Loading
Setting the table...
Fetching the latest recipes from the archive.
Loading
Fetching the latest recipes from the archive.
Recipe tag
Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Wojapi photo coming soon
1800-1860
Wojapi is a Native American berry sauce or jam commonly made from chokeberries or other wild berries, used as a condiment or dessert accompaniment. Its preparation and use reflect indigenous foodways and regional wild fruit harvesting in early 19th-century America.
The Melting Pot
Berry Jam photo coming soon
1800s-present
Berry jam is the flavor of American summer preservation: short-season fruit cooked with sugar so it can brighten biscuits, toast, and winter breakfasts. Home canning, commercial pectin, and extension-tested recipes made jam a dependable household project.
The Melting Pot
Cherry Pie photo coming soon
1700s-present
A double-crust sour cherry pie with a bright tart-sweet filling thickened just enough to slice cleanly.
The 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.
The Melting Pot
Cottage Cheese Ice Cream photo coming soon
2010-2026
Cottage cheese ice cream is a contemporary, protein-rich twist on classic frozen desserts. Popularized in food trucks and farmers markets during the 2010s, it blends creamy cottage cheese with traditional ice cream ingredients for a unique texture and tangy flavor.
The Melting Pot
Carrot Raisin Salad photo coming soon
1940s-present
Carrot raisin salad belongs to the American category of sweet mayonnaise salads that showed up in cafeterias, potlucks, and chain-restaurant side dishes. Chick-fil-A made one especially familiar before retiring it, and the recipe still circulates as a nostalgic copycat.
The Melting Pot
Eggs Benedict photo coming soon
Cross-era
Eggs Benedict is a classic American brunch dish featuring English muffins topped with Canadian bacon, poached eggs, and rich hollandaise sauce. Though its origins are debated, it has become an iconic part of the American breakfast table.
The Melting Pot
Mock Apple Pie photo coming soon
1861-1900
Mock Apple Pie is a resourceful dessert developed during the Civil War era and later, using crackers instead of apples to simulate the texture and flavor of apple pie. This affordable and wartime-inspired pie substituted scarce or expensive ingredients with accessible ones while maintaining familiar comforting flavors. It represents American ingenuity during times of scarcity in the late 19th century.