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Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Bratwurst photo coming soon
1800s-present
Bratwurst is older than the American brat on a bun. German immigrants carried regional sausage-making traditions to the United States, where Midwestern butcher shops, especially in Wisconsin, made fresh bratwurst part of everyday cooking and community events.
The Melting Pot
City Chicken photo coming soon
1900-1929
City Chicken consists of cubes of pork or veal (sometimes a mix), skewered on sticks, breaded, and fried or baked to simulate roasted chicken. It became popular in American industrial cities with large Polish, Czech, Slovak, and other Eastern European immigrant populations in the early 20th century, especially where chicken was expensive or scarce. Served often at diners, lunch counters, and state fairs, it represents resourceful ethnic adaptation and immigrant influence on urban American foodways.