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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Strawberry Pretzel Salad photo coming soon
1946-1969
Strawberry Pretzel Salad combines a salty pretzel crust, a creamy sweetened cream cheese layer, and a tangy strawberry gelatin topping. Emerging in postwar America, this recipe became a staple at holiday and Easter tables, marrying convenience with contrasting flavors and textures.
The Melting Pot
Coca-Cola Salad photo coming soon
1946-1969
Coca-Cola Salad is a nostalgic mid-20th-century American side dish that uniquely integrates Coca-Cola soda into a sweet gelatin-based salad. Popular in the post-World War II era, it reflects the inventive and playful use of convenience ingredients like Jell-O and soft drinks in suburban home cooking during the 1946-1969 period.
The Melting Pot
Congealed Salad photo coming soon
1946-1969
Congealed salad is a cold dish featuring gelatin with mixed ingredients such as fruit, vegetables, mayo, or cottage cheese, molded into decorative shapes. Popular in American homes and potlucks from 1946 to 1969, it reflects mid-century fascination with convenience foods and playful presentation. Though less common today, it remains a nostalgic symbol of postwar suburban family menus and holiday tables.
The Melting Pot
Jell-O Salad photo coming soon
1900-1929
Jell-O salad, popular in early 20th-century American school, church, and community gatherings, is a molded gelatin dish incorporating fruit, nuts, and sometimes vegetables. It became a festive side or dessert during the 1900-1929 period, reflecting innovation in convenience foods and the era's fondness for bright, decorative dishes.
The Melting Pot
Lime Jell-O with Cottage Cheese photo coming soon
1946-1969
Lime Jell-O with cottage cheese is a nostalgic side dish from mid-20th century America combining tart lime gelatin with creamy cottage cheese. Popular during suburban dinner parties and potlucks, it reflects the era's fascination with gelatin salads and convenient frozen foods.
The Melting Pot
Mock Whipped Cream photo coming soon
1930-1945
Mock Whipped Cream is an inventive, non-dairy topping created during the Great Depression and World War II era when cream was scarce or rationed. This economical recipe uses gelatin, milk, and sugar to simulate whipped cream's light texture and sweetness. It illustrates American homefront adaptations to food shortages, fitting within the context of victory gardens, rationing, and wartime ingenuity in domestic cooking.
The Melting Pot
Seafoam Salad photo coming soon
1946-1969
Seafoam Salad is a light, frothy gelatin salad featuring lime Jell-O, crushed pineapple, marshmallows, and cottage cheese or whipped topping. Popular in mid-20th century American suburbs, especially during 1946-1969, it was a fixture of potlucks and holiday dinners symbolizing postwar convenience foods adapted into celebratory menus.