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Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Quad Cities Pizza photo coming soon
Cross-era
Quad Cities Pizza is a distinctive American pizza style from the Mississippi River's Quad Cities area, known for its thick crust, sweet tomato sauce, and unique blend of cheeses. Rooted in Italian-American traditions, this regional pizza reflects local tastes and longstanding community pride.
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Focaccia photo coming soon
1861-1900
Focaccia is a flat Italian-style bread seasoned with olive oil, herbs, and often sea salt. Italian immigrants introduced focaccia to the United States during the late 19th century, adapting Old World baking techniques to American ingredients, thus becoming a beloved Italian-American staple bread.
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Fortune Cookies photo coming soon
1900-1929
Fortune cookies are thin, crisp cookies folded to hold a paper slip with a message or fortune inside. Although commonly associated with Chinese-American restaurants, their origins trace back to early 20th-century immigrant communities, blending Asian and American culinary influences.
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Irish Soda Bread photo coming soon
1800-1860
This Irish soda bread recipe uses baking soda as a leavening agent, reflecting a practical bread-making tradition brought by Irish immigrants to America in the 19th century, adapted for home kitchens today.
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New Haven Apizza photo coming soon
Cross-era
New Haven Apizza is a regional pizza style with a thin, charred crust, sparse tomato sauce, and minimal toppings, popular in Connecticut's Italian-American community. Known for its distinctive smoky flavor from coal-fired ovens, it reflects Italian immigrant baking traditions adapted to American tastes.
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Oatcakes photo coming soon
1800-1860
Oatcakes are wholesome, crunchy biscuits or cookies associated with Irish culinary heritage and popular among Irish-American communities in the 19th century. Made with basic pantry ingredients, they make a satisfying dessert or tea accompaniment reflecting simpler times and immigrant food traditions.
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Clam Cakes photo coming soon
1800-1860
Clam Cakes are deep-fried savory dough balls with minced clams, a staple of coastal New England cuisine dating back to the early 19th century. Typically served as appetizers or snacks, they highlight the region's seafood availability and British-based frying traditions. Clam Cakes exemplify local adaptations celebrating clam harvesting and are commonly found at seafood shacks and fairs throughout New England.
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Biscuits with Salt Pork Gravy photo coming soon
1861-1900
Before sausage gravy became the default, cooks could make a filling breakfast from salt pork, flour, and milk. The method fits chuckwagon, farm, and 19th-century working kitchens where cured pork traveled well and every bit of fat mattered.
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Blueberry Muffins photo coming soon
1900s-present
Blueberry muffins are everyday American breakfast baking, but Boston gave them a particular legend through Jordan Marsh department store. The oversized, sugar-topped muffin became a coffee-shop and bakery standard long after the department store disappeared.
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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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Air Fryer Cheese Curds photo coming soon
2010-2026
Fresh cheese curds coated in seasoned panko, chilled, and air-fried until crisp outside and molten inside.
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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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Apple Pancake photo coming soon
1900s-present
A German-American Dutch baby-style pancake baked over cinnamon apples in a hot skillet.
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Auntie Anne's-Style Pretzel Bites photo coming soon
1970-1989
A homemade mall-style pretzel bite recipe with yeast dough, a baking-soda dip, coarse salt, and a generous butter finish.
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Banana Bars photo coming soon
1946-present
Moist banana bars baked in a sheet pan and topped with cream cheese frosting, made for church basements, lunchrooms, and family potlucks.
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Banana Bread photo coming soon
1930s-present
A classic banana bread made with mashed ripe bananas, butter, brown sugar, eggs, flour, baking soda, and optional walnuts.
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Bialys photo coming soon
Late 1800s-present
Bialys are not bagels without holes. They are their own Ashkenazi bread: baked rather than boiled, dimpled in the center, and traditionally filled with onion and sometimes poppy seeds. Polish Jewish immigrants brought them to New York, where bakeries kept the tradition alive.
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Bierocks photo coming soon
1870s-present
Bierocks traveled with Volga German communities into Kansas, Nebraska, and the Great Plains. They are field food and comfort food at once: portable bread pockets filled with seasoned beef and cabbage, closely related to Nebraska runzas.
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Blackberry Cobbler photo coming soon
1800s-present
Blackberry cobbler is summer fruit economy: wild or cultivated berries, sugar, butter, flour, and enough heat to turn a picking bucket into dessert. Southern versions range from pour-over batter cobblers to biscuit-topped family recipes.
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Blondies photo coming soon
1900s-present
Blondies are American bar cookies built on brown sugar, butter, eggs, and flour. They preserve an older non-chocolate brownie lineage while becoming a lunchbox, bake-sale, and weeknight dessert standard.
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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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Blueberry Buckle photo coming soon
1800s-present
Blueberry buckle is a classic American fruit cake, especially at home in New England where native blueberries are abundant. The streusel topping sinks and cracks into the cake as it bakes, giving the dessert its buckle name.
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Boiled Coffee Cake photo coming soon
1870s-present
Older American coffee cakes sometimes actually contained coffee. Recipes using cold boiled coffee, molasses, raisins, and spice appeared in late-19th and early-20th-century cookbooks, making a sturdy loaf cake for the coffee table.
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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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Bran Muffins photo coming soon
1910s-present
Bran muffins became part of American breakfast culture through cereal marketing, home economics, and recurring waves of interest in fiber and wholesome baking. They can be plain and practical or sweetened with raisins, molasses, honey, or brown sugar.
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Bundt Cake photo coming soon
1950s-present
Bundt cake is as much about the pan as the batter. Nordic Ware created the Bundt pan in 1950 for home bakers seeking a kugelhopf-style shape, and Ella Helfrich's 1966 Tunnel of Fudge cake sent Bundt baking into American kitchens.
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Cannoli photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cannoli came to Italian American bakeries from Sicily, where fried pastry shells and ricotta filling have deep carnival and regional roots. In the United States, Little Italy bakeries made cannoli a signature Italian American dessert, often sweeter and larger than Sicilian versions.
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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.
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Challah photo coming soon
1880s-present
A tender braided egg bread with a glossy crust, lightly sweet crumb, and deep Jewish American Shabbat and holiday meaning.
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Chicken and Dumplings, Early Style photo coming soon
1770s-1800s
A historic-style chicken broth with simple flour dumplings, inspired by early American meat-dumpling and pottage traditions.
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Chicken and Slicks photo coming soon
1800s-present
Chicken simmered in broth with thin rolled dumpling strips, also called slicks, sliders, or chicken pastry in parts of the South.
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Chicken-Fried Steak photo coming soon
1861-1900
Chicken-Fried Steak is a tenderized beefsteak, breaded and fried similarly to fried chicken, served with creamy country gravy. Rooted in 19th-century cattle trail and chuckwagon cooking, this hearty dish became a Great Plains staple during the Civil War and westward expansion, embodying resourceful American frontier cooking.
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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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Coffee Cake photo coming soon
1900-1929
Coffee cake is a moist, sweet cake often topped with cinnamon sugar streusel, enjoyed in schools, churches, and diners during the early 1900s. This American breakfast favorite embodies community gathering traditions and immigrant influences melding into everyday comfort food.
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Coffee Shop Scones photo coming soon
Cross-era
Coffee shop scones are tender, buttery pastries with a crisp exterior and soft crumb, popular in Pacific Northwest cafes. Typically served with coffee, these scones reflect regional preferences and European pastry influences adapted to local tastes across eras.
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Cornbread photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornbread is a versatile quick bread made primarily from cornmeal, commonly baked or fried in the South and Appalachia during the Great Depression and World War II eras. It was a dietary staple in military mess halls and home kitchens, valued for economical ingredients and satisfying flavor. Often served alongside barbecue and holiday meals, this cornbread represents resilience and regional culinary heritage in trying times.
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Cornbread and Beans photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornbread and beans was a nutritional and affordable meal staple during the Great Depression, combining inexpensive ingredients to create a filling dish. Beans, often pinto or kidney varieties, provided protein and fiber, while cornbread offered a comforting starch. This pairing sustained many American families through economic hardship and is now a symbolic representation of depression-era resourcefulness in foodways.
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Corn Chowder photo coming soon
Cross-era
Corn chowder is a creamy and filling soup showcasing fresh or canned corn with potatoes, onions, and occasionally bacon or salt pork, enjoyed across the United States over multiple eras.
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Cornmeal Pancakes photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornmeal pancakes were a practical and hearty breakfast staple during the Depression and Dust Bowl years, offering an affordable, nourishing start to the day in rural and urban kitchens alike. Using simple pantry staples like cornmeal and flour, these pancakes sustained families through hard economic times and food shortages.
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Cottage Cheese Pie photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cottage cheese pie was a cost-effective and nutritious dessert during the Dust Bowl and Depression years. Utilizing simple, affordable ingredients, it provided a satisfying sweet treat in households facing economic constraints and rationing during the 1930s and 1940s.
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Crumbl-Style Cookies photo coming soon
2010-2026
Crumbl-Style Cookies are soft-centered, thick cookies popularized by the Crumbl cookie chain, featuring a variety of rotating flavors but united by a chewy, buttery texture. These bakery-inspired cookies capture recent American dessert trends emphasizing shareability and novelty.
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Doughnuts photo coming soon
Cross-era
Doughnuts are a beloved American breakfast and snack originating from various immigrant influences, consisting of fried dough rings or balls coated in sugar or glaze. The recipe has evolved over centuries and become a cross-era staple with numerous regional variations.
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Dried Apple Stack Cake photo coming soon
1930-1945
The dried apple stack cake is a layered cake made with dried apple filling between thin cakes, originating in Appalachia during the Dust Bowl and Depression era. It was a practical dessert using dried fruit, emblematic of resourceful farm survival cooking.
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Dumplings photo coming soon
1990-2009
Dumplings are versatile dough balls cooked by steaming or boiling, commonly served with gravies or soups. In late 20th century American suburbs, immigrant and adaptation influences popularized various dumpling recipes at coffee shops and as comfort food during social events.
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Dutch Oven Cobbler photo coming soon
Cross-era
A classic outdoor dessert, the Dutch Oven Cobbler combines fresh or canned fruit topped with a simple biscuit or cake-like batter, baked in a cast iron Dutch oven over coals or an open fire. A favored treat at camps and cabins, it's valued for ease of preparation and comforting, warm sweetness.
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Dutch Oven Peach Cobbler photo coming soon
1861-1900
This classic peach cobbler bakes juicy sweet peaches under a biscuit-like topping inside a cast iron Dutch oven. Originating from cattle camps and chuckwagon cooking on the Great Plains during late 19th century, it is a rustic comfort dessert reflecting resourceful frontier foodways.
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Eggless Cake photo coming soon
1930-1945
Eggless Cake was a popular baking solution on the World War II home front when eggs were in short supply. Using common pantry ingredients, these cakes provided a sweet treat while conserving rationed items. The recipes showcase adaptability and resourcefulness of wartime American cooks.
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Egg Noodles photo coming soon
1930-1945
Egg noodles are thin, flat pasta made with flour and eggs, common in various American and immigrant cuisines. During the Depression and Dust Bowl, egg noodles were easy to prepare and adaptable to many meals, from soups to casseroles, featuring prominently in farm and wartime kitchens.
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Election Cake photo coming soon
1776-1800
Election Cake is a rich, spiced yeast-leavened cake traditionally baked for political celebrations in colonial and early American history. It combines dried fruits, warm spices, and nuts, symbolizing communal festivity around elections and gatherings.
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Elephant Ears photo coming soon
1900-1929
Elephant Ears are large, thin, fried dough pastries typically coated with cinnamon sugar or other sweet toppings. A favorite at state fairs and carnivals, they offer a crispy, warm, and indulgent treat enjoyed by American families since the early 20th century.
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Field Biscuits photo coming soon
1930-1945
Field Biscuits are basic, hearty biscuits commonly prepared for military meals and mess halls during the Great Depression and World War II. They exemplify economical baking with minimal ingredients designed for mass production and nourishment.
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Apple Cake photo coming soon
1800s-present
A tender apple-studded cake with cinnamon, butter, and a simple crumb topping.
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Beignets photo coming soon
1700s-present
Beignets carry French and Acadian roots into Louisiana, where New Orleans coffee stands made them a breakfast and late-night ritual. The familiar square, sugar-dusted version is now inseparable from cafe au lait and the French Quarter.
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Cinnamon Rolls photo coming soon
1970-1989
Classic American breakfast sweet rolls featuring a soft, fluffy dough swirled with cinnamon sugar and topped with a sweet glaze. Cinnamon rolls became popular as convenient and comforting treats at tailgate parties, booster clubs, and concession stands in late 20th-century America, especially from the 1970s through the 1980s. Their warm spices and sweetness mark them as a festive favorite around Christmas and other cold-weather celebrations.
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Carne Guisada photo coming soon
1800s-present
Carne guisada means stewed meat, and in Texas it is a beloved Mexican American home-cooking and Tex-Mex restaurant dish. Cubed beef cooks slowly with chiles, tomatoes, aromatics, and gravy until it can be spooned into tortillas or served as a plate lunch.
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Black and White Cookies photo coming soon
1900s-present
Black and white cookies are New York bakery icons, commonly linked to Glaser Bake Shop in Yorkville and to German Jewish bakery traditions. Their half-vanilla, half-chocolate tops made them instantly recognizable on deli and bakery counters.
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Air Fryer Pickles photo coming soon
2010-2026
Dill pickle chips breaded with seasoned panko and air-fried into a tangy, crunchy snack.
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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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Dutch Baby photo coming soon
Cross-era
The Dutch Baby is a large, puffy, oven-baked pancake known for its golden, crisp edges and soft, custardy center. It is typically flavored with lemon or powdered sugar and served hot. Thought to have origins tied to German pancakes and popularized in American brunch culture, it offers a simple yet impressive breakfast treat.
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Eggplant Parmesan photo coming soon
1861-1900
Eggplant Parmesan is an Italian-American casserole featuring breaded, fried eggplant slices layered with tomato sauce, mozzarella, and Parmesan cheese, baked until bubbly and golden. Popularized in Italian-American communities post-Civil War settlement era, it exemplifies adaptation of Italian culinary traditions in America.
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Fastnachts photo coming soon
1800-1860
Fastnachts are dense, fried doughnuts traditionally prepared by German-American communities in the U.S. during the 19th century, especially for Shrove Tuesday. These simple pastries reflect German immigrant influence on American regional baking traditions during early expansion and immigration periods.
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Hardtack photo coming soon
1861-1900
Hardtack is a simple, dense biscuit made from flour, water, and sometimes salt, designed as long-lasting hard bread for soldiers and sailors. It was a fundamental ration during the American Civil War and frontier settlement, valued for shelf stability despite its hardness.
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Kringla photo coming soon
1861-1900
Kringla is a lightly sweet, buttery Scandinavian cookie shaped like a pretzel, traditionally associated with church and holiday celebrations in the Midwest. Norwegian immigrants brought this recipe during the 19th century, where it became part of Christmas and Easter gatherings, symbolizing cultural continuity in immigrant farming communities.
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Krumkake photo coming soon
1861-1900
Krumkake are thin, crisp Norwegian waffle cookies rolled into cones, often filled with whipped cream or preserved fruit. Introduced by Scandinavian settlers to the Midwest in the late 19th century, krumkake became holiday staples for Christmas and family celebrations, highlighting continuity of heritage and festive customs.
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Kuchen photo coming soon
1800-1860
Kuchen, German for cake, refers to a variety of fruit or custard-topped cakes introduced to American Great Plains by German immigrants in the 19th century. These cakes were often baked for social and family occasions, reflecting adaptation of old-world recipes to local fruits and dairy, making them a staple in immigrant households.
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Lamb Cake photo coming soon
Cross-era
Lamb cake is a dessert shaped into a lamb, traditionally served at Easter celebrations in various American communities. The cake symbolizes purity and resurrection, often made using a molded pan and decorated with frosting to resemble wool. Its cross-era presence illustrates the blending of European Easter customs with American holiday traditions.
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Lane Cake photo coming soon
1800-1860
Lane cake is a traditional Southern dessert featuring layered cake filled with custard, raisins, coconut, and sometimes a hint of whiskey. Established in the 19th century South, it became a celebratory dish for holidays and special gatherings, representing Southern hospitality and culinary ingenuity with pantry staples.
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Lava Cake photo coming soon
1990-2009
Lava cake is a rich dessert featuring individual chocolate cakes with a gooey molten center. Popularized in American family restaurants and chains from the 1990s onward, it uses minimal ingredients to create a dramatic dessert that combines chocolate cake and fondant-like filling, appealing broadly across age groups and occasions.
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Lebkuchen photo coming soon
1800-1860
Lebkuchen are dense, spiced cookies resembling gingerbread, traditional in German holiday baking. Immigrants brought lebkuchen recipes to America in the 1800s, particularly to Great Plains settlements. These cookies combine honey, spices, nuts, and sometimes candied fruit and are enjoyed especially around Christmas time.
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Lefse photo coming soon
1861-1900
Lefse is a soft, thin flatbread made from potatoes, flour, and cream, traditionally cooked on a griddle. Norwegian immigrants brought lefse to the American Midwest in the late 19th century, where it became a festive and everyday staple enjoyed with butter, sugar, or savory fillings during holiday and church celebrations.
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Mayonnaise Cake photo coming soon
1930-1945
A simple and moist chocolate cake using mayonnaise as a substitute for eggs and butter. Popular during the Great Depression when traditional baking ingredients were scarce or expensive.
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Mini Donuts photo coming soon
1900-1929
Mini donuts are tiny, fried doughnuts commonly enjoyed at American state fairs, carnivals, and diners during the early 20th century. Their small size made them a convenient treat for fairgoers and lunch counter patrons. This recipe captures the simplicity and nostalgic appeal of these sweet bites, featuring a light dough fried to golden perfection and lightly dusted with cinnamon sugar.
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Navajo/Indigenous Fry Bread photo coming soon
1800-1860
Navajo Fry Bread is a deep-fried flatbread traditionally prepared by Indigenous communities, especially the Navajo Nation. Dating back to the 19th century, the bread represents survival and adaptation during difficult historical periods and continues as a staple in Southwestern cooking.
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New York Pizza photo coming soon
Cross-era
New York Pizza is a regional pizza style characterized by large, thin, hand-tossed crust and foldable slices topped with tomato sauce and mozzarella. Descended from Italian immigrant traditions, it is a cultural icon of New York City and the wider Mid-Atlantic region.
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Oatmeal Cream Pies photo coming soon
1946-1969
Oatmeal Cream Pies are soft, sandwich-style cookies filled with creamy vanilla filling. Popularized in mid-20th century America, especially postwar suburbs, these treats combined convenience with nostalgic comfort, becoming a lunchbox and snack staple representative of American childhood.
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Rabbit with Dumplings photo coming soon
1800-1860
Rabbit with Dumplings is a traditional Appalachian dish pairing tender rabbit stew with hand-rolled dough dumplings. Popular in rural homes during early 19th-century expansion and frontier life, this hearty meal provides comfort and sustenance using available game and pantry staples.
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Ramp Biscuits photo coming soon
1800-1860
Ramp Biscuits are tender American biscuits flavored with chopped ramps, a wild onion native to Appalachia. This early 19th-century Appalachian recipe celebrates local foraged ingredients and rustic baking techniques central to frontier cooking and regional food traditions.
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Sheet Cake photo coming soon
1900-1929
Sheet Cake is a simple, large-format cake baked in a rectangular pan, often frosted and decorated for community gatherings, school events, and church socials. Its easy preparation and service made it a staple dessert in early American communal dining spaces.
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Shoofly Pie photo coming soon
1800-1860
Shoofly Pie is a molasses-sweetened pie with a crumb topping, historically popular in Pennsylvania Dutch and Mid-Atlantic communities. Its rich, sticky filling reflects early American sweetening traditions and regional preferences.
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Shoofly Pie Ancestor photo coming soon
1776-1800
The Shoofly Pie Ancestor is an early version of the molasses crumb pie originating in the Mid-Atlantic region during the late 18th century. It features simple ingredients reflective of colonial foodways before industrialized sugar was widespread.
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Skillet Cookie photo coming soon
1990-2009
Skillet Cookie is a large, thick cookie baked in a cast-iron or oven-safe skillet, served warm and often topped with ice cream. It gained popularity in family restaurants and chain eateries during the 1990s and early 2000s.
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Smith Island Cake photo coming soon
Cross-era
Smith Island Cake is a multi-layered cake originating from the Mid-Atlantic region, known for its numerous thin layers and rich chocolate frosting. This cake is the official state dessert of Maryland and reflects the baking traditions of the Chesapeake Bay area.
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Sugar Cookies photo coming soon
Cross-era
Sugar cookies are a timeless American holiday treat known for their crisp edges and tender interiors. Often decorated with colored sugar or icing, they hold a special place in Christmas celebrations and beyond, evolving over centuries to suit home bakers and commercial baking alike.
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Sugarless Cookies photo coming soon
1930-1945
Sugarless cookies were developed during World War II on the American home front, reflecting rationing and shortages of sugar. These cookies use alternative sweeteners or rely on natural flavors to create a satisfying treat despite ingredient limitations.
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Sweet Potato Biscuits photo coming soon
1861-1900
Sweet potato biscuits emerged as a staple in the American South during the Reconstruction era, utilizing the widely available sweet potato for a slightly sweet and moist biscuit. These biscuits were common at home tables and communal events during and after the Civil War.
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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.
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Sawmill Gravy photo coming soon
Frontier & Expansion
Sawmill Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Poor-man's flour-and-fat gravy, often with sausage or pork drippings. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Country Gravy / White Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Country Gravy / White Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Chicken-fried steak, mashed potatoes, biscuits. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Giblet Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Giblet Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Thanksgiving turkey gravy with giblets. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Brown Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Brown Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Diner meatloaf, hot beef sandwiches, mashed potatoes. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Chocolate Gravy photo coming soon
Frontier & Expansion
Chocolate Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Appalachian/Southern breakfast sauce for biscuits. It brings flavor from Appalachia and Pennsylvania Dutch country to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Mushroom Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Mushroom Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Salisbury steak and casserole America. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Onion Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Onion Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Meatloaf, hamburger steak, pot roast. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Pot Roast Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Pot Roast Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Sunday dinner sauce. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Milk Gravy photo coming soon
Frontier & Expansion
Milk Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Farmhouse pan gravy. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Pepper Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Pepper Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Steakhouse and diner gravy. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Hot Turkey Sandwich Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Hot Turkey Sandwich Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Diner open-faced sandwich staple. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Cream Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Cream Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Fried chicken and chicken-fried steak. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Chicken Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Chicken Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Cafeteria, Sunday supper, chicken and biscuits. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.