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Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Hoppin' John photo coming soon
Founding Era
A Lowcountry rice and black-eyed pea dish tied to Southern New Year tables, pork seasoning, and African-influenced foodways.
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Michigan Pasties photo coming soon
2010-2026
Michigan pasties are portable meat pies filled with seasoned ground beef, potatoes, and vegetables, originally brought to the Upper Peninsula by Cornish miners. This recipe celebrates the enduring legacy of immigrant miners' hearty meals adapted for cold climates and hard labor.
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Minnesota Wild Rice Soup photo coming soon
2010-2026
Minnesota Wild Rice Soup is a comforting, creamy soup showcasing native wild rice combined with mushrooms, vegetables, and savory broth. Popularized in the modern era through food trucks and farmers markets, this regional specialty integrates indigenous ingredients with contemporary cooking techniques, reflecting Minnesota's culinary heritage and evolving food culture.
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Pickles and Onions photo coming soon
Cross-era
Pickles and Onions is a classic American barbecue side dish that pairs crisp dill pickles sliced with rings of raw onion to complement grilled meats. This simple combination adds acidity and pungency that cuts through rich, smoky barbecue flavors, making it a staple at cookouts and backyard grills throughout U.S. barbecue traditions.
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Sheet Pan Fajitas photo coming soon
2010-2026
Sheet Pan Fajitas assemble seasoned meat and vegetables spread on a single sheet pan and roasted together for a fast, flavorful meal. They reflect contemporary American fusion cuisines and the popularity of convenient weeknight cooking solutions.
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Smash Burger Tacos photo coming soon
2010-2026
Smash Burger Tacos combine the crispy seared beef patties with Mexican-style tortillas and toppings, reflecting an American-Mexican fusion popularized by food trucks and viral food culture since 2010.
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Wet Burritos photo coming soon
1970-1989
Wet Burritos are large flour tortillas filled with seasoned meat, beans, and cheese, generously topped with red chili sauce and melted cheese. Originating in Tex-Mex fusion cuisine, they rose in popularity across the United States in the 1970s and 1980s as a hearty, saucy alternative to traditional dry burritos popular at tailgates and casual dining.
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Corned Beef and Cabbage photo coming soon
1800-1860
Corned beef and cabbage is a staple Irish-American dish popularized in the United States during the early 19th century, especially among immigrant communities.
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Egg Foo Young photo coming soon
1900-1929
Egg Foo Young is a omelette dish with roots in Chinese-American cuisine, featuring beaten eggs mixed with vegetables, meats, or seafood, then fried and topped with a savory brown gravy. Adapted by Chinese immigrants for American tastes, it has become a diner and lunch counter favorite.
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Egg Rolls photo coming soon
1900-1929
Egg Rolls are deep-fried rolls filled with a mixture of meats, vegetables, and noodles, popularized in Chinese-American cuisine during the early 20th century. Adapted for American tastes, they are a staple appetizer at diners and takeout venues across the U.S.
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Latkes photo coming soon
1861-1900
Latkes are fried potato pancakes traditionally served during Hanukkah, tracing back to Jewish communities of Eastern Europe. Brought to America by Jewish immigrants in the late 19th century, latkes symbolize cultural resilience and holiday observance, made from grated potatoes, onions, and eggs, fried to golden crispness and served with applesauce or sour cream.
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Sheet Pan Sausage and Peppers photo coming soon
2010-2026
Sheet Pan Sausage and Peppers combines Italian sausage with bell peppers and onions roasted together on one pan, creating a comforting and straightforward meal favored in Italian-American households and casual dining.
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Cabbage Soup photo coming soon
1800s-present
Cabbage soup is old-world thrift cooking that fit American boardinghouses, mining camps, immigrant kitchens, and wartime tables. Cabbage stored well, stretched broth, and could become a light vegetable soup or a heartier meal with potatoes, beans, or meat.
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Wild Rice Dressing photo coming soon
Cross-era
Wild Rice Dressing is a traditional American Thanksgiving side combining wild rice with aromatic vegetables, herbs, and often nuts or sausage. It reflects regional Midwestern and Native American influences and features prominently at holiday tables across the United States.
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Beef and Noodles photo coming soon
1861-1900
Beef and noodles is plainspoken comfort food: slow-cooked beef, rich broth, and egg noodles served as a main dish or over mashed potatoes. It fits the railroad, boardinghouse, and settlement table because it stretches a roast into a filling meal and reflects German and Amish noodle traditions carried into the Midwest and Great Plains.
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Beer Cheese Soup photo coming soon
1900s-present
Beer cheese soup is a Wisconsin-style comfort dish where dairy country meets brewing culture. It echoes European beer soups but becomes distinctly Midwestern with cheddar, lager, supper-club richness, and sometimes popcorn or pretzels on top.
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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.
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Cheeseburger photo coming soon
1920s-present
A classic griddled cheeseburger with American cheese, pickles, onion, ketchup, mustard, and a toasted bun.
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Chicken and Dumplings photo coming soon
1800s-present
Tender chicken in rich broth with soft dumplings, finished as a thick, comforting Southern and Appalachian main dish.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Bialys photo coming soon
Late 1800s-present
Bialys are not bagels without holes. They are their own Ashkenazi bread: baked rather than boiled, dimpled in the center, and traditionally filled with onion and sometimes poppy seeds. Polish Jewish immigrants brought them to New York, where bakeries kept the tradition alive.
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Bierocks photo coming soon
1870s-present
Bierocks traveled with Volga German communities into Kansas, Nebraska, and the Great Plains. They are field food and comfort food at once: portable bread pockets filled with seasoned beef and cabbage, closely related to Nebraska runzas.
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Birria Pizza photo coming soon
2010s-present
Birria pizza extends the quesabirria boom into food-truck and social-media territory. It takes slow-braised chile-spiced birria, the melted-cheese pull of quesabirria, and the shareable shape of pizza.
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Birria Ramen photo coming soon
2010s-present
Birria ramen, or birriamen, became a modern Mexican and Mexican American fusion dish as cooks paired Japanese-style noodles with birria broth. The appeal is direct: a rich chile consomme already wants noodles.
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Birria Tacos photo coming soon
2010s-present
Birria tacos, especially quesabirria, moved from Tijuana into Los Angeles and then across the United States through trucks, pop-ups, Instagram, and TikTok. They turn celebratory birria into a crunchy, cheesy, dip-able street-food icon.
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Black Bean Soup photo coming soon
1900s-present
Black bean soup connects Caribbean, Spanish, and Cuban cooking traditions with American tables through Florida, Cuban American restaurants, and home kitchens. It is economical, filling, and deeply flavored when the beans are simmered slowly.
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Black-Eyed Peas photo coming soon
1700s-present
Black-eyed peas carry West African, Southern, and Gullah Geechee food history. They became a New Year good-luck dish across the South, especially when served with greens, cornbread, or rice as Hoppin John.
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Bloomin? Onion-Style Onion Blossom photo coming soon
1980s-present
The onion blossom is a late-20th-century chain-restaurant spectacle: part onion ring, part table centerpiece. Outback Steakhouse popularized the Bloomin Onion nationally after opening in 1988, though similar blooming onion ideas circulated before it.
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Boardinghouse Meatloaf photo coming soon
1861-1900
Boardinghouse meatloaf fits kitchens that had to feed many people from affordable ingredients. Ground meat, binders, vegetables, and a sweet-tangy glaze made a loaf that sliced neatly, stretched well, and reheated for leftovers.
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Braised Cabbage photo coming soon
1700s-present
Braised cabbage is an old, practical side dish because cabbage stores well, feeds many, and softens beautifully with slow moist heat. American versions draw from British, German, Irish, and Eastern European cabbage cookery as well as plain farm-table thrift.
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Brats photo coming soon
1800s-present
Brats are bratwurst in their American backyard form: pork sausages grilled or beer-simmered, tucked into buns, and served at picnics, tailgates, baseball games, and summer cookouts. Wisconsin made the brat especially visible through German American sausage culture and stadium food.
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Braunschweiger Sandwich photo coming soon
1800s-present
American braunschweiger is a smoked liver sausage closely associated with German-style deli and butcher traditions. In the Midwest and other German American communities, it became a quick sandwich filling with rye bread, mustard, onion, and pickles.
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Butter Burgers photo coming soon
1930s-present
Butter burgers are Wisconsin dairy pride in sandwich form. Local restaurants such as Solly's and Kroll's helped popularize butter-topped burgers in the 1930s, while Culver's later carried a buttered-bun version far beyond Wisconsin.
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Cabbage and Bacon photo coming soon
1800s-present
Cabbage and bacon points back to Irish bacon-and-cabbage traditions more directly than corned beef and cabbage does. Irish American cooks adapted the pairing with the bacon available in American markets, turning it into a quick skillet or boiled side.
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Cabbage and Noodles photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cabbage and noodles is Depression-friendly comfort food with Central and Eastern European roots. In American Polish, Slovak, Czech, Hungarian, and Appalachian communities, buttered cabbage and noodles became a cheap dish that could feed many people.
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Cabbage Rolls photo coming soon
1900s-present
Cabbage rolls came to American tables through many Eastern European and Jewish immigrant communities. Polish golabki, Ukrainian holubtsi, Slovak holubky, Jewish holishkes, and related dishes all wrap humble cabbage around a filling that stretches meat with rice or grain.
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Calabacitas photo coming soon
1800s-present
Calabacitas means little squash, and in New Mexico it names a fast summer vegetable dish of squash, corn, and green chile. It reflects Indigenous, Spanish borderlands, Mexican, and Mexican American foodways across the Southwest.
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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.
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Bacon Jam Burgers photo coming soon
2010-2026
A griddled burger topped with homemade bacon jam, sharp cheese, arugula, and a toasted bun, inspired by the modern food-truck burger boom.
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Bread Stuffing photo coming soon
1700s-present
Bread stuffing is the Thanksgiving workhorse that turns stale bread into the part of the plate many people reach for first. Whether cooked inside the bird or baked separately as dressing, the core American formula is bread, aromatics, poultry herbs, and rich stock.
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Collard Greens photo coming soon
Cross-era
Collard greens are a Southern staple of slow-cooked leafy greens, often simmered with smoked meats and seasonings. Served frequently at Thanksgiving and other holidays, they reflect African American and Southern culinary traditions blending native and immigrant foodways. This versatile side dish is a symbol of Southern hospitality and cultural heritage.
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Collard Greens with Potlikker photo coming soon
1800-1860
Collard greens cooked slowly with smoked meat produce a flavorful broth called potlikker, traditionally served alongside or poured over cornbread. This dish exemplifies Southern homestyle cooking from the early 19th century, highlighting resourcefulness in using all parts of the cooked greens and broth. It remains a soulful and satisfying side or accompaniment to main courses.
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Coney Dogs photo coming soon
1900-1929
The Coney dog is a hot dog topped with a savory meat chili sauce, mustard, and onions, originating from Greek immigrant communities in Midwestern U.S. cities during the early 20th century. It became popular at diners, lunch counters, and state fairs as an affordable, flavorful meal. The dish blends immigrant culinary traditions with American fast food culture, reflecting urban foodways and ethnic entrepreneurship.
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Cornbread and Beans photo coming soon
1930-1945
Cornbread and beans was a nutritional and affordable meal staple during the Great Depression, combining inexpensive ingredients to create a filling dish. Beans, often pinto or kidney varieties, provided protein and fiber, while cornbread offered a comforting starch. This pairing sustained many American families through economic hardship and is now a symbolic representation of depression-era resourcefulness in foodways.
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Cornbread Dressing photo coming soon
1800-1860
Cornbread dressing is a savory Southern side enjoyed especially during Thanksgiving, combining crumbled cornbread with herbs and often broth for moist stuffing.
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Corn Chowder photo coming soon
Cross-era
Corn chowder is a creamy and filling soup showcasing fresh or canned corn with potatoes, onions, and occasionally bacon or salt pork, enjoyed across the United States over multiple eras.
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Corned Beef Hash photo coming soon
1930-1945
Corned beef hash is a simple blend of chopped corned beef, potatoes, and onions, pan-fried to a crispy breakfast dish popular on the World War II home front.
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Corn Soup photo coming soon
1800-1860
Corn soup is a nourishing dish rooted in Indigenous American foodways, made with fresh or dried corn and vegetables. It was a common staple during the early 19th century, reflecting traditional methods of using native crops for sustenance.
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Cucumber Salad photo coming soon
1900-1929
This cool cucumber salad is a staple among Polish, Czech, Slovak, and other Eastern European-American communities in early 20th-century immigrant cities. Served often in diners and at state fairs, it features thinly sliced cucumbers dressed with sour cream, fresh dill, onions, and vinegar for a tangy, refreshing side.
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Czech Roast Pork with Dumplings photo coming soon
1900-1929
This hearty dish combines slow-roasted pork, delicate bread dumplings, and tangy sauerkraut, reflecting the culinary traditions of Czech and Slovak immigrants in early 20th-century America. It remains a beloved entree at diners and state fairs during festive occasions like Easter.
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Denver Omelet photo coming soon
1900-1929
The Denver omelet, a diner and lunch counter staple, blends diced ham, green bell peppers, onions, and cheddar cheese folded into eggs. Popularized in early 20th-century American immigrant cities, it remains a hearty breakfast favorite at state fairs and casual diners.
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Egg Salad Sandwich photo coming soon
1900-1929
The Egg Salad Sandwich features chopped hard-boiled eggs mixed with mayonnaise and seasonings, served between slices of bread. A staple of American diners and lunch counters since the early 20th century, simple yet satisfying with variations in add-ins and bread choice.
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Elk Burgers photo coming soon
Cross-era
Elk Burgers offer a lean and flavorful alternative to traditional beef, made popular in hunting and cabin contexts. The ground elk meat is seasoned and grilled or pan-fried, served in sandwich form, representing a connection to American hunting and outdoor culinary traditions.
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Empanadas photo coming soon
1990-2009
Empanadas are baked or fried dough pockets filled with savory or sweet mixtures, widely enjoyed in Puerto Rican, Chamorro, Filipino-American, and Virgin Islands communities across US territories and suburbs. They serve as portable meals or snacks showcasing diverse immigrant culinary heritages.
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Farmhouse Hash photo coming soon
1930-1945
Farmhouse Hash is a resourceful, filling dish combining potatoes, root vegetables, and available proteins cooked together, typical of Depression-era and Dust Bowl survival cooking. It reflects home cooks' adaptability during austerity, utilizing garden and pantry staples in one-pan meals.
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Fried Cabbage photo coming soon
1930-1945
Fried cabbage is thinly sliced cabbage sauteed with onions and seasonings until tender and slightly caramelized. It became a popular economical side dish during the Great Depression, reflecting resourcefulness and simplicity in American kitchens.
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Fried Potatoes and Onions photo coming soon
1800-1860
Fried potatoes and onions combine sliced potatoes and onions fried together until caramelized and crispy. A common Appalachian side dish reflecting early 19th century southern frontiersman cooking traditions.
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Bison Burgers photo coming soon
1980s-present
Bison burgers are a modern restaurant and backyard form of a much older Great Plains food story. Bison sustained Indigenous nations for centuries; after near-destruction in the 19th century, ranching and restoration made bison meat more available again.
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Broccoli Rice Casserole photo coming soon
1950s-present
Broccoli rice casserole is a classic convenience-era side dish. Frozen broccoli, quick rice, condensed soup, and processed cheese made it easy for home cooks to put a green vegetable, starch, and creamy sauce into one holiday or potluck pan.
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Bean Porridge photo coming soon
1776-1800
Bean porridge sits close to the everyday cooking of early America: beans or peas, water, a little meat when available, and meal to thicken the pot. It was plain food, but practical food, made in a kettle and stretched for households that needed warmth, calories, and thrift more than ceremony.
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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.
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Booster Club Brats photo coming soon
1970s-present
Brats are Midwestern event food: easy to scale, easy to hold warm, and strongly tied to Wisconsin football and German American sausage culture. Booster clubs and tailgaters use beer, onions, and grills to feed a crowd without much fuss.
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Bread Bowl Soup photo coming soon
1970s-present
Soup in a bread bowl became nationally familiar through San Francisco sourdough tourism and later cafe chains. The idea is older than the mall, but in modern American food it usually means chowder, broccoli cheddar, or another creamy soup served in an edible round loaf.
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Chili Dogs photo coming soon
1970-1989
Chili dogs are an American fast-food favorite that combines the simplicity of a hot dog with the rich, spicy flavors of chili. Popular at concession stands, tailgates, and booster clubs from the 1970s through the 1980s, chili dogs reflect the fusion of American convenience food with the influence of Mexican-American and Southwestern cuisines, especially from Texas. This recipe offers a home-cooked version of a nostalgic and casual meal.
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BBQ Beef Sandwiches photo coming soon
1970s-present
This sandwich turns pot roast into crowd food: cook beef until it pulls apart, simmer it in barbecue sauce, and serve it from a slow cooker or Dutch oven. It fits the late-20th-century world of booster clubs, church suppers, and game-day tables, where economical roasts could feed a line of hungry fans.
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Beef Stew photo coming soon
1800s-present
Beef stew is old-world pot cooking adapted to American beef country, boardinghouses, and family kitchens. Browning the meat, simmering it gently, and adding vegetables in stages turns inexpensive chuck into a cold-weather meal.
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Fajitas photo coming soon
1970-1989
Fajitas are grilled strips of marinated meat served sizzling with peppers and onions, often wrapped in tortillas. Popularized in Texas and nationwide by the 1970s and 1980s, fajitas reflect Tex-Mex cuisine's blend of Mexican and American flavors and became a staple for casual dining and tailgate events.
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Haluski photo coming soon
1900-1929
Haluski is a traditional dish of Polish, Czech, Slovak, and Eastern European origins consisting of noodles, fried cabbage, and onions. Brought to the United States by immigrants in the early 20th century, it became comfort food commonly served at diners and state fairs, especially around Easter.
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Leather Britches Beans photo coming soon
1800-1860
Leather Britches Beans are dried beans soaked and slow-cooked until tender, a staple in Appalachian and frontier American diets. Dating from the early 19th century, this simple yet hearty side dish reflects the resourcefulness of settlers and mountain communities using preserved legumes and basic seasonings.
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Norwegian Meatballs photo coming soon
1861-1900
Norwegian Meatballs are tender, flavorful meatballs influenced by Scandinavian immigrants who settled in the American Midwest during the 19th century. Blended with traditional spices and baked or pan-fried, these meatballs reflect immigrant culinary adaptation in new lands, often served with gravy or lingonberry sauce.
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Oatmeal Meatloaf photo coming soon
1930-1945
Oatmeal Meatloaf combines ground meat with oatmeal as an extender and binder, reflecting Depression and World War II-era home cooking focused on stretching ingredients during rationing and scarcity. This practical dish provided nourishment and comfort during challenging times in American kitchens.
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Okra Stew photo coming soon
1800-1860
Okra Stew is a hearty Southern dish featuring tender okra simmered with tomatoes and spices to create a flavorful soup or stew. Reflecting culinary influences within the South, it is rooted in African American and Southern cooking traditions dating back to the 19th century, showcasing local produce and simple ingredients.
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One-Pot Pasta photo coming soon
2010-2026
One-Pot Pasta is a convenient, popular recipe where pasta cooks simultaneously with sauce ingredients in one pot, minimizing cleanup. Gaining viral popularity in the 2010s, it reflects modern American cooking preferences for fast, flavorful meals with minimal effort, suited to kitchen gadgets and contemporary life.
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Oyster Pie photo coming soon
1800-1860
Oyster Pie is a savory pie filled with oysters and often combined with vegetables and seasonings, baked in a flaky crust. As a traditional New England dish from the early immigration and expansion era, it reflects coastal harvests and colonial cooking styles preserving regional seafood heritage.
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Range Stew photo coming soon
1861-1900
Range Stew is a robust meat and vegetable stew historically cooked by cattle trail and chuckwagon cooks in the Great Plains during the late 19th century. This dish reflects frontier life and the demands of feeding cowboys crossing long ranges with accessible ingredients simmered into a thick, hearty stew.
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Skillet Potatoes photo coming soon
1861-1900
Skillet Potatoes are a hearty side vegetable dish long favored by cowboys and settlers along the Great Plains during the Civil War and Reconstruction era. Cooking simple, sliced potatoes in a heavy skillet over an open fire or camp stove made this dish a staple of the cattle trail and railroad expansion periods.
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Sloppy Joe photo coming soon
Cross-era
The Sloppy Joe is a casual American sandwich combining seasoned ground beef in a tangy tomato-based sauce served on a sandwich bun. Beloved for its indulgent flavor and ease of preparation, it became popular mid-20th century as an affordable family meal and lunch counter staple.
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Sloppy Joes photo coming soon
1900-1929
Sloppy Joes are ground beef sandwiches served in a savory tomato sauce on hamburger buns. Popular from the early 20th century in diners, schools, and community gatherings, they became a staple of affordable American social dining, especially at state fairs and church suppers.
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Smash Burger photo coming soon
Cross-era
The Smash Burger is a style of hamburger created by pressing a ball of fresh ground beef onto a hot griddle, searing a flavorful crust. Known for its crispy edges and juicy interior, it is a modern American twist on the classic burger.
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Smash Burgers photo coming soon
2010-2026
Smash Burgers are an evolution of the traditional hamburger featuring thin, pressed patties seared to crispy perfection. Popularized by food trucks and urban food movements since 2010, they often incorporate fusion toppings and cooking techniques utilizing air fryers and apps.
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Smothered Pork Chops photo coming soon
1861-1900
Smothered pork chops are a classic Southern dish featuring pork chops cooked slowly in a rich onion gravy. This comforting recipe reflects Southern resilience and resourcefulness during and after the Civil War, when affordable cuts and flavorful preparation were essential.
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Swiss Steak Casserole photo coming soon
1946-1969
Swiss steak casserole is a comforting American casserole popular in the Midwest during postwar suburban expansion. Featuring tenderized beef cooked in tomatoes and baked with toppings, it became common in home kitchens, reflecting convenience and frugality of the era.
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Taverns photo coming soon
1900-1929
Taverns, also known as loose meat sandwiches, originated in early 20th century American diners and lunch counters, especially in immigrant and industrial cities. The sandwich features seasoned ground beef served on a bun without forming a patty, popular at schools, churches, and state fairs.
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Walking Tacos photo coming soon
1970-1989
Walking Tacos are a convenient handheld meal combining taco ingredients served directly in a bag of chips, popular at tailgates, school events, and booster clubs in the Midwest from the 1970s onward. This recipe reflects Mexican-American flavors adapted into American fast and convenience food traditions for outdoor gatherings.
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Western Omelet photo coming soon
Cross-era
The Western Omelet is a filling breakfast dish combining eggs, diced ham, onions, and bell peppers, widely enjoyed across the United States for a robust start to the day. Its origins tie to American diner culture and homestyle cooking traditions.
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Wild Rice Soup photo coming soon
1800-1860
Wild Rice Soup is a creamy, savory dish featuring indigenous wild rice combined with vegetables and broth, popular in the American Midwest since the early 19th century. It reflects Native American foodways adapted into settler cooking traditions with regional ingredients.
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Wisconsin Butter Burger photo coming soon
2010-2026
The Wisconsin Butter Burger features a juicy beef patty topped with butter and cheese on a bun, popularized by regional food trucks and new American fusion cuisine in recent years. Known for its rich, indulgent flavor, this burger reflects Midwestern culinary pride and inventive fast food culture post-2010.
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Onion Gravy photo coming soon
Cross-era
Onion Gravy is a condiment with real American table personality: Meatloaf, hamburger steak, pot roast. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Vidalia Onion Relish photo coming soon
Cross-era
Vidalia Onion Relish is a relish with real American table personality: Georgia/Southern sweet onion condiment. It brings flavor from the American South to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Onion Jam photo coming soon
Modern Melting Pot
Onion Jam is a preserve with real American table personality: Modern steakhouse and burger condiment. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Ranch Dressing photo coming soon
Cross-era
Ranch Dressing is a dressing with real American table personality: Buttermilk, herbs, garlic, onion, mayo/sour cream. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.
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Sweet Onion Dressing photo coming soon
Cross-era
Sweet Onion Dressing is a dressing with real American table personality: Common in delis, diners, and sub shops. It brings flavor from coast-to-coast American tables to cookouts, counters, lunch plates, potlucks, and weeknight suppers.