
πΊπΈ American Cuisine
Melting-pot cuisine with deep regional traditions and immigrant contributions
Definition
American cuisine is the culinary tradition of the United States, a nation-state cuisine shaped by the convergence of Indigenous foodways, European colonial settlement, the forced migration of enslaved Africans, and successive waves of voluntary immigration from every inhabited continent. It is practiced across a vast and ecologically diverse geography, producing a cuisine that is simultaneously unified by certain national patterns and profoundly fragmented into regional sub-traditions of considerable distinctiveness.\n\nAt the national level, American cuisine is characterized by a set of shared structural habits: a protein-centered plate architecture (typically meat or poultry as the focal element), abundant use of corn and wheat derivatives, preference for wood-fire and dry-heat cooking methods (grilling, smoking, roasting, and deep-frying), and a democratic orientation toward informality in meal service. The flavor profile ranges widely but leans toward savory-sweet combinations, high umami through meat-based preparations, and liberal use of sugar across all meal courses, including savory dishes. Indigenous agricultural staples β maize (corn), squash, beans, tomatoes, and potatoes β form the biological foundation upon which all subsequent immigrant contributions were layered.\n\nBecause American cuisine encompasses dozens of distinct regional traditions β including Southern, New England, Tex-Mex, Louisiana Creole, Pacific Northwest, and Hawaiian β it is best understood not as a single unified cuisine but as a meta-cuisine: a dynamic framework within which regional and ethnic sub-traditions maintain coherence while contributing to an evolving national culinary identity.
Historical Context
The culinary history of the United States begins with the foodways of Indigenous nations, whose agricultural systems β particularly the Three Sisters complex of corn, beans, and squash β provided the nutritional and agricultural infrastructure for all subsequent development. European colonization beginning in the late 15th and early 16th centuries introduced Old World livestock (cattle, pigs, chickens), wheat, and culinary techniques from Britain, France, Spain, and the Netherlands, which merged unevenly with Indigenous practices across different colonial regions. The transatlantic slave trade (16thβ19th centuries) brought West and Central African culinary knowledge β including rice cultivation, okra, black-eyed peas, and frying techniques β that proved foundational, particularly in Southern cuisine.\n\nThe 19th and early 20th centuries saw successive immigration waves that permanently expanded the American culinary lexicon: German and Scandinavian settlers transformed the Midwest; Chinese laborers contributed to Western foodways; Italian, Jewish, and Eastern European immigrants reshaped urban eating cultures in the Northeast. The post-World War II era introduced industrialized food production and fast food as dominant cultural forces, while late 20th-century immigration from Latin America, Southeast Asia, and South Asia produced another cycle of culinary transformation. Today, American cuisine continues to evolve through ongoing negotiation between industrial standardization, regional revivalism, and new immigrant contributions.
Geographic Scope
American cuisine is practiced across all 50 U.S. states, with significant regional variation among the South, Northeast, Midwest, Southwest, and Pacific Coast. It is also widely represented in diaspora communities globally and has achieved broad international reach through the export of fast food and popular food culture.
References
- Pillsbury, R. (1998). No Foreign Food: The American Diet in Time and Place. Westview Press.academic
- Gabaccia, D. R. (1998). We Are What We Eat: Ethnic Food and the Making of Americans. Harvard University Press.academic
- Edge, J. T. (Ed.). (2007). The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Vol. 7: Foodways. University of North Carolina Press.culinary
- Mintz, S. W. (1996). Tasting Food, Tasting Freedom: Excursions into Eating, Culture, and the Past. Beacon Press.academic
Sub-cuisines
Recipe Types (5,589)
Garden Vegetable Salad
Garden Vegetable Spread

Garlic Bread
Garlic Bread Pizza

Garlic Cheese Biscuits
Garlic Chicken
Garlic Cole Slaw
Garlic Crabs
Garlic-flavored Potato Cake
Garlic Gazpacho Butter

Garlic-Ginger Barbecued Baby Back Ribs
Garlic Herb Cheese Spread

Garlic Herb Shrimp

Garlic Lemon Rice

Garlic Lime Chicken
Garlic Lime Chicken II
Garlic Lover's Lentil Soup

Garlic Prawns in Lemon Butter
Garlic Rice with Pine Nuts

Garlic Roasted Chickken
Garlic Seared Halibut

Garlic Shrimp I
Garlic-Soy Dipping Sauce
Garlic, Tomato and Cheddar Sandwich
Garmugia Lucca style
Gateaux jos louis (joe louis cakes)
Gatun American Legion
Gazpacho Salad Dressing

Gazpacho Salad I
Gee Estate Basic White Sauce
Gee Estate Frozen Margaritas

Gee Estate Irish Cream Chocolates
Gee Estate Irish Potato Pancakes

Gee Estate Swiss Cheese Sauce

Gekochtes Rindfleisch
Gelatin a la Ponche Crema
Gelatin wiggles

Gemini Peanut Butter Cups

General Tsao's Chicken

Genetta Cookies
George Foreman Grilled Cheese
George Washington's Rice Waffles

German Chocolate Brownies

German Chocolate Cake

German Potato Salad I
Gesmoorde Spinasie
Ghengis Green Beans
Gherkin Relish Dip
Ghorayebah
