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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveAmerica's Melting Pot
Grilled Steak photo coming soon
1946-1969
Grilled steak has been a centerpiece of American backyard barbecues since the postwar suburban boom. Typically prepared with simple seasoning and cooked over charcoal or gas grills, it represents a traditional approach to meat preparation for outdoor hospitality and family gatherings.
America's Melting Pot
Butter Mochi photo coming soon
1900s-present
Butter mochi is beloved local Hawaii potluck food, with a chewy custard texture that reflects the islands' layered Japanese, Filipino, Portuguese, and local baking influences. It is easy to mix, travels well, and cuts into snackable squares.
America's 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.
America's Melting Pot
Chamorro Barbecue photo coming soon
1900s-present
A Guam fiesta-table barbecue of chicken, ribs, or beef marinated in a tangy soy-vinegar mixture and grilled over hot coals.
America's Melting Pot
Arroz con Gandules photo coming soon
1900-1929
A Puerto Rican arroz con gandules made in one pot with medium-grain rice, pigeon peas, sofrito, sazon, pork, olives, and a patient steam for fluffy grains and coveted pegao.
America's 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.
America's Melting Pot
Cardamom Bread photo coming soon
1800s-present
Cardamom bread came into Upper Midwest kitchens with Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, and other Scandinavian immigrants. Finnish pulla and Swedish cardamom breads became coffee-table, holiday, and family celebration loaves in Scandinavian American communities.
America's Melting Pot
Guam Kelaguen photo coming soon
1900-1929
Kelaguen is a traditional Chamorro dish from Guam, consisting of marinated meat or seafood typically chopped and served cold. Blending influences from Chamorro, Filipino, Puerto Rican, and other island cultures, it remains a cherished part of island American territories' food traditions.