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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Cheese Logs photo coming soon
1960s-present
Retro party cheese logs made from cream cheese, cheddar or blue cheese, Worcestershire, hot sauce, and a nut or herb coating.
The Melting Pot
Air Fryer Wings photo coming soon
2010-2026
Chicken wings air-fried until crisp, then tossed with buttered hot sauce and served with celery and blue cheese or ranch.
The Melting Pot
Buffalo Chicken Dip photo coming soon
1990s-present
Buffalo chicken dip turns Buffalo wing flavors into a scoopable party dish. It belongs to the Super Bowl and tailgate era of American entertaining, with Frank's RedHot, cream cheese, shredded chicken, and ranch or blue cheese becoming the familiar formula.
The Melting Pot
Buffalo Wings photo coming soon
1960s-present
Buffalo wings became a national American bar-food icon after their rise in Buffalo, New York, especially through Anchor Bar lore around Teressa Bellissimo in 1964. Other Buffalo cooks also shaped local wing culture, but the hot-sauce-and-butter wing became the template.
The Melting Pot
Canned Corned Beef Hash photo coming soon
1910s-present
Canned corned beef hash moved through military rations, Depression-era thrift, and diner breakfasts because it was shelf-stable, filling, and quick. The key home technique is simple: spread it in a hot skillet and let it brown before turning.
The Melting Pot
Chicken Bog photo coming soon
1920s-present
A Pee Dee and Horry County chicken-and-rice dish with smoked sausage, moist rice, and enough broth to stay boggy.
The Melting Pot
Louisiana-Style Hot Sauce photo coming soon
Cross-era
Louisiana-Style Hot Sauce is a condiment with real American table personality: Vinegar-aged cayenne hot sauce culture: Tabasco, Crystal, Louisiana Hot Sauce, and many more. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
The Melting Pot
Cajun Garlic Hot Sauce photo coming soon
Cross-era
Cajun Garlic Hot Sauce is a condiment with real American table personality: Louisiana seafood boil, po' boy, and gumbo table condiment. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
The Melting Pot
Crystal-Style Hot Sauce photo coming soon
Cross-era
Crystal-Style Hot Sauce is a condiment with real American table personality: New Orleans table sauce culture. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
The Melting Pot
Jezebel Sauce photo coming soon
Cross-era
Jezebel Sauce is a condiment with real American table personality: Southern sweet-hot sauce, usually pineapple preserves, apple jelly, horseradish, mustard, and pepper. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
The Melting Pot
Buffalo Sauce photo coming soon
Cross-era
Buffalo Sauce is a condiment with real American table personality: Butter and hot sauce, tied to Buffalo wings at the Anchor Bar in Buffalo, New York, in 1964. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.