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Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
St. Louis Ribs photo coming soon
Cross-era
St. Louis ribs are a regional barbecue staple, characterized by trimmed spareribs cooked slowly and finished with a sweet, tangy tomato-based sauce. This style emphasizes tenderness, smoky flavor, and a balanced sauce, popularized in local barbecue traditions across Missouri and beyond.
The Melting Pot
Cajun Seafood Boil Bags photo coming soon
2000s-present
Cajun seafood boil bags grew from Gulf Coast seafood boils and the Viet-Cajun restaurant boom in Louisiana, Texas, and Houston. The modern bag format lets diners shake boiled seafood with a rich garlic-butter sauce and spice level chosen at the table.
The Melting Pot
Clam Bake photo coming soon
Cross-era
Clam Bake is a communal outdoor cooking method from New England that involves steaming clams, fish, corn, potatoes, and sometimes other shellfish in a pit or pot layered with seaweed. This method celebrates coastal regional ingredients and social dining, historically practiced by Native Americans and adopted by European settlers to feature the bounty of the Atlantic. It remains a hallmark of summer gatherings and fishing camp meals in New England.