sustenance.
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Brisket photo coming soon
1800s-present
Before brisket became a barbecue shorthand, it was a holiday braise in many Jewish American homes. The tough cut becomes tender with long moist cooking, making it practical for Rosh Hashanah, Passover, Hanukkah, Shabbat, and make-ahead family meals.
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Carrot Raisin Salad photo coming soon
1940s-present
Carrot raisin salad belongs to the American category of sweet mayonnaise salads that showed up in cafeterias, potlucks, and chain-restaurant side dishes. Chick-fil-A made one especially familiar before retiring it, and the recipe still circulates as a nostalgic copycat.
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Beef Stew photo coming soon
1800s-present
Beef stew is old-world pot cooking adapted to American beef country, boardinghouses, and family kitchens. Browning the meat, simmering it gently, and adding vegetables in stages turns inexpensive chuck into a cold-weather meal.
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Moose Stew photo coming soon
Cross-era
Moose Stew is a nourishing, slow-cooked stew featuring moose meat and root vegetables, traditional in Alaska's hunting and subsistence cultures. Its preparation embraces rustic methods suited to remote environments, offering warmth and sustenance year-round. This dish represents Alaska's regional food heritage and resourceful use of local wildlife across eras.
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Rabbit Stew photo coming soon
1776-1800
Rabbit Stew is a slow-cooked, savory dish combining rabbit meat with root vegetables and herbs in a flavorful broth. A rural favorite in early America, it provided nutrient-rich, warming food using wild or farmed rabbits during the late 18th century.
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Wild Rice Soup photo coming soon
1800-1860
Wild Rice Soup is a creamy, savory dish featuring indigenous wild rice combined with vegetables and broth, popular in the American Midwest since the early 19th century. It reflects Native American foodways adapted into settler cooking traditions with regional ingredients.