Loading
Setting the table...
Fetching the latest recipes from the archive.
Loading
Fetching the latest recipes from the archive.
Recipe tag
Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Tater Tot Hotdish photo coming soon
Postwar & Diner Age
A practical Upper Midwest casserole layered with seasoned beef, vegetables, creamy sauce, cheese, and crisp tater tots.
The Melting Pot
Taco in a Bag photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
A portable concession-stand meal of chips, taco meat, cheese, lettuce, salsa, and toppings served right in the bag.
The Melting Pot
Cheese Logs photo coming soon
1960s-present
Retro party cheese logs made from cream cheese, cheddar or blue cheese, Worcestershire, hot sauce, and a nut or herb coating.
The Melting Pot
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.
The Melting Pot
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.
The Melting Pot
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.
The Melting Pot
Buffalo Chicken Dip photo coming soon
1990s-present
Buffalo chicken dip turns Buffalo wing flavors into a scoopable party dish. It belongs to the Super Bowl and tailgate era of American entertaining, with Frank's RedHot, cream cheese, shredded chicken, and ranch or blue cheese becoming the familiar formula.
The Melting Pot
Chaffle photo coming soon
2010s-present
The chaffle became a keto and low-carb internet staple in the late 2010s because it promised bread-like structure from two common ingredients: cheese and egg. Mini waffle makers, Facebook groups, blogs, and TikTok-style sharing helped it spread fast.
The Melting Pot
Charcuterie Boards photo coming soon
2010s-present
A modern American party board arranging cured meats, cheeses, crackers, fruit, nuts, pickles, and spreads for casual grazing.
The Melting Pot
Cheese Ball photo coming soon
1950s-present
A midcentury-style cheese ball made with cream cheese, cheddar, green onion, Worcestershire, and a crunchy pecan coating.
The Melting Pot
Bacon Jam Burgers photo coming soon
2010-2026
A griddled burger topped with homemade bacon jam, sharp cheese, arugula, and a toasted bun, inspired by the modern food-truck burger boom.
The Melting Pot
Cheese Grits photo coming soon
1800s-present
Creamy Southern grits cooked with milk or water, finished with butter, sharp cheddar, and black pepper.
The Melting Pot
Broccoli Rice Casserole photo coming soon
1950s-present
Broccoli rice casserole is a classic convenience-era side dish. Frozen broccoli, quick rice, condensed soup, and processed cheese made it easy for home cooks to put a green vegetable, starch, and creamy sauce into one holiday or potluck pan.
The Melting Pot
Bread Bowl Soup photo coming soon
1970s-present
Soup in a bread bowl became nationally familiar through San Francisco sourdough tourism and later cafe chains. The idea is older than the mall, but in modern American food it usually means chowder, broccoli cheddar, or another creamy soup served in an edible round loaf.
The Melting Pot
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.
The Melting Pot
Tex-Mex Chopped Salad photo coming soon
Postwar & Diner Age
Tex-Mex Chopped Salad turns the taco-salad idea into a bright, fork-friendly supper: crisp lettuce, warm seasoned beef or beans, sweet corn, black beans, tomatoes, avocado, cheese, tortilla crunch, and a tangy lime-ranch dressing.