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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Moo Goo Gai Pan photo coming soon
1900-1929
Moo Goo Gai Pan is a staple Chinese-American dish featuring sliced chicken, mushrooms, and vegetables quickly cooked in a mild, savory sauce. It became established in American immigrant cities and diners from the early 20th century, catering to changing local tastes while retaining familiar Cantonese influences. The dish exemplifies the immigrant city culinary adaptations to American palates during early 1900s.
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Orange Chicken photo coming soon
1900-1929
Orange Chicken is a popular Chinese-American fried chicken dish coated in a sweet, tangy orange-flavored sauce. Emerging from Chinese immigrant restaurant cuisines in early 20th century America, it has become a ubiquitous menu item blending American tastes with Chinese culinary techniques.
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Carrot Marmalade photo coming soon
1910s-1940s
Carrot marmalade became useful in wartime kitchens because carrots were available, productive in victory gardens, and naturally sweet. Recipes appeared during World War I and returned during World War II as cooks stretched scarce citrus and sugar.
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Bourbon Chicken photo coming soon
1980s-present
Bourbon chicken is modern American fusion food: bite-size chicken in a sticky sweet-savory sauce, associated with Bourbon Street in New Orleans and later with mall food courts and American-Chinese steam tables. Some versions include bourbon whiskey; others keep the name and skip the liquor.
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Chai Latte photo coming soon
1990s-present
Chai latte is an American coffee-shop adaptation of South Asian masala chai. Starbucks introduced a chai tea latte in 1999, and the sweet, milky, cinnamon-cardamom drink became a standard cafe order even as it differed from everyday chai made in South Asian homes and stalls.
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Switchel photo coming soon
1776-1800
Switchel, also known as haymaker's punch, is a traditional American fermented drink of water, vinegar, ginger, and sweeteners dating to the Revolutionary period. It was commonly consumed for refreshment and hydration during hard labor and social occasions.
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Ginger Ale Float photo coming soon
Gilded Age & Progressive Era
Ginger Ale Float is fizzy Americana from the soda-fountain counter: Light, old-fashioned soda fountain drink.
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Boston Cooler photo coming soon
Gilded Age & Progressive Era
Boston Cooler is fizzy Americana from the soda-fountain counter: Ginger ale, often Vernors, blended with vanilla ice cream; strongly associated with Detroit/Michigan.
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Orange Carrot Ginger Smoothie photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Orange Carrot Ginger Smoothie brings juice-bar color and American smoothie-counter energy to the glass: Juice bar staple.