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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
BBQ Chicken Pizza photo coming soon
1985-present
BBQ chicken pizza became a national restaurant-chain signature after chef Ed LaDou developed it for California Pizza Kitchen in the 1980s. It is pure late-20th-century American fusion: Italian American pizza form, California creativity, smoky-sweet barbecue sauce, and a weeknight-friendly topping lineup.
The Melting Pot
Wet Burritos photo coming soon
1970-1989
Wet Burritos are large flour tortillas filled with seasoned meat, beans, and cheese, generously topped with red chili sauce and melted cheese. Originating in Tex-Mex fusion cuisine, they rose in popularity across the United States in the 1970s and 1980s as a hearty, saucy alternative to traditional dry burritos popular at tailgates and casual dining.
The Melting Pot
Banh Mi photo coming soon
1970s-present
A Vietnamese American banh mi sandwich with crisp baguette, mayonnaise, pate, pork or tofu, pickled carrot and daikon, cucumber, jalapeno, and cilantro.
The Melting Pot
Birria Pizza photo coming soon
2010s-present
Birria pizza extends the quesabirria boom into food-truck and social-media territory. It takes slow-braised chile-spiced birria, the melted-cheese pull of quesabirria, and the shareable shape of pizza.
The Melting Pot
Birria Ramen photo coming soon
2010s-present
Birria ramen, or birriamen, became a modern Mexican and Mexican American fusion dish as cooks paired Japanese-style noodles with birria broth. The appeal is direct: a rich chile consomme already wants noodles.
The Melting Pot
Birria Tacos photo coming soon
2010s-present
Birria tacos, especially quesabirria, moved from Tijuana into Los Angeles and then across the United States through trucks, pop-ups, Instagram, and TikTok. They turn celebratory birria into a crunchy, cheesy, dip-able street-food icon.
The Melting Pot
Carne Asada photo coming soon
1800s-present
Carne asada means grilled meat, and in northern Mexico and the American Southwest it is both a recipe and a gathering. Mexican American families, taquerias, and backyard cooks made thin grilled steak a staple for tacos, burritos, plates, and weekend cookouts.