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Back to recipe archiveThe Melting Pot
Quad Cities Pizza photo coming soon
Cross-era
Quad Cities Pizza is a distinctive American pizza style from the Mississippi River's Quad Cities area, known for its thick crust, sweet tomato sauce, and unique blend of cheeses. Rooted in Italian-American traditions, this regional pizza reflects local tastes and longstanding community pride.
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St. Louis Pizza photo coming soon
Cross-era
St. Louis Pizza is distinct for its ultra-thin, cracker-like crust, Provel cheese topping, and square slices. This regional specialty blends Italian-American pizza traditions with local innovations, emerging in mid-20th-century St. Louis area pizzerias and home kitchens.
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Focaccia photo coming soon
1861-1900
Focaccia is a flat Italian-style bread seasoned with olive oil, herbs, and often sea salt. Italian immigrants introduced focaccia to the United States during the late 19th century, adapting Old World baking techniques to American ingredients, thus becoming a beloved Italian-American staple bread.
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Stuffed Crust Pizza photo coming soon
1990-2009
Stuffed crust pizza is a late 20th-century American innovation featuring pizza crust filled with cheese, enhancing the traditional pizza experience with an extra layer of flavor and indulgence. This style rose in prominence with national pizza chains and home pizza enthusiasts seeking novel options.
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Anadama Bread photo coming soon
1800s-present
A lightly sweet New England loaf made with cornmeal, molasses, wheat flour, and yeast.
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Auntie Anne's-Style Pretzel Bites photo coming soon
1970-1989
A homemade mall-style pretzel bite recipe with yeast dough, a baking-soda dip, coarse salt, and a generous butter finish.
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Bagels photo coming soon
1861-1900
A basic homemade bagel recipe using high-protein flour, malt or brown sugar, a short boil, and a hot bake for chewy New York-style results.
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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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Buckwheat Cakes photo coming soon
1700s-present
Buckwheat cakes were once a cold-weather American breakfast staple, especially in Pennsylvania, Appalachia, and boardinghouses. Buckwheat grew well in poor soils, and an overnight batter gave the cakes a tangy flavor before modern baking powder pancakes took over.
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Cardamom Bread photo coming soon
1800s-present
Cardamom bread came into Upper Midwest kitchens with Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, and other Scandinavian immigrants. Finnish pulla and Swedish cardamom breads became coffee-table, holiday, and family celebration loaves in Scandinavian American communities.
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Challah photo coming soon
1880s-present
A tender braided egg bread with a glossy crust, lightly sweet crumb, and deep Jewish American Shabbat and holiday meaning.
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Doughnuts photo coming soon
Cross-era
Doughnuts are a beloved American breakfast and snack originating from various immigrant influences, consisting of fried dough rings or balls coated in sugar or glaze. The recipe has evolved over centuries and become a cross-era staple with numerous regional variations.
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Election Cake photo coming soon
1776-1800
Election Cake is a rich, spiced yeast-leavened cake traditionally baked for political celebrations in colonial and early American history. It combines dried fruits, warm spices, and nuts, symbolizing communal festivity around elections and gatherings.
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Elephant Ears photo coming soon
1900-1929
Elephant Ears are large, thin, fried dough pastries typically coated with cinnamon sugar or other sweet toppings. A favorite at state fairs and carnivals, they offer a crispy, warm, and indulgent treat enjoyed by American families since the early 20th century.
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Beignets photo coming soon
1700s-present
Beignets carry French and Acadian roots into Louisiana, where New Orleans coffee stands made them a breakfast and late-night ritual. The familiar square, sugar-dusted version is now inseparable from cafe au lait and the French Quarter.
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Cinnamon Rolls photo coming soon
1970-1989
Classic American breakfast sweet rolls featuring a soft, fluffy dough swirled with cinnamon sugar and topped with a sweet glaze. Cinnamon rolls became popular as convenient and comforting treats at tailgate parties, booster clubs, and concession stands in late 20th-century America, especially from the 1970s through the 1980s. Their warm spices and sweetness mark them as a festive favorite around Christmas and other cold-weather celebrations.
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Cinnamon Rolls with Chili photo coming soon
Cross-era
A unique breakfast combining the sweet, soft cinnamon roll with a spicy chili twist, reflecting flavor fusions from the Great Plains region influenced by Mexican-American and Southwestern cuisines. This dish pairs the warming spices of cinnamon with hearty chili for a tasty and filling meal that honors regional culinary blending.
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Cider photo coming soon
1776-1800
Cider, made from fermented or fresh-pressed apple juice, has been an important American drink since colonial times. Both hard (alcoholic) and sweet (non-alcoholic) varieties were common, used at meals and celebrations, embodying early American fruit preservation and local agriculture.
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Fastnachts photo coming soon
1800-1860
Fastnachts are dense, fried doughnuts traditionally prepared by German-American communities in the U.S. during the 19th century, especially for Shrove Tuesday. These simple pastries reflect German immigrant influence on American regional baking traditions during early expansion and immigration periods.
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King Cake photo coming soon
Cross-era
King cake is a sweet, ring-shaped cake traditionally decorated in purple, green, and gold sugars, associated with Mardi Gras and New Year's celebrations. Originating from European Epiphany customs, the king cake became an emblem of holiday festivity in the southern United States, especially New Orleans, blending cultural symbolism with regional baking.
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Julekake photo coming soon
1861-1900
Julekake is a traditional Norwegian Christmas bread flavored with cardamom, studded with raisins, candied citrus peel, and sometimes almonds. Brought to the American Midwest by Scandinavian immigrants between 1861 and 1900, it remains a festive bread symbolizing heritage and holiday celebration.
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Kolaches photo coming soon
1900-1929
Kolaches are soft yeast dough pastries filled with fruit jams, cream cheese, or savory meats. They became popular in the Great Plains through Polish, Czech, Slovak, and other Eastern European immigrant communities. These treats are traditionally enjoyed at church gatherings, state fairs, and holiday celebrations like Easter, symbolizing community and heritage.
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Nut Roll photo coming soon
1900-1929
Nut Roll is a rich yeast dough rolled with a sweet, spiced nut and sugar filling, popular among Polish, Czech, Slovak, and other Eastern European immigrant communities. This sweet bread often appears at Easter and fairs, symbolizing cultural continuity amidst new American settings.
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Peanut Butter Bread photo coming soon
1930-1945
Peanut butter bread emerged during the Great Depression as a practical way to enrich simple bread dough with added protein and flavor. This bread combines pantry staples to create a satisfying loaf ideal for stretching limited resources affordably.
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Poppy Seed Roll photo coming soon
1900-1929
Poppy Seed Roll is a traditional Eastern European sweet yeast bread rolled around a dense poppy seed filling. This dessert became popular among Polish, Czech, and Slovak immigrant communities in American cities during the early 20th century.
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Small Beer photo coming soon
1776-1800
Small Beer is a historical low-alcohol beer brewed in Colonial America, commonly consumed daily as a hydrating alternative to water. Its mild strength and nutritional value made it a household staple in the Revolutionary era.
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Soft Pretzels photo coming soon
1970-1989
Soft pretzels are twisted, chewy bread snacks with a glossy, salted crust. This recipe is inspired by the tailgate and concession stand traditions in the Mid-Atlantic, where pretzels have long been a favored portable treat at sporting events, schools, and fairs.
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Sourdough Bread photo coming soon
Cross-era
Sourdough Bread is a crusty loaf leavened by naturally occurring wild yeasts from a fermented starter. It has been a staple throughout the West Coast from the Gold Rush through modern artisan baking, prized for its tangy flavor and chewy crumb.