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
Biscuits with Salt Pork Gravy photo coming soon
1861-1900
Before sausage gravy became the default, cooks could make a filling breakfast from salt pork, flour, and milk. The method fits chuckwagon, farm, and 19th-century working kitchens where cured pork traveled well and every bit of fat mattered.
The 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
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 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.