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Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Boston Baked Beans photo coming soon
1600s-present
Boston baked beans grew from New England bean cookery, English pork-and-bean traditions, and the colonial availability of molasses through Atlantic trade. The long bake made practical sense for Sabbath observance and cold-weather kitchens, and the dish became one of Boston's defining foods.
The Melting Pot
Army Bean Soup photo coming soon
1861-1900
A hearty military-style bean soup built on navy beans, smoked ham hock, onion, celery, carrot, and bay leaf, adapted for a home pot from large-batch service traditions.
The Melting Pot
Baked Beans photo coming soon
1600s-present
A New England-style baked bean pot made with navy beans, molasses, brown sugar, mustard, onion, and salt pork or bacon.
The Melting Pot
Bean Soup photo coming soon
1930s-present
Bean soup is a humble American constant: inexpensive dried beans, water or stock, onion, and a ham bone when one was available. During hard times, that kind of pot could stretch flavor and protein across several meals. The U.S. Senate version made navy bean soup famous, but home kitchens kept it practical.