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Recipes from the archive that share this tag, occasion, ingredient, or cultural root.
Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
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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Booyah photo coming soon
1850s-present
Booyah is more than soup in Green Bay and northeast Wisconsin. It is a community event food tied to Belgian American settlements, church picnics, fundraisers, and enormous kettles stirred for hours.
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Brunswick Stew photo coming soon
1800s-present
Brunswick stew has competing origin claims in Virginia and Georgia, and older roots in Southeastern stews that combined meat and corn. Modern versions are often linked to barbecue restaurants, church fundraisers, hunting camps, and community kettles.
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Butter Chicken photo coming soon
1970s-present
Butter chicken, or murgh makhani, is associated with Moti Mahal and Punjabi cooks who turned tandoori chicken into a rich tomato-butter gravy. In the United States, Indian restaurants, immigrant cooks, supermarket sauces, and suburban takeout made it one of the best-known Indian dishes for American diners.
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Chicago Deep-Dish Pizza photo coming soon
1940s-present
A sausage Chicago deep-dish pizza with buttery dough, mozzarella under the fillings, chunky tomato sauce, and Parmesan on top.
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Army Chili photo coming soon
1930-1945
A practical ground-beef chili with beans, tomatoes, onion, chili powder, cumin, and paprika, adapted from Armed Forces chili con carne formulas for a family pot.
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Burgoo photo coming soon
1800s-present
Burgoo is Kentucky gathering food, cooked in big kettles for barbecues, political events, church fundraisers, Derby parties, and camps. Its origins are murky, with links to frontier stews, ragout, and communal cooking, but its identity is unmistakably Kentucky.
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Chicken Cacciatore photo coming soon
1900s-present
Bone-in chicken browned and simmered with tomatoes, wine, peppers, mushrooms, onions, garlic, and herbs in the Italian American style.
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Carne Guisada photo coming soon
1800s-present
Carne guisada means stewed meat, and in Texas it is a beloved Mexican American home-cooking and Tex-Mex restaurant dish. Cubed beef cooks slowly with chiles, tomatoes, aromatics, and gravy until it can be spooned into tortillas or served as a plate lunch.
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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.