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Lorne sausage, a traditional Scottish food usually made from minced meat, rusk and spices; Meatloaf, a dish of ground meat mixed with other ingredients and formed into a loaf shape, then baked or smoked; Pork roll, pork-based processed meat available in parts of the northeastern United States; Slatur, an Icelandic food made from the innards of ...
State Food type Food name Image Year & citation Alabama: State cookie Yellowhammer cookie: 2023 [1]: State nut: Pecan: 1982 [2]: State fruit: Blackberry: 2004 [3]: State tree fruit
Invented at the Toll House Inn in Whitman, Massachusetts. [156] Tipsy cake: South Southern United States A variation on the English trifle brought to America in colonial times. A cake made with an alcoholic beverage such as wine, sherry, or bourbon, and often with custard, jam, or fruit. [157] [158] Whoopie pie: Northeast Maine and Pennsylvania
Chicken corn soup—made with egg noodles and sometimes saffron, which has been cultivated in Pennsylvania Dutch country since the early 19th century; egg noodles, corn, hard boiled eggs, and chicken. [1] Sometimes an addition is rivels, small dumplings. Chow-chow; Coleslaw; Cup cheese
One original creation that's still made in the cornhusker state is Dorothy Lynch Salad Dressing, a sweet and tangy condiment invented by its namesake in late '40s St. Paul, of which every bottle ...
Invented in Philadelphia in the 1930s, the cheesesteak is the most well known, and soft pretzels have long been a major part of Philadelphia culture. The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw the creation of two Philadelphia landmarks offering an array of food options, the Reading Terminal Market and the Italian Market.
Pennsylvania in general produces 80% of the pretzels consumed in the U.S., [9] with many of the top producers located in York County alone. [10] Auntie Anne's , the international pretzel franchise, was founded in Downingtown, Pennsylvania .
Shoofly pie is a type of American pie made with molasses associated with Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine.While shoo-fly pie has been a staple of Moravian, Mennonite, and Amish foodways, there is scant evidence concerning its origins, and most of the folktales concerning the pie are apocryphal, including the persistent legend that the name comes from flies being attracted to the sweet filling.